Thursday, May 26, 2011

Caparo T1 Supers Car 2011




















Designed by a British team that brought us the McLaren F1, the Caparo T1 claims that the fastest accelerating road car in the world like the Bugatti Veyron race 0-60 km / h in about 2.5 seconds and an unbelievable 000-100 km / h, about 5 seconds. This enormous speed secure place among the fastest accelerating road legal car ever, but in the shadow of the $ 1,700,000 price tag attached to the Bugatti.
So what is it?
A comparison of this car in another vehicle, so it’s just not comparable. This car is fully justified in the super league, the Veyron supercar. For this is a car with so much energy you want and one hundred and fifty thousand pounds in two vehicle whip around the track, or travel to Germany for the famous stretch of the highway where they can reach a maximum potential of 205 km / h / 330 mph.
T1 provides two driver’s seat and weighs less than 500 kg and has a carbon fiber chassis, incredibly easy compared to an average family car. The fuel tank is large enough to do 500 miles before they need the dock, it will say if he does make much difference, but because of the size of the fuel, not economic, but the expectation is that the car character.


Reliability

The vehicle has a violent past with more PR events go drastically wrong for the automaker. Both the British TV show Top Gear Overdrive and had problems on live TV on some of them are potentially fatal.
Jeremy Clarkson, Top Gear footage aired publicly humorous said. “If you try to circumvent the normal roundabout at normal speed you have a huge mistake .. If this thing goes on sale, a ditch or a country that is full Premier League footballers’


Total

Generieke offers something different T1 super car is usually seen as possibly Italian and American muscle on the other side of the vehicle, which of course some work to improve their safety record, which in turn, the customer confidence in this wonderful concept engine increase. Since its launch in 2011 the British pound lost on a train to another currency, which is considerably more expensive than when prices were announced originally.

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