Odds are pretty good you’ve never heard of SSC. That’s not because they’re new to the scene, though: SSC North America, as it’s formally known, has been around for more than two decades, having been founded in 1998 by a fellow named Jerod Shelby. (No, he’s not related to Carroll.) They’re not new to shattering production car speed records, either; their first car, the SSC Ultimate Aero, nabbed the Guinness World Record for fastest production car with a 256-mph run back in 2007.
Still, fast as it was, the Ultimate Aero was very much a machine made for a mission — a stripped-down, simplistic speed machine, as simplistic and purpose-built as an F-117 Nighthawk was for evading radar. SSC’s newest car, the Tuatara, is an F-22 Raptor by comparison: more powerful, more well-rounded and oh so much better-looking.
And, as it turns out, even faster. On October 10th, the SSC Tuatara — a hypercar that’ll be limited to 100 units with a base price of $1,625,000 and a fully-loaded price around two million bucks — cracked through the air at a speed of Mach 0.42 to become the fastest production car on the planet.
The SSC Tuatara hit an official top speed of 316 MPH

In the honest fashion of setting true speed records, however, that was an average of two runs conducted within one hour, going in both directions in order to cancel out any effect of wind or elevation change. On the quicker run, the hypercar hit a stunning 331 mph; going the other way, it hit 301 mph. (All the figures were officially verified, including via an average of 15 GPS satellites tracking the runs.)