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Experience the raw V8 power of the legendary BMW E39 M5 as we unleash it on the German Autobahn! In this video, we test the ...
MATIC as it unleashes full V8 biturbo power on the German Autobahn, where speed has no limits. Captured from the POV driver's ...
The hybrid supercar's factory-claimed performance is a top speed in excess of 218 mph and a 0-62 mph time of 2.5 seconds; ...
The autobahn began during the darkest chapter in German history. Its first 14-mile section opened on May 19, 1935, connecting Frankfurt to the nearby city of Darmstadt.
The autobahn is part and parcel of national mythology in Germany. But the climate crisis is causing a rethink of this no-speed-limit highway system, writes Paul Hockenos.
KUNZE: The autobahn is a collective piece of architecture. It's connected to an idea of Volksgemeinschaft. That was the Nazi idea that, like, all Germans are a somewhat harmonious nation.
The autobahn is in many ways the distilled essence of this formula; not only does it offer the basic allure of automotive freedom, but it tickles our dormant fantasies about capitalistic meritocracy.
A decade ago I lapped Germany by autobahn in a 577-hp Mercedes-AMG S63, traveling as fast as was legally possible at almost every point. Over 1400 miles I averaged a less-than-stellar 59 mph.