October 13, 2010
Corvette Z06 Reaches 216 MPH on the Autobahn
Tampa Sports Car Examiner
In one of the most glorious and magnificent top speed films of the Corvette Z06 I have ever seen. We get to ride along with this Corvette owner as he pulls 216 miles per hour while driving downhill on the Autobahn. Who said that cars couldn’t fly? Check out more Corvette fun at Tampa Sports Car Examiner!
October 4, 2010
The Worst Sign on the Autobahn
Atomicalex
The Autobahn is often regarded as a driving enthusiast’s dream, but more and more of these signs are popping up: Stau (or Ruckstau) is the German word for traffic jam. It’s particularly bad around cities, just like in the US. I get to see this sign about three days out of five on my morning commute, and the image quality mirrors my mood about it. I’ll post a pic of the best sign next week. Hint: it’s the polar opposite.

June 8, 2010
Bugatti Veyron Funky Autobahn Run
Tampa Sports Car Examiner
What is the fastest way to funkytown? 200+ miles per hour in a screaming Veyron down the Autobahn is a great start. While jamming out to a classic musical fable of disco lore, these Veyronites push their Bugatti to the watered down limit. You could have done better! Read more at Tampa Sports Car Examiner.
March 31, 2010
WTF Was That!?
Tampa Sports Car Examiner
While driving down the Autobahn, a motorist was attacked by what appears to be a savage sock monkey flying through the air at destructive speed. But where did it come from? Is this the elusive evil sock monkey that lurks about the Autobahn? Maybe. Read more about the attack at Tampa Sports Car Examiner.
November 13, 2009
Rainy Autobahn Skyline Race
Tampa Sports Car Examiner
A meeting of twin JDM legends on the Autobahn leads to a race toward an overcast horizon in the rain. Traversing the slick conditions at over 200 miles per hour, the twin Skylines show their true colors in purest form. Read more about the rainy Autobahn Skyline race at Tampa Sports Car Examiner.
October 12, 2009
No Limits: The Autobahn
By Speedhunters
Car Culture At Large
I’m sure that most people who live in and around Germany don’t necessary think of the Autobahn as a Temple of Speed. It’s just a highway system that interconnects German cities. But for people who live further afield, a chance to drive flat out on the world’s only unrestricted freeways sounds like an impossible fantasy. And having recently spent a day driving on these famous roads, I thought I’d commit a few of these experiences to paper (as it were) before the experience completely fades from memory.
For our day of driving, we met up with Germany-based photographer Alok Paleri and local drifter Patrick Ritzman. Alok was going to help us shoot the driving sequences as Dino and I had our hands full piloting our two BMW press cars. For Patrick and Alok, driving along in a tuned up Mini with your speedometer pegged past the 240 kph marking is just another day on the road. For the rest of us it sounds like a slice of heaven! Continue reading at Speedhunters
By Rod Chong

March 25, 2008
60 Car Pileup on Autobahn
By Rob Einaudi
Editor-in-Chief
Earlier today about sixty cars smashed into each other on the Austrian Autobahn after heavy snowfall. Only one fatality has been reported so far. More at MSNBC.
February 28, 2008
Autobahn Myths Debunked
By Rich
Automotive Traveler
When I laid the foundation for Automotive Traveler in my very first rear view mirror editorial, I made no secret that much of its inspiration came from the great road trip stories I had read over the years in the great English motoring publications like Octane, evo, and most of all, Car. Things like driving a Ferrari from Buenos Aries to the tip of South America were grand adventures that quite frankly, were rarely found in our domestic titles. Those stories were the reasons why I felt it was worth shelling out $10 or more at Borders or Barnes and Noble. Read more…
Yesterday the March 2008 issue of Car appeared at my local Barnes and Noble and its a keeper, with an in-depth story on Germanys Autobahns, and how in this era of green political correctness, it’s now on the endangered species list. If youre going to experience this form of automotive nirvana, you should start making your plans now.
The story, written in a very concise way over 14 glorious pages by multi-lingual German journalist Georg Kacher (who contributes to Automobile–hopefully they’ll pick up the story so it reaches a wider audience) and stunningly photographed by Charlie Magee, is a primer for everything you need to know about the subject. The issue is a keeper, well worth its $10.25 cover price, just so you can file the issue away for future reference on this subject.
Current map of the Autobahn network
Unlike the popular misconception held by many enthusiasts, the autobahn system is not totally de-restricted. Rather, certain sections are, as the autobahns suffer the same high traffic density as our Interstates, thus as a practical concern, much of the system carries 130-KPH (81-MPH) limits. But what the article provides are Georgs 10 Best sections for unlimited speed motoring.
Sign indicating a de-restricted (no speed limits) section of the Autobahn
Because I have friends who live in Jena, in what was once East German, the DDR, he included the section of the A38 from Gttingen and Leipzig as his personal #3. Of more recent construction, after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the reunification of Germany, this is one of my favorite places to release my inner right foot when Im behind the wheel of a proper performance car. Its where you can feel as comfortable at 150-MPH as you would on I-80 in northern Nevada at 85-MPH.
2004 Corvette in Berchtesgen (with Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest in the background)
He also included for me, my most memorable section of the Autobahn system, the A5, running from Karlsruhe to Basel as #6. At the time I had a girlfriend who called Karlsruhe home and on a trip back from covering the Geneva Auto Show, I was wheeling a tweaked C5 Corvette. Between Baden Baden running north to Karlsruhe, the A5 runs flat and straight and is three lanes wide for extra safety.
I was cruising at 150-MPH and saw the unmistakable tail light of an M5 about 15 car lengths ahead. Then I saw his right directional flash and as I started to overtake the Bimmer I dropped down a cog to fifth and powered by with the heads-up display showing an indicated 170-MPH. Thinking I might not have another opportunity like this again I stayed in it with the display finally topping out at 184-MPH as I approached Karlsruhe with its 130-KPH limit. When I arrived in Karlsruhe I was drenched in sweat, so much so that when I arrived at her flat, she asked me if it was raining outside.
To prove it wasnt a fluke, the next day I returned to the scene with my girlfriend who got the obligatory speedometer shot just as the needle touched 180. Due to the fact that it was daytime (the 184-KPH run was done late at night) traffic was an impediment to an ultimate top speed run. But 180-MPH in traffic I thought was quite noteworthy, and to a degree, scary. The 184-MPH from the night before remains my personal best when it comes to driving legally on a public road, which has only whetted my appetite to attain the double ton before I hang up my Pilottis.
Hitting 180 on the A5 somewhere between Karlsruhe and Baden Baden
December 15, 2007
Veyron Hits 227MPH on Public Road!
By John
Editor
But it’s OK. Really. This isn’t like the Lambo video. The public road is the German Autobahn, so while hitting that speed at night might not be the brightest thing to do, it’s perfectly legal. Dangerous, but legal. I’ve watched this clip a few times, and I still can’t believe how cool that V16 sounds. Wow.

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