Ludhiana, February 02, 2023 (News Team): ŠKODA has set two official world ice drift records with the ENYAQ RSiV SUV, the brand’s second all-electric sporting model. The records for the ’Longest Continuous Vehicle Drift on Ice’ and the ‘Longest Continuous Vehicle Drift on Ice (electric car)’, have been verified by GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS. They were set by motoring journalist Richard Meadenon a circular track measuring 188.496m in circumference on the frozen Stortjärnen lake near Östersund, Sweden, on Thursday 19 January 2023.
The first record broken by ŠKODA on the Stortjärnen lake was for the Longest Continuous Vehicle Drift on Ice. Driving the recently launched ŠKODAENYAQ RS iV SUV, Richard Meaden set a new officially-verified record by holding the car in a controlled slide for more than 15 minutes and 7.351 km. Meaden’s drift beat the previous record of 6.231 km, set in China in 2022. In breaking the first record, Meaden and the ŠKODAENYAQ RSiV SUV set a second record for the ‘Longest Continuous Vehicle Drift on Ice (electric car)’.
With a GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS adjudicator present and international drifting judge David Kalas as a witness, ŠKODA set the record on the brand’s fourth day on location following numerous practice runs with different tyre combinations. A total of 18 hours of drifting were put in across the full five days in sub-zero temperatures to achieve the perfect drift.
The ENYAQ RS iV SUV held its own under demanding conditions and powered round the drift circle 39 times during the 15 minutes and 58 seconds of its record-breaking run. It achieved a top speed of 48.69 km/h and was travelling at 31.64 km/h at its slowest point.
The standard production car used to complete the record was fitted with20-inch alloy wheels. The Däckproffsen 245/35-R20 ‘event tyres’ (sourced from Michelin) on the front had 600 5 mm studs, enabling an even better traction and steering input onthe frozen grip-less surface; whilst the Nokian Hakkapelitta 255/45-R20 tyres fitted on the rear wheels had 300 2 mm studs across the tyre surface, which proved the ideal combination on the 40 cm deep ice surface.
The setting of two new GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS titles returns ŠKODA, the new record-holder Richard Meaden and the RS nameplate to the record books. In 2011, the British driver set a new Southern Californian Timing Association (SCTA) Land Speed Record for a 2.0-litre forced induction production car of 227.080 mph. Driving a ŠKODAUK-built Octavia RS, the record was set at the legendary Bonneville Salt Flats in the USA.
Meaden said of the triumph: “Being back behind the wheel of another record-breaking ŠKODA is pretty special, going from the Bonneville Salt Flats of the USA to a frozen lake in Scandinavia – setting two different records in two very different cars. I’m incredibly proud to be part of a record-breaking team again 12 years on – who would have thought we’d be here drifting an electric car on ice? It shows just how much the automotive world is changing, and how exciting it is too.”
The ENYAQ RS iV features sports suspension 15 mm lower at the front over the standard ENYAQ iV, and 10 mm lower at the rear. Furthermore, progressive steering and Drive Mode Select as well as optional Dynamic Chassis Control for an adaptive damping system enable even better traction. Further enhancements include characteristic RS sports bumpers, gloss black exterior detailing, as well as sports seats with black leather upholstery extended to the steering wheel and dashboard trim.
The ENYAQ RS iV SUV is the second all-electric ŠKODA to bear the RS badge, offering 299PS and 0-100 km/h in just 6.5 seconds from its 82kWh (77kWh net) battery and twin electric motors. With one on each axle, the ENYAQ RS iV produces 460Nm of torque, with instant acceleration and powerful performance. The vehicle can be fast charged at speeds of 135 kW, meaning an 80% charge can be achieved in as little as 36 minutes.