Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

For Faraday Future, Pikes Peak was both a race and a testing lab

Add as a preferred source on Google

While it is still unclear whether Faraday Future will be able to get its FF 91 electric car into production anytime soon, the company at least proved that the FF 91 is pretty fast. At the recent Pikes Peak International Hill Climb, Faraday Future’s creation set a record for production-based electric cars.

Staged on the Colorado mountain of the same name, the Pikes Peak Hill Climb features a 12.42-mile course with 156 turns that climbs 4,270 feet from the starting line to the finish line. The thin air at Pikes Peak’s high altitude gives electric cars an advantage since, like people, internal-combustion engines do not do very well when deprived of oxygen. Besides the FF 91, recent all-electric entries have included purpose-built race cars, a modified Acura NSX, and a Tesla Model S, among others.

Recommended Videos

Driven by Faraday engineer Robin Shute, the FF 91 ran in Pikes Peak’s Exhibition Class. It covered the course in 11:25.083, beating the previous record for a production-based electric car by more than 20 seconds, according to Faraday. “Production-based” is key here because the FF 91 isn’t actually on sale yet. Hopefully the eventual production model will feel as fast as the racer looks in the above video, which was posted to the Pikes Peak YouTube channel.

Faraday used a “beta” development vehicle that was largely representative of the eventual production model, albeit with some Pikes Peak-specific hardware and software tweaks. Faraday viewed Pikes Peak as a testing opportunity, with Shute saying that engineers identified “key battery pack relay and system seal issues” that will improve the production process. But the automaker will also get more public exposure from the high-profile race. Pikes Peak is not Faraday’s first motor-sport foray, it also backs a team in Formula E.

“The hill climb at Pikes Peak serves as the ideal setting to further develop the electric propulsion system and supporting thermal systems of FF 91,” Faraday research and development boss Nick Sampson said in a statement ahead of the race. Seeing how components perform under the stresses of racing was a major reason for going to Pikes Peak, Farady engineers explained in a video (see below) produced by the automaker. “Testing the performance of FF 91 in real-world conditions sets the bar even higher as we bring the vehicle to market in 2018,” Sampson said.

Sampson’s confirmation of a 2018 launch date aligns with previous statements from Faraday, but it seems like an optimistic goal. The company has halted work on its North Las Vegas, Nevada, factory indefinitely, and has not announced concrete plans for a new factory. Between building a factory, completing development work on the FF 91, and tooling up for production, Faraday has a lot to finish in a very short amount of time.

Faraday has also had to contend with instability at its main backer, Chinese tech firm LeEco. The company is laying off most of its U.S. workforce, and billionaire founder Jia Yueting said in November that it was running out of cash. Faraday has said it is unaffected by the LeEco cuts, although it is now looking for additional sources of funding.

Updated: Added second video and updated information on Faraday’s Nevada factory.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Audi tackles Ferrari Luce fever with the hybrid Nuvolari, it’s fastest and beefiest car ever
Meet the Audi that makes Formula 1 technology street legal.
Audi Nuvolari

Audi has just pulled the wraps off the Nuvolari, its first hybrid supercar, and the numbers are genuinely hard to comprehend. Named after Tazio Nuvolari, one of motorsport's most iconic figures, the car produces 1,001 PS and can reach a top speed of over 350 km/h. Only 499 people will ever get to own one, with deliveries kicking off in the first half of 2027.

The Nuvolari can go from 0 to 100 km/h in 2.6 seconds and can hit the 200 km/h mark in just 6.8 seconds. Under the hood is a 4.0-liter V8 biturbo engine producing 800 hp, paired with three electric motors for a combined system output of 1,001 PS. The electric motors at the front axle alone deliver 2,150 Nm of torque, which is a number that feels almost fictional.

Read more
Electric cars are getting more pocket-friendly globally, except for US buyers
The US EV market's 2025 decline wasn't about consumer disinterest. It was the predictable result of eliminating financial incentives.
Porsche Cayenne Coupe electric

In 2025, one in four cars sold anywhere in the world was electric. However, in the US, that figure is closer to one in ten, and it is not moving in the right direction. 

The falling EV prices globally have pushed sales to record levels. American buyers, on the other hand, are marching through 2026 with fewer incentives, higher prices, and a shrinking selection of affordable options. 

Read more
Lexus halts plans of an electric car based on the stunning LF-ZC concept and it’s such a bummer
Lexus finally designed a gorgeous EV and then sent it to timeout
LF-ZC concept

Toyota and Lexus may have just shelved one of the most exciting electric vehicle concepts shown in recent years. According to reports from Automotive News and Nikkei Asia, Toyota has halted development of the next-generation Lexus EV that was expected to be based on the futuristic LF-ZC concept.

For EV enthusiasts and Lexus fans, the news is particularly disappointing because the LF-ZC represented one of the clearest signs that Lexus was finally preparing to make a serious leap into the premium electric future.

Read more