electric car test

Watch Porsche’s electric car test around Nürburgring track

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We are getting a few interesting glimpses into the development program of Porsche’s 1st all-electric vehicle, the Mission E, lately.

 

Now we get to see the car speeding around the Nürburgring race track.

 

Last month, Porsche was noticed benchmarking Mission E test mules with Tesla’s vehicles.

 

While they have been using Tesla vehicles in their development program, it doesn’t mean that they’re aiming for similar specs.

 

The German car manufacturer has been hinting at making the Mission E fit the race track performance expectations of Porsche customers.

 

All-electric vehicles have unbeatable torque and that they are nice for quick bursts of acceleration, but sustaining high-speed for long periods of time isn’t their force.

 

For example, Tesla’s performance vehicles ne’er really achieved great times on the Nürburgring race track has its power output gets limited the longer it’s pushed. The battery pack and drive units need to be cooled in order to achieve the best possible output.

 

Tesla’s vehicles are simply not tuned for this type of performance, but other electric vehicles are.

 

Earlier this year, we saw NIO’s EP9 all-electric race car beat every production car ever with a Nurburgring lap record of 6:45.90.

 

Now Porsche is also taking its Mission test mule to Nürburgring for testing. The vehicle was caught on video last week:

 

Obviously, this is a test mule without the real Mission E body but instead only the electric powertrain. we can even see the tailpipes on the vehicle. we got a better look at the latest prototype at Porsche’s recent Mission E event in Norway last month.

 

It’s only a few seconds of footage, but the vehicle seems to be moving well on the track. What do you think? let us recognize in the comment section below.

 

Porsche only revealed a few specs about the Mission E, like “over 310 miles of range” (500 km) NEDC, that is likely nearer to around 250 miles of real-world range, and a zero to sixty mph acceleration in 3.5 seconds.

 

That was 1st declared in 2015 when the German car manufacturer unveiled the concept. the production vehicle is expected to enter the market in 2019. we hope for few surprises with the production specs.

 

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source:electrek.co

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