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WATCH: Inside Koenigsegg’s Record-Setting Lego Technic Hypercar

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A Lego Car That Was Built To Go Fast

Needless to say, Lego cars aren’t exactly built for speed. We’ve seen life-sized F1 replicas cruise around for the cameras, but nobody actually expects these plastic bricks to go hunting for speed records.

But Koenigsegg clearly missed that memo. Recently, the Swedish speed freaks joined forces with Lego Technic to whip up a full-size Sadair's Spear – their latest track weapon. But this wasn’t just about nailing the wild looks. The mission is to actually prove that a life-sized Lego car could pull off something no other brick-mobile had dared to try.

And the result was a record-smashing run at Goodwood, with Koenigsegg’s own Markus Lundh sending the Lego beast downhill to a verified 111 km/h (that’s 69 mph for the rest of us). For context, the Lego McLaren P1 topped out at about 40 mph, and the Bugatti Chiron replica barely crawled past 12 mph. This one left them all in the dust.

More Than Just Plastic Bricks

Sure, the body is a wild patchwork of 327,906 Lego Technic pieces, but underneath, things get a lot more serious than you’d ever guess from a pile of plastic bricks.

This isn’t just a Lego shell slapped on some wheels. Underneath, there’s a custom metal chassis, a legit FIA roll cage, real Koenigsegg carbon-fiber wheels shod in Pirellis, proper racing brakes, and working suspension. They even copied Koenigsegg’s wild Triplex setup. Power comes from a small electric motor at the rear, and the whole thing tips the scales at a hefty 1,800 kg – almost 4,000 pounds of brick-built madness.

Here’s the kicker: not a single Lego panel on