Skip to main content

There’s a new ‘Cannonball Run’ record for driving across the USA

Arne Toman

You’ve probably seen the movie, Cannonball Run, a star-studded romp across the country with Burt Reynolds and friends. It was based on a very real event: Back in 1971, automotive legends Brock Yates and Steve Smith took off in a 1971 Dodge Custom Sportsman van called the “Moon Trash II” in a celebration of the United States Interstate system and as a protest to the restrictive speed limits on our highways. That first run took 35 hours and 54 minutes.

Needless to say, others would follow.

Arne Toman

This week, Arne Toman, Doug Tabutt, and Berkeley Chadwick left New York in their customized 2015 Mercedes Benz E63 AMG at 12:57 a.m. on November 10, and arrived in Redondo Beach, California 27 hours and 25 minutes later, shattering the prevailing Cannonball record by more than two hours, according to Road & Track. If ever there was a cult following for a speed record that’s highly dangerous and can’t be obtained legally, this is it.

Recommended Videos

“We planned every detail of the run including building a spreadsheet which we planned the exact times we passed through more populated areas in order to make sure we went through either at night or in low traffic times,” Toman told Digital Trends.

The trio left the Red Ball Garage on the east side of Manhattan and aimed the Mercedes west, opting for a northern route using I-80 through Nebraska, then veering southwest on I-76 down to Denver, I-70, over the Rockies and through the middle of Utah, and then south on I-15 through Las Vegas and across the Mojave Desert, then dropping into the maze that is Los Angeles to finish at the Portofino Inn in Redondo Beach. All that in a little more than 27 hours. To break it down, that’s an average of 103 miles per hour, including fuel stops, which totaled a mere 22-1/2 minutes.

Arne Toman
Arne Toman

The Mercedes was highly modified, with a reported 700 horsepower delivered to the wheels. Mods included upgraded turbos, down-pipes, intercoolers, and intake. An array of electronics ranged from aircraft avoidance systems to detect state patrol aircraft, several radar detectors, taillight and headlight kill switches, several GPS systems to verify the record run, and much, much more.

We broke the Cannonball Record

These three men can claim a place in Cannonball history next to Dan Gurney — who won the second Cannonball in a Ferrari Daytona — and alongside of Brock Yates, who founded the event. “I didn’t want to break the record by minutes,” Toman reported to Road & Track, adding that “I didn’t want anyone else trying and I didn’t want to do it again.”

John Elkin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Worked for many off road and rally and sports car publications throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Decided to go look for a…
Tesla and Elon Musk sued over use of AI image at Cybercab event
tesla and spacex CEO elon musk stylized image

Tesla’s recent We, Robot presentation has run into trouble, with one of the production companies behind Blade Runner 2049 suing Tesla and its CEO, Elon Musk, for alleged copyright infringement.

Tesla used the glitzy October 10 event to unveil its Cybercab and Robovan, and also to showcase the latest version of its Optimus humanoid robot.

Read more
Qualcomm wants to power your next car with the Snapdragon Cockpit and Ride Elite platforms
Qualcomm Snapdragon Cockpit Elite and Ride Elite automotive platforms

It’s been a big year for Qualcomm. Alongside its massive launch into laptop chips through the Snapdragon X Elite series, Qualcomm is now entering the automotive space. The company has announced the new Qualcomm Snapdragon Cockpit Elite and Snapdragon Ride Elite platforms at its annual Snapdragon Summit, which it flew me out to attend.

The two platforms are designed for different purposes, and can be used togetheror separately. The Snapdragon Cockpit Elite is built for in-vehicle infotainment systems and services, while the Snapdragon Ride Elite is built to power autonomous vehicle systems, including all the cameras and sensors that go into those systems.

Read more
Scout Traveler and Scout Terra forge a new path for EVs
Scout Traveler and Scout Terra.

Electric vehicles are inseparable from newness, whether it’s new tech, new designs, or new companies like Rivian, Lucid, and Tesla. But the Volkswagen Group’s new EV-only brand also relies heavily on the past.

Unveiled Thursday, the Scout Traveler electric SUV and Scout Terra electric pickup truck are modern interpretations of the classic International Harvester Scout. Manufactured from 1961 to 1980, the original Scout helped popularize the idea of the rugged, off-road-capable utility vehicle, setting the stage for modern SUVs.

Read more