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0-62mph in under 2.0sec claim = PROVEN
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carbonfibre, much wow
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Aiming to be fastest EV in the world
At the Frankfurt motor show last year, Aspark arrived with a
brand new all-electric hypercar. Named the Owl, the new hypercar promised
incredible power, but like a lot of electric cars we’ve seen, Aspark had very
little evidence to back it up. That is until, now.
In a video released yesterday, Aspark demonstrated the Owl’s
incredible speed, and it looks like it could be a match for the Tesla Roadster.
A video posted on YouTube shows the Japanese car hitting 0-100km/h in just
1.921 seconds, putting it very much in the neighbourhood of the upcoming
Tesla Roadster – and perhaps a little faster according to Autoblog.
The most interesting thing about the video? The terrible
area Aspark decided to conduct its publicity inducing test. Firstly, it appears
the Owl takes off from a parking space, and the whole thing look as though it’s
been done on a industrial estate – or perhaps a shopping complex car park.
Either way, it proves the Owl will be very fast.
Aspark Owl: everything we know
Built from carbonfibre and powered by an all-electric
drivetrain producing the equivalent of 1000bhp, its Japanese makers reckons the
Owl will good for 0-62mph in under 2.0sec.
The car has been in development since 2014, but Frankfurt
represents its world debut - which is impressive in its own way, given what's
clearly a limited development budget and the fact that it orginates in Japan.
Inevitably, it's made largely from carbonfibre, with
wonder-weave panels over a spaceframe chassis, plus super-light magnesium alloy
wheels helping to get the acceleration ball rolling.
Four-wheel drive is surely on the cards, as there's no other
way it could possibly gain enough traction with the torque from an electric
drive system to achieve such outrageous sprint times.
It also stands just 39 inches tall - one less than the
famously short-statured Ford GT40...
How realistic is the Aspark Owl really?
Well, it's possibly to make any car accelerate quickly given
the appropriate gearing - and a 1000bhp electric drive is hardly likely to be
slow in any case.
Aspark Owl all-electric supercar at Frankfurt 2017 - front
That amount of electric power is certainly feasible. Though
whether it will be feasible alongside any kind of meaningful driving range
remains to be seen.
One of our colleagues described the dramatic, if slightly
generic, styling as like a 'Poundland Aston Martin Valkyrie'. Which seems a bit
harsh, even if in the carbon the Aspark does look strangely unfinished.
We can confirm it does not appear to be able to turn its
head all the way round.
Expect it to be a track-only plaything… if it happens.
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