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Automotive superlatives include attributes such as the smallest, largest, fastest, lightest, best-selling, and so on.
This list (except for the firsts section) is limited to automobiles built after World War II, and lists superlatives for earlier vehicles separately. The list is also limited to production road cars that:
- Are constructed principally for retail sale to consumers for personal use transporting people on public roads. No commercial or industrial vehicles are included
- Have had 25 or more instances made by the original vehicle manufacturer offered for sale to the public in new condition (cars modified by either professional tuners or individuals are not eligible)
- Are street-legal in their intended markets and capable of passing any official tests or inspections required to be granted this status
Calendar years rather than "model years" are used except when explicitly marked as otherwise.
Vehicle dimensions
editLength
edit- Shortest
Width (without mirrors)
edit- Widest
- Car
- Current production car – 2,099 mm (82.6 in) – Lamborghini Countach LPI 800-4[3]
- Limited production convertible – 2,100 mm (82.7 in) (armoured) – 1938–1943 Mercedes-Benz 770 W150[4]
- Pickup truck – 2,436 mm (95.9 in) – Chevrolet Silverado 3500HD[5]
- Van
- Current van – 2,112 mm (83.1 in) Ford Transit[6]
- Car
Height
edit- Tallest
- Van – 3,055 mm (120.3 in) Mercedes-Benz Sprinter 906 L4H3[7]
- Mid-size SUV – 1,986 mm (78.2 in) Mercedes-Benz G-Class
- Mid-size pickup truck – 1,955 mm (77.0 in) Ford Ranger Raptor[8]
- Lowest
Wheelbase
editTrack
edit- Widest front
- Car
- Production car – 1,784 mm (70.2 in) – 2022 Lamborghini Countach LPI 800-4[3]
- Car
- Widest rear
- Car
- Production car – 1,722 mm (67.8 in) BMW i8[9]
- Production convertible – 1,722 mm (67.8 in) – BMW i8 Roadster[9]
- Car
Curb weight
edit- Heaviest
- Car
- Production car – 5,100 kg (11,244 lb) – 2017 Mercedes-Maybach S600 Pullman Guard[10]
- Car
- Lightest
- Current production car – 440 kg (970 lb) – Caterham 7 170[11][12]
Engines
editEngine displacement
editLargest
edit- Production car
- Three-cylinder – 2.0 litres (121.3 cu in) – 2020 Koenigsegg Gemera[13]
- Sixteen-cylinder – 8.35 litres (509.55 cu in) – 2025– Bugatti Tourbillon[14]
Power
editHighest power by engine type
edit- Petrol engine (naturally aspirated) – 745.7 kW (1,014 PS; 1,000 hp) – Aston Martin Valkyrie, 6,500 cc (396.7 cu in) Cosworth V12[15]
- Diesel engine (forced induction) – 368 kW (500 PS; 493 bhp) – Audi Q7 V12 TDI, 5,934 cc (362.1 cu in) twin-turbo TDI V12[16][17] / 368 kW (500 PS; 493 bhp) Ford Super Duty, 6,651 cc (405.9 cu in) turbocharged Powerstroke V8[18]
Highest power by body style
edit- 4-door sedan – 761 kW (1,035 PS; 1,021 bhp) – 2022 Tesla Model S Plaid; three electric motors[19]
- Pickup truck/ute – 530 kW (721 PS; 711 bhp) 2024 Ford F-150 Raptor R; 5,163 cc (315.1 cu in) V8 petrol[20]
- SUV – 529 kW (719 PS; 709 bhp) 2021 Dodge Durango SRT Hellcat; 6,166 cc (376.3 cu in) V8 petrol[21][22]
- Van – 299 kW (407 PS; 401 bhp) 2021 Chevrolet Express and GMC Savana; 6,551 cc (399.8 cu in) V8 petrol[23]
- Heavy truck – non-hybrid 589 kW (801 PS; 790 bhp) Shacman X6000; 16.6 L (1,013.0 cu in) V8 diesel[24]
Highest specific engine output (power/unit displacement)
