News
Rimac Nevera Becomes Road-Legal As First Unit Gets License Plates
1,914-horsepower Rimac Nevera hypercar becomes road-legal as first unit gets license plates.
It comes after 5 years of development, 17 prototypes produced, 45 crash tests, 9 cars destroyed during crash tests.
The two-seat hypercar uses four electric motors, and will hit 60 mph in 1.85 seconds in ideal conditions.
The Rimac Nevera costs around €2 million, which equates to $2.1 million at the current exchange rates.
This is an important milestone for the Croatian brand as it means the Nevera, which will be made in a limited run of 150 units, is now finally road-legal and can embark on its final journey: being delivered to customers.
“After 5 years of development, over 1,000 people in the project, 17 prototypes produced, 45 crash tests, 9 cars destroyed during crash tests, and thousands of other tests – today the first Nevera is regularly registered. For now in Croatia and soon in many other countries.”
-
READ ALSO: Hyundai To Cut Ties With Rimac
The photos shared by Mate Rimac reveal a turquoise-painted Nevera with Croatian license plates from the country’s capital city of Zagreb. A sequence of letters and numbers after “ZG” reference to the electric hypercar’s monumental peak torque of 2,360 Nm (1,740 lb-ft).
The Rimac Nevera is designed, engineered and handcrafted in Croatia at the company’s production facility in Sveta Nedelja just outside Zagreb. The spectacular hypercar is powered by a quad-motor electric powertrain making 1,888 horsepower (1,914 PS or 1.4 MW) and 2,360 Nm (1,740 lb-ft) of torque.
The Nevera’s performance figures are out of this world : 0-62 mph (0 100 km/h) takes 1.97 seconds, 0-186 mph (0-300 km/h) takes 9.3 seconds, the quarter-mile is covered in under 8.6 seconds, and the top speed is 256 mph (412 km/h).
The motors draw power from a 120-kWh Lithium Manganese Nickel battery pack that can take up to 500 kW of DC fast charging for a 0-80 SoC time of 19 minutes. The estimated WLTP range is 550 kilometers (341 miles) based on preliminary testing and simulations.
The Rimac Nevera costs around €2 million, which equates to $2.1 million at the current exchange rates.