BYD’s luxury brand, Yangwang, has claimed a new Nürburgring Nordschleife record for a production electric vehicle with its U9 hypercar.
The automaker released video of the Yangwang U9 Xtreme, a limited-edition version of the car, completing a lap of the “Green Hell” in a blistering 6:59.157 last month.
It made the U9 the first production EV to break the 7-minute barrier at the legendary German track.
Today, the run, driven by German racer Moritz Kranz, was officially certified by Nürburgring officials.
BYD announced:
Only weeks after becoming the fastest production car in history with a top speed of 496.22 km/h, the YANGWANG U9X has now conquered the Nürburgring Nordschleife in record time, completing the lap in 6:59.157, making it the fastest EV production vehicle around the track.
The time shaved a significant five seconds off the previous record, a 7:04.957 lap set earlier this year by the Xiaomi SU7 Ultra.
The production EV record at Nürburgring has been frequently broken over the last few years. It even changed hands several times in the same month at times – a testament to how rapidly EV technology is improving.
It is also a somewhat controversial title due to what people consider to be a “production vehicle”.
The Yangwang U9 Xtreme isn’t your average EV. It’s built on a 1200-volt platform and uses four electric motors (one at each wheel) to produce a combined output of nearly 3,000 hp. This is the same car that also claimed the world record for the fastest production car, hitting a top speed of 308 mph (496 km/h) last month.
It’s built in a limited-run production with only about 30 units reportedly planned – hence why some people might question the “production EV” part.
Electrek’s Take
I know there’s going to be some pushback on this, but regardless, a sub-7-minute lap in any car is serious business, and doing it in an EV is doubly impressive — credit where it’s due.
Does a Nürburgring lap time matter for 99.9% of EV buyers? Absolutely not. But it is an excellent showcase of the rapidly improving EV technology.
BYD and Yangwang are clearly utilizing the U9 platform to push their engineering capabilities, relying heavily on their “e⁴ Platform” and “DiSus-X” intelligent body control system to manage the immense power on a demanding track.
It’s impressive to see BYD produce something like the U9 at the very high end of the automotive spectrum, and then something like the $10,000 Seagull at the other end.
That’s quite a range.