Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. Legacy Archives

Watch Tesla’s 691-hp Model S P85D annihilate a Dodge Challenger Hellcat

Add as a preferred source on Google

The Tesla Model S P85D has already thrashed a couple of Italian supercars, and now it’s got another high-profile drag race victory under its belt.

We clearly live in a golden age of automotive performance when one can walk into a dealership (or Tesla Store) and buy a 691-horsepower electric car, or a 707-hp muscle car like the 2015 Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat.

Recommended Videos

Two owners recently put these beasts side-by-side on a drag strip to answer the obvious question, and this video shows the carnage wrought on the Dodge by the Tesla.

When the lights went green, the Model S simply drove away from the Challenger, setting a claimed record for fastest-accelerating electric car with a quarter mile time of 11.6 seconds, and a trap speed of 114.6 mph.

Granted, the Challenger driver seems to have badly botched the start. The car lurches prematurely while the light is still red, the hesitates and spins its wheels when it’s really time to go.

Dodge says the Challenger Hellcat will do an 11.2-second quarter mile, the HEMI-powered coupe theoretically should have been faster. Yet a clean launch is vital in drag racing, as this matchup demonstrates.

It also demonstrates just how easy it is to drive the P85D fast. With all-wheel drive, sophisticated control software, and the instantaneous response of two electric motors, it’s much harder for the driver to screw up.

It’s even more impressive considering that the Model S is a four-door luxury sedan, although the two cars are closer in weight than you might think, with the Tesla tipping the scales at about 200 pounds heavier than the Dodge.

At least the Challenger looks cool doing a burnout.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Topics
Waymo’s robotaxis keep finding new things to drive into, and construction zones are the latest
Thirteen construction zone incidents, one fleet recall, and a passenger who thought the end was near.
A Hyundai Ioniq 5 is equipped as a robotaxi.

Waymo has recalled its entire fleet of nearly 4,000 robotaxis to prevent them from driving on highways after identifying at least 13 instances where its vehicles drove straight into highway sections closed for construction. 

This is the company's sixth recall in under a year, and follows separate incidents involving flooded roads, telephone poles, chains and gates, towed trucks, and school buses.

Read more
BYD’s Great Tang eSUV offers 10-minute charging and a 590-mile range starting at $40,000
Spectacular specs, record preorders, and not a single one headed to America.
Car, Transportation, Vehicle

BYD just launched the Great Tang, a full-size electric SUV that offers the range of a regular gasoline-powered car and takes only slightly longer to refuel (read: recharge). 

The company's flagship eSUV starts at around $35,500 and gives most American electric SUVs a serious run for their money.

Read more
BMW is taking orders for the i3 way ahead of schedule, and it’s got a happy problem to blame
Too much demand, too good a car to make people wait until fall.
Bumper, Transportation, Vehicle

BMW planned to open order books for the new i3 sedan this fall, but now, the automaker is opening them this week instead. The reason is the kind of happy problem every automaker wishes they had.

As it turns out, too many people want to buy the car, and the automaker decided it would be rude to make them wait.

Read more