A Hennessey Venom F5 Crashed During 250 MPH High Speed Testing

Venom F5 Crash Ts
ADVERTISEMENT

From an outsider’s perspective, it might appear as though supercar companies are just flooding the market with one new product after another and not facing much in the way of challenges. In reality, though, the hurdles automakers leap over to produce such wild cars are numerous and tall.

Case in point is a crash suffered last week when a Hennessey Venom F5 lost control during a 250 mph high-speed run. The driver still managed to walk away without injury.

The car in question was running a new aerodynamic set-up according to John Hennessey himself. Owned by the automaker itself, this prototype wrecked when the car lost downforce during a 0-250 mph run. Things were evidently going well to that point as Hennessey points out that the car needed under 4,000 feet to reach that speed.

For context, that’s far less than the Koenigsegg Jesko Absolut needed for its recent 0-250-0 mph run. How? The Venom F5 in factory form makes 1,817 horsepower and the company says its track-focused Revolution Coupe makes 800 pounds of downforce at 186 mph which swells to 1,400 pounds at 249 mph. Whether this was a Revolution-style setup or something else is currently unknown.

In any case, the real work begins now to determine exactly what caused the loss in downforce. Hennessey didn’t go into any additional details. It’s unclear what type of Venom F5 this prototype most closely resembles, what sort of total damage was done, and what effect the crash had on efforts to go 300 mph this year.

https://www.instagram.com/p/C9C_9adsMdL/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

While we might not have information on the details here like the aero equipment, what went wrong exactly, and what type of Venom F5 this was, the most important detail is there. The fact that the driver escaped without injury is just one more testament to the safety equipment in cars like this.

Hennessey Venom

This isn’t the first hurdle for a brand like this and it won’t be the last. The team over at Shelby Super Cars had its own struggles during testing. While it didn’t crash, high winds and ill-positioned braking cones were enough for SSC to give up trying to reach 300 for now. Interestingly, both the Tuatara and the Venom F5 had these issues at the Kennedy Space Center.

The use of KSC is kind of interesting as this place is the Johnny Bohmer Proving Grounds when being used for this kind of testing. Bohmer is an interesting guy and a speed chaser in his own right. While the United States lacks a modified high-speed track like VW’s Ehra-Lessien facility, it does have a few shuttle landing facilities like KSC. Boehmer was the first to realize that a 15,000-foot, entirely level surface designed to land space shuttles is also perfect for high-speed runs.

John Hennessey ended his post about the crash with an appropriate quote. “As President Kennedy once said, many years ago, “We don’t do these things because they are easy. We do them because they are hard”.

Venom F5 Top Speed Testing 35

About the Author

View All My Posts

37 thoughts on “A Hennessey Venom F5 Crashed During 250 MPH High Speed Testing

  1. If someone wants to give me money for a Koenigsegg Jesko Absolut, I too can add a shitty tune and body kit, call it something else (Maybe Kingegg Yeetsco Absolute F42069?) and then claim to be one of the greatest car makers ever? Please and thank you.

  2. Just to clear up some misinformation. It was reported elsewhere that the Venom F5 is being sold on Show & Display status. It is not. S&D is reserved for imported cars, which the F5 is not, and regardless it does not appear on the S&D approved list anyway. https://www.nhtsa.gov/document/vehicles-determined-eligible-importation-show-or-display-0

    It’s interesting to note that cars on S&D still need to pass U.S. EPA certification as submitted by either the factory or an aftermarket shop, of which there are a handful who specialize in such work. The F5 has no such certificate of which I’m aware.

    Furthermore, Hennessey has never applied for, nor received a WMI from the SAE, which means he cannot even assign legal VINs to his cars. I know that F5’s are being sold with VINs that begin with HSV (Hennessey Special Vehicles), which is contrary to established convention and regulations. It’s akin to a kit car VIN, which as far as I can tell is the only way Hennessey cars can be registered in the U.S.

    (There are similar discrepancies when examining the SSC Tuatara.)

    John Hennessey really, really wants to be known for producing the world’s fastest car and establish himself among the pantheon of automotive giants. But there’s a huge difference between his work and that of Koenigsegg, Pagani, Rimac, and Bugatti.

    It’s probably me just being excessively pedantic and in the end the internet won’t care, it just bothers me when people cut corners the others have had to figure out how to negotiate properly, to achieve the same accolades.

  3. I’m really glad the driver walked away, otherwise John Hennessey would be stealing his organs to pay for the engine he stole from a customer’s Corvette to build the F5.

  4. When I see the Venom F5, all I can think is it’s a pretty skin wrapped around the most basic drivetrain and chassis setup. I seriously doubt they have any real investment beyond basic wind tunnel and off-the-shelf traction control. It’s a pretty, dumb missile.

    Whereas I expect pretty much everything in the Koenigsegg to be bleeding edge and actually works WELL.

    1. This. I see an aging LMP2 platform with an NHRA street-spec LS and some coachwork, each designed by a completely different team with a different goal.

  5. For context, that’s far less than the Koenigsegg Jesko Absolut needed for its recent 0-250-0 mph run. How?

    Because Hennessey can say the performance is whatever he wants it to be since he knows it doesn’t matter whether his not-really-street-legal car can actually do it.

  6. I love ripping on JH and Hennessey et al, but the important bit is the driver walked away. Very good thing they didn’t kill a man.

  7. John Hennessey was last seen tip-toeing away from the crash site with a sack full of parts to resell to customers while laughing maniacally.

  8. 1400lb of downforce doesn’t sound like a lot for what they’re doing. The McMurtry Speirling electric track car produces 4400lb and weighs 2200lb. Even a pretty basic early 2000s F3 car produces around 1400lb of downforce, but at more like 130mph. UK Hillclimb single seaters have an upside down speed (ie when downforce = mass) of around 90mph.

    1. In fear of stating the obvious, and a fair bit of oversimplification, downforce is paid for with drag, and drag robs you of top speed. An F1 car pays an awful lot for all that downforce, but collects a lot of interest with insane cornering speeds.

  9. Cool – you’re full(er) time now!

    But now it does seem that 1) you’re not in fact the frontman of Weezer as I’d wondered before and 2) a naming convention showdown with SWG may be coming.

  10. We don’t do these things because they’re easy, we do them so we can sell ridiculous cars to people with obscene amounts of money.

      1. The amount of favorable press the guy has gotten for the last 30 years compared to his actual accomplishments and proven track record screwing over customers boggles the mind.

        1. He delivers pre-written articles to bloggers under pressure to produce in volume.

          If he delivered cars and parts as well as he delivered self-promotion, I wouldn’t have a problem.

          John Hennessey is a thief.

Leave a Reply