Summary of "The Most Insane BeamNG Speed Record"
The Most Insane BeamNG Speed Record — Summary
Storyline / video arc
- The creator attempts to break top-speed records in BeamNG.drive using the stock HT55 (a dump truck) and progressively upgrades/mods it until it reaches extreme speeds.
- The run begins with the stock truck (~700 hp, ~40 tons) topping out around the high 70s km/h. The creator then:
- removes weight (bed, nonessential components),
- upgrades turbos and engine parts,
- installs nitrous,
- uses a community mod for drivetrain/final-drive improvements,
- and finally creates powerful custom engines.
- The video alternates between methodical tuning (weight, gear ratios, final drive) and chaotic high-power tests that produce wheelspin, wheelies, engine explosions, and terrifying high-speed visuals of a 30-ton dump truck.
Key speed milestones (approximate)
- Stock HT55: ~76–78 km/h
- Removing bed and further weight reduction: up to ~79 km/h
- Max turbo (engine ~1,093 hp): ~80 km/h
- Nitrous added (power ~2,400 hp): nitrous bursts to ~120–126 km/h
- Heavy stripping (brakes, steering, hydraulics, emptied tank) dropping weight to ~23.3 t: ~126 km/h (with nitrous peaks)
- Community mod (final drive, engine parts, manual transmission): >130 km/h without nitrous; ~148 km/h with nitrous
- Added engine upgrades (~4,000+ hp) and longer final drive: ~170–190 km/h; nitrous pushing past ~200 km/h (truck ~30 t)
- Custom modded engines:
- ~28,500 hp: speeds climb to ~250–315+ km/h; nitrous/final-drive changes push past ~330 km/h
- Doubling RPM: truck breaks 400 km/h (400–426 km/h)
- ~67,000 hp attempt: massive wheelspin and eventual engine explosion
- Improved traction and clutch-dump technique: stable runs reaching ~500 km/h
- “Bob” engine (~100,000 hp): launches truck into ~600 km/h territory with extreme wheelies and destruction
Strategies, techniques, and tips
- Weight reduction
- Remove the bed and all nonessential components (brakes, air filters, hydraulics, emptied fuel tank) to reduce mass and improve acceleration.
- Power upgrades
- Max out turbochargers and fit engine performance parts before addressing gearing.
- Add nitrous for temporary, large power boosts during top-speed runs.
- Final drive / gearing
- The stock final drive is often a bottleneck; lengthening/optimizing final-drive ratios is required for higher top speeds.
- Use a manual or custom transmission to stay in the power band more effectively.
- Nitrous usage technique
- Reach redline (or the engine’s peak revs) first, then engage nitrous for the biggest top-speed jump.
- Nitrous can damage turbos or blow engines if misused.
- Traction management
- Wheelspin limits how much power is usable—improve tire grip or use clutch-dump techniques to hook up power.
- Locking differentials can help maintain straight-line traction.
- Cautionary notes
Extremely high power and altered RPM/torque curves can cause engine explosions, wheelies, uncontrollable spin, or other instability. Mods can bypass in-game limits but may break realism or stability—proceed with caution and adjust throttle/gear ratios carefully.
Step-by-step (condensed approach used in the video)
- Start with the stock truck and measure baseline top speed.
- Iteratively:
- Remove weight (bed, tank, nonessentials).
- Upgrade turbo and engine components.
- Add and test nitrous (use bursts at redline).
- If limited by gearing, install a final-drive mod or switch to a manual/custom transmission.
- Improve tires/traction when wheelspin becomes dominant.
- For absolute extremes, create or install custom high-power engines and carefully tune RPM/torque curves.
- Test frequently, watch for wheelspin and engine stress, and adjust gearing or traction accordingly.
Gameplay / entertainment takeaways
- The video mixes technical tuning guidance with spectacle—serious experimentation plus comedic, destructive outcomes.
- Visuals of a 30-ton dump truck exceeding 200 km/h (and later several hundred km/h) are striking and often terrifying.
- The creator emphasizes incremental testing and learning the vehicle and game mechanics before applying extreme mods.
Gamers / sources featured
- Muya — video creator (references prior “T-Series” video and iterations of his persona)
- An unnamed modder — community mod used for final drive and engine parts (author not specified)
- Game: BeamNG.drive (implied by context)
Category
Gaming
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