edit- Petrol (naturally aspirated) piston engine – 124.3 kW (169.0 PS; 166.7 hp) per litre – 2008 Ariel Atom 500 373 kW (507 PS; 500 hp) 3.0 L V8[25][26][27][28]
- Biofuel piston engine – 232.4 kW (316.0 PS; 311.7 hp) per litre – 2020 Koenigsegg Jesko 1,177 kW (1,600 PS; 1,578 hp) 5,065 cc (309.1 cu in) twin-turbocharged V8 on E85 fuel[29]
- Diesel engine (naturally aspirated) – 33.4 kW (45.4 PS; 44.8 hp) per litre – 1993 Mercedes E 300 diesel 100 kW (136 PS; 134 hp) DIN 2.996 L OM606 I6
- Diesel engine (forced-induction) – 100 kW (136.0 PS; 134.1 hp) per litre – 2020 BMW Alpina D5 S 3.0 L I6 triturbo 300 kW (408 PS; 402 hp)[30]
Highest power by cylinder count (production cars)
edit- Three-cylinder – 2.0 litres (121.3 cu in) – 447 kW (600 hp; 608 PS) 600 N⋅m (443 lb⋅ft) – 2020 Koenigsegg Gemera[13]
- Five-cylinder – 2.5 litres (151.3 cu in) – 368 kW (493 hp; 500 PS) 581 N⋅m (429 lb⋅ft) – 2022 KTM X-Bow GT-XR[31]
Highest torque by engine type
edit- Forced induction petrol engine – 1,818 N⋅m (1,341 lbf⋅ft) – 2020 SSC Tuatara, 5,900 cc (360.0 cu in) V8[32]
- Naturally aspirated petrol engine – 813 N⋅m (600 lbf⋅ft) – 2013-2017 Dodge Viper, 8,390 cc (512.0 cu in) V10
- Forced induction diesel engine – 1,627 N⋅m (1,200 lb⋅ft) – 2022 (2023 MY) Ford Super Duty, 6,653 cc (406.0 cu in) V8[33]
- Naturally aspirated diesel engine – 488 N⋅m (360 lbf⋅ft) – 1988–94 Ford F-250/350 IDI diesel, 7,276 cc (444.0 cu in) V8
- Electric motor – 2,360 N⋅m (1,741 lbf⋅ft) – 2021 Rimac Nevera
- Hybrid engine – 3,500 N⋅m (2,600 lbf⋅ft) – Koenigsegg Gemera[34]
Highest torque by body style
edit- Car – 3,500 N⋅m (2,581 lbf⋅ft) – 2020 Koenigsegg Gemera, hybrid 3-cylinder + 4 electric motors,
- Pickup truck – 1,627 N⋅m (1,200 lb⋅ft) – 2022 (2023 MY) Ford Super Duty, 6,653 cc (406.0 cu in) V8[33]
- SUV – 1,000 N⋅m (738 lbf⋅ft) – Audi Q7 V12 TDI, 6,000 cc (366.1 cu in) V12 diesel[35]
- Van – 712 N⋅m (525 lbf⋅ft) – 2014 Chevrolet Express and GMC Savana, 6,599 cc (402.7 cu in) V8 diesel
Highest specific torque (torque/unit displacement)
editThe mean effective pressure (MEP) is a useful comparison tool, giving the average cylinder pressure exerted on the piston.
- Petrol engine (naturally aspirated) – MEP 1.67 MPa (16.7 bar), 132.6 N⋅m (98 lbf⋅ft) per litre – 2019 BAC Mono R 330 N⋅m (243 lbf⋅ft)
- Petrol engine (forced-induction) – MEP 3.51 MPa (35.1 bar), 279.3 N⋅m (206 lbf⋅ft) per litre – 2014 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X FQ440 MR 558.6 N⋅m (412 lbf⋅ft)
- Petrol engine (naturally aspirated pistonless rotary engine) – MEP 2.15 MPa (21.5 bar), 170.8 N⋅m (126.0 lbf⋅ft) per litre – 2005 Mazda RX-8 222 N⋅m (164 lbf⋅ft)
- Petrol engine (forced-induction pistonless rotary engine) – MEP 3.03 MPa (30.3 bar), 241.38 N⋅m (178.0 lbf⋅ft) per litre – Mazda RX-7 turbo 313.8 N⋅m (231 lbf⋅ft)
- Diesel engine (naturally aspirated) – MEP 903 kPa (9.03 bar), 71.88 N⋅m (53 lbf⋅ft) per litre – 1999 Nissan AD Van (Y11) 157 N⋅m (116 lbf⋅ft) 2.184 L Nissan YD
- Diesel engine (forced-induction) – MEP 3.47 MPa (34.7 bar), 276 N⋅m (204 lbf⋅ft) per litre – 2021 Mercedes-Benz C300d 550 N⋅m (406 lbf⋅ft) 1.992 L OM654 D 20 R SCR
Fuel economy
editMost economical
editThe following are all vehicles once certified for sale in the United States. Some vehicles from other countries have better fuel economy. Figures (showed in miles per US gallon units) are based on laboratory estimates, not consumer data.
- All-diesel production vehicle – 1984 Nissan Sentra with 41 combined / 37 city / 46 highway.[36]
- All-petrol production vehicle – 1986 Chevrolet Sprint ER with 48 combined / 44 city / 53 highway[37]
- All natural gas production vehicle – 2012 Honda Civic GX with 31 combined / 27 city / 38 highway[38]
- E85 production vehicle – 2013 Ford Focus SFE FWD FFV with 22 combined / 19 city / 27 highway[39]
- Production electric hybrid – 2021 Hyundai Ioniq Hybrid (Ioniq Blue) with 59 combined / 58 city / 60 highway[40]
- Production plug-in electric hybrid – 2017/2023 Toyota Prius Prime with 133 combined MPGe (EV mode) and 54 MPG combined city/highway (petrol)[41]
- Production all-electric vehicle – 2025 Lucid Air Pure RWD with 19 inch wheels with 146 combined / 149 city / 142 highway MPGe[42]
The following are as sold in Europe:
- Volkswagen XL1, diesel-electric PHEV, 0.9 L/100 km (310 mpg‑imp; 260 mpg‑US) on the New European Driving Cycle[43]
Fuel capacity
editAll below amounts are total capacities for fuel tanks, (lithium based) batteries and other energy storage devices, not usable/net capacity.
- Diesel off-road van - Toyota Land Cruiser 70 series Troopcarrier, 180 L[44]
- Diesel SUV - Toyota Land Cruiser Prado, 150 L (33 imp gal; 40 US gal)[45]
- Half-ton pickup truck - Toyota Tundra, 144 L (38 US gal)[46]
- EV - GMC Hummer EV Edition 1, 246.8 kWh
- PHEV - M-Hero 917, 66 kWh[47]
- Smallest EV - Smart fortwo coupe, 17.6 kWh[48]
- Smallest PHEV - BMW i3, 9 L[49]
Price
edit- Most expensive (production) – US$3,260,000 – Bugatti Chiron Sport[50]
- Least expensive (production) – US$125 (equivalent to $2,275 in 2023) official general inflation – 1922 Briggs & Stratton Flyer
- Most expensive (auction) – US$143,000,000 1957 Uhlenhaut Coupé[51][52]
- Most expensive (private sale) – US$70,000,000 (£52,000,000 at June 2018 exchange rates) 1963 Ferrari 250 GTO (2018)[53]
- Most expensive (concept car) – US$8,000,000 2005 Maybach Exelero
Performance
editAcceleration
edit- Quickest 0 to 97 km/h (0 to 60 mph) with 1 foot rollout – 1.74 seconds – Rimac Nevera[54]
- Quickest 0 to 100 km/h (0 to 62 mph) with 1 foot rollout – 1.81 seconds – Rimac Nevera[54]
- Quickest 0 to 161 km/h (0 to 100 mph) with 1 foot rollout – 3.21 seconds – Rimac Nevera[54]
- Quickest 0 to 200 km/h (0 to 124 mph) with 1 foot rollout – 4.42 seconds – Rimac Nevera[54]
- Quickest 0 to 300 km/h (0 to 186 mph) with 1 foot rollout – 9.22 seconds – Rimac Nevera[54]
- Quickest 0 to 400 km/h (0 to 249 mph) with 1 foot rollout – 20.68 seconds – Koenigsegg Regera (with non-standard Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R tyres)[55]
Top speed
edit- Highest top speed (forced induction petrol engine) – Bugatti Chiron Super Sport 300+ – 490.48 km/h (304.77 mph)[56]
- Highest top speed (naturally aspirated engine) – McLaren F1 – 355–386 km/h (221–240 mph)
- Highest top speed (forced induction diesel engine) – BMW Alpina D5 S – 286 km/h (178 mph)[57][58]
- Highest top speed (electric production vehicle) – Rimac Nevera – 415 km/h (258 mph)[59]
- Highest top speed (unibody SUV) – Lamborghini Urus SE – 312 km/h (194 mph)
- Highest top speed (production half-ton pickup truck) – Dodge Ram SRT-10 – 248.784 km/h (154.587 mph)[60]
- Highest top speed (production half-ton pickup truck) – Ram 1500 TRX – 190 km/h (118 mph)[61]
Highest rpm redline
edit- Internal combustion piston-engined production car – Gordon Murray T.50 – 12,100 rpm[62]
- Internal combustion Wankel rotary-engined production car – Mazda RX-8 – 9,000 rpm
- Electric production vehicle – Zeekr 001 FR – 20,620 rpm[63]
Sales
edit- Best-selling models
- Best-selling vehicle nameplate – Toyota Corolla (50,000,000+ units sold since 1966)[64]
- Best-selling single model – Volkswagen Beetle (21,529,464 units sold between 1938 and 2003)
- Best single-year sales – 1.36 million – 2005 Toyota Corolla[65]
- Best single-month sales – 126,905 – July 2005 Ford F-Series[66]
See also
edit- List of largest machines (including land vehicles)
- Units of measurement
- Power
- Torque
- Mass
References
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