See it: Electric SUV drifts 4.6 miles on ice for new record
Distance took nearly 16 minutes to cover
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Skoda gets the drift.
The Volkswagen-owned Czech automaker has claimed the Guinness record for longest continuous drift on ice with one of its electric SUVs.
The feat was accomplished on a circular track built on a frozen lake in Sweden.
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The Skoda Enyaq iV vRS is a compact electric SUV built on the same platform as the Volkswagen ID.4 and Audi Q4 e-tron that are sold in the U.S.
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The performance-oriented model features an all-wheel-drive system with 302 horsepower.
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The car was driven by British automotive journalist Richard Meaden, who, after several attempts, was able to cover 4.6 miles without breaking the drift.
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Meaden held the car in the drift for 39 laps of the 188.5-meter track, which took 15 minutes and 58 seconds at an average speed of 30 mph.
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Guinness marked it down for two records, the longest continuous drift on ice and the longest continuous drift on ice in an electric vehicle.
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However, it was far short of the longest drift ever.
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That record is held by a team from BMW, which used an M5 sedan to drift for 232.5 miles on a wet skidpad in 2018.
The stunt required a second car to drift alongside it and refuel it midway through the attempt, which earned a second record for longest twin drift at 49.25 miles.