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In an obvious bid to remind the world just how good they are at everything automotive, the Japanese have clinched Guiness's coveted
"Lowest Roadworthy Car in the World" trophy. And just to rub it in, the amazingly-low rider was constructed by a high school class.
Students and teachers at the Okayama Sanyo High School in Asakuchi, Japan, call their little project the Mirai, which in Japanese means future. From the ground to the highest point on the car (not including driver), the single-seater measures 45.2 centimeters, or 17.7 inches. That's almost 6 centimeters lower than the previous record holder, the
Flatmobile.
But while the battery-powered Mirai looks like a car some of us would be willing to drive, the Flatmobile was a jet-powered, 100-mph, Batmobile replica built by Britain's
Perrywinkle Customs.
Harada Kazunari, Principal at Okayama Sanyo High School, says, "It can be frightening to drive MIRAI on a big street, especially when the speed goes over 40km/h because the road is very close to the driver's eye point. Also, you can feel afraid that you will be run over by other cars. So, we make it a rule, when we drive MIRAI on a busy street, to place a leading car to the front of MIRAI, and a guarding car in the rear."
Video evidence of the car's ability to hang with traffic as well as negotiate parking deck ramps is posted below.
Continue reading Check out the new lowest car in the Guinness Book of World Records
Check out the new lowest car in the Guinness Book of World Records originally appeared on
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