When Autobahn comes to mind, I can’t help
but reference Michael Jackson’s hit “Speed Demon, “ a fast-paced song about the
repercussions of speeding down an infinite highway. THAT is how I picture the Autobahn. Millions of people have heard references to
the famed speedway, but what exactly is it?
Is it a motorway system that lasts an eternity without a speed limit or
a racetrack for the fastest cars in the world?
In today’s blog, we break down WHAT the Autobahn is and how you can see
it for yourself.
The Autobahn, by definition, is a
superhighway or expressway in Germany that stands as one of the last places on
earth where you can drive as fast as you want.
The highway is in no means a free-for-all, with some sections of the
autobahn having speed limits, though great stretches still remain
unrestricted.
The Autobahn national highway system
stretches over 6,800 miles and is designed to connect all of Germany’s major
metropolitan areas. The presumption is
that there are unlimited speeds on the entire Autobahn, but many heavily
trafficked sections of the freeway have speed limits in the 50 to 75 mph range.
The suggested speed for the unlimited sections is 81 mph, though various
speedsters and adrenaline seekers routinely break the fold.
So, you must be wondering HOW fast someone
has ventured into the record books.
Well, in 1938, driver Rudolf Caracciola set an autobahn speed record of
268.8 mph. WOW.
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