The VW ID R Corners So Hard You'll Pass Out At The Wheel

The slick-shod Volkswagen ID R has been driven by a journalist from Top Gear magazine, and it corners so hard that he briefly passed out...
The VW ID R Corners So Hard You'll Pass Out At The Wheel

Volkswagen’s ID R generates enough cornering grip to make you pass out at the wheel, according to a journalist who recently took the wheel.

Top Gear journalist Ollie Marriage has become just the third person in the world – and the first outside Volkswagen – to drive the prototype that smashed the Pikes Peak hill-climb record recently, and it wasn’t solely about the joy of accelerative organ reorganisation.

Remote video URL

The ID R’s epic aero kit produces more than the car’s weight in downforce, so it’s always going to corner pretty briskly.

Recounting his efforts in exploring the phenomenal 670bhp car’s performance on a large, open and well-surfaced space with nothing to hit but traffic cones, Marriage explains in a new feature how had been building up his corner speed before trying something at close to the 137mph limited top speed. He writes:

“There’s one bend out here I can take at near max speed, and because I can, I just shut off the self-preservation voices in my head and turn-in hard. And the car simply… turns. Without delay or scrub or slip. My head, body and internal organs follow the laws of centrifugal force.

“The split second after turn-in is alarming, terrifying even, but then, because the corner is long, my brain does something funny. It relaxes. It tells me all’s fine and I should take some time out, kick back, have a nap.

“And then, as I straighten up, my brain snaps back to attention, synapses whirr and I wake up gasping, as if I’d had a nightmare and sat bolt upright in bed. It’s weird.

“When I pull over for a rest I ask Dieter Depping, the car’s test driver (and the only bloke besides Romain and I ever to have driven the car) what’s going on. He informs me with a smile that what I’m experiencing is G-loc – loss of consciousness through g-force. That’s the kind of cornering speeds the ID R is capable of delivering. It’s mad.”

The VW ID R Corners So Hard You'll Pass Out At The Wheel

Probably not something to try on public roads, then. Or even a normal racetrack, for that matter. You can read the full ID R first drive report on the Top Gear website.

Comments

Anonymous

now we just need a production version of this

10/29/2018 - 11:28 |
24 | 0
GTRTURTLE 🔰 🐢(Oo \ S K Y L I N E / oO) (Koen

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

This could end up being the new mustang joke as all the rich blokes who don’t have the driving expertise crash and probably die.

10/29/2018 - 11:32 |
10 | 0
Matt Kimberley

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Sadly, I think that’s about as likely as me beating Lewis Hamilton to next year’s F1 title.

10/29/2018 - 11:35 |
60 | 0
TheDriver 1

“I’m just off to the shops, I’ll be back in a bit”

10/29/2018 - 11:34 |
268 | 0

Yeah you need the G-Suit to survive in that car!

10/29/2018 - 13:03 |
14 | 0
Olivier (CT's grammar commie)

In reply to by TheDriver 1

A suit like this would be completely useless in a car like that. Fighter pilots generally experience most of the time positive Gs (the ones that push you into your seat, where your blood gets drawn to your legs and away of the head) and negative Gs from time to time (the ones where it’s the opposite and where blood gets drawn to the head), while a car will make you experience horizontal Gs. A G-suit only helps for positive Gs, as it presses on your legs and abdomen to avoid getting blood to the legs and keep it in the higher parts of the body. Since horizontal Gs don’t pull blood away from the head to send it to the legs, it’s useless.

10/30/2018 - 23:21 |
4 | 0
Jared G.

Ok, first off, thats impressive, and second, centrifugal force isn’t a thing. I think he meant centripetal force

10/29/2018 - 13:25 |
0 | 12

While centrifugal force doesn’t really exist, the centripetal force isn’t the correct word either. As centripetal force is the force in circular motion that keeps an object on a circular path. So in the case of a car the frictional forces between the tyres and the ground.

10/29/2018 - 17:43 |
8 | 0

People always mistake inertia as centrifugal force
So I think he meant inertia

10/30/2018 - 10:51 |
0 | 0

People always mistake inertia as centrifugal force
So I think he meant inertia

10/30/2018 - 10:51 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Now we need to see IDR vs 919 Evo

10/29/2018 - 13:27 |
34 | 0
Anonymous

Passes out like hamster driving a Rimac

10/29/2018 - 14:50 |
8 | 2
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Too soon, man. Lol.

10/29/2018 - 19:08 |
0 | 0
TheMindGarage

Now imagine one of these with more power (say a Rimac drivetrain) on the Nurburgring. 4:30?!?

10/29/2018 - 21:40 |
0 | 0

It would first need much bigger batteries to finish the required amount of laps

10/30/2018 - 02:40 |
2 | 0
AAA Insurance

I think that has less to do with hypoxia and more to do with disorientation. Relatively low horizontal G-force shouldn’t cause you to pass out.

10/29/2018 - 21:43 |
6 | 0
Anonymous

Vertical Gs make you pass out, not horizontal… sooo what happened?

10/29/2018 - 23:01 |
4 | 2
TheMindGarage

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Horizontal can make you pass out too. Having all the blood move to one side of your body isn’t generally nice.

10/29/2018 - 23:37 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

Dang I thought cornering hard in Small Chevy makes you pass out

10/29/2018 - 23:33 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

OMG!! ID R might be faster than a Formula 1 car when cornering!!!

10/30/2018 - 10:42 |
2 | 2

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