Over 0–100 km/h, Model S Long Range and Model S Long Range are neck and neck (3,21 s vs 3,29 s, no significant gap).
Performance comparison
Simulated drag race 0 → 1,000 m in real time. Synchronised speed counters and stopwatch. Physics calibration on 7 manufacturer measurements.
Simulation
Calibration
Physics model calibrated on manufacturer splits. The limited top speed is not the real aerodynamic top speed of the vehicles.
| Model S Long Range | Model S Long Range | |
|---|---|---|
| 0–100 km/h | 3,29 s | 3,21 s+0,08 s |
| 400 m standing start | 11,12 s | 11,02 s+0,10 s |
| 1,000 m standing start | 20,17 s | 20,06 s+0,11 s |
| Top speed (electronically limited) | 250 km/h | 250 km/h |
| Power-to-weight ratio | 3,09 kg/hp | 3,09 kg/hp |
Standing-start drag race, calibrated on manufacturer splits. The gap shows at each stage.
Simulated performance at each stage. Winner in green.
| Palier | Model S Long Range | Model S Long Range |
|---|---|---|
| 0–30 km/h | 0,94 s | 0,94 s |
| 0–50 km/h | 1,56 s | 1,56 s |
| 0–80 km/h | 2,51 s | 2,51 stight gap |
| 0–100 km/h | 3,29 s | 3,21 stight gap |
| 0–120 km/h | 4,25 s | 4,11 stight gap |
| 0–160 km/h | 6,77 s | 6,58 s |
| 0–200 km/h | 10,23 s | 10,02 s |
| 400 m standing start | 11,12 s | 11,02 stight gap |
| 1,000 m standing start | 20,17 s | 20,06 stight gap |
| Top speed limited | 250 km/h | 250 km/h |
Manufacturer technical specifications. The power-to-weight ratio is the key physical factor in a drag race.
| Characteristic | Value | Detail |
|---|---|---|
| Power | 670 hp | Dual Permanent Magnet Synchronous Motor |
| Torque | 908 Nm | |
| Weight | 2 069 kg | manufacturer kerb weight |
| Drivetrain | Integrale (AWD) | |
| Gearbox | Single-speed fixed gear |
| Characteristic | Value | Detail |
|---|---|---|
| Power | 670 hp | Dual Permanent Magnet Synchronous Motor |
| Torque | 908 Nm | |
| Weight | 2 069 kg | manufacturer kerb weight |
| Drivetrain | Integrale (AWD) | |
| Gearbox | Single-speed fixed gear |
Off the line, the Model S Long Range hits 100 km/h in 3.22 s versus 3.29 s for the Model S Long Range. The 0.08 s gap is negligible: both vehicles are neck and neck.
At 200 metres, the Model S Long Range is doing 169 km/h against 167 km/h for the Model S Long Range. The gap is 0.07 s. The gap remains stable from the start.
At 400 metres standing start, the Model S Long Range crosses the line in 11.02 s versus 11.11 s. The 0.10 s gap represents roughly 6 m of track - barely a car length.
Past 400 metres, nothing changes. Same ceiling, same acceleration, same trajectory - both rivals run in formation to the line. The 0.12 s gap at 1,000 metres confirms what the specs already suggested: on track, they’re interchangeable. The real contest happens elsewhere - range, comfort, charging network reliability.
Both rivals share the same electronic speed cap: the Model S Long Range and the Model S Long Range are governed to 249 (i.e. 155 mph - industry threshold) km/h. At that speed, standard-fit tyres approach their safety threshold - an industrial ceiling common to most electric vehicles in this segment. Neither car shows its true aerodynamic potential in this duel.
With two electric powertrains, the difference comes down to power-to-weight ratio (3.09 kg/hp vs 3.09 kg/hp) and transmission (Automatic vs Automatic).
In European road use (130 km/h max), both vehicles reach the legal speed limit in under 4.81 seconds. The 0.08 s difference in 0 to 100 km/h is mostly felt in motorway merging and overtaking.
Swap one of the two models to explore an equivalent duel in the same segment.
Over 0–100 km/h, Model S Long Range and Model S Long Range are neck and neck (3,21 s vs 3,29 s, no significant gap).
Model S Long Range goes from 0 to 100 km/h in 3,29 seconds (calibrated simulation).
Model S Long Range: 670 hp, ratio 3,09 kg/hp. Model S Long Range: 670 hp, ratio 3,09 kg/hp.
Model S Long Range: 250 km/h. Model S Long Range: 250 km/h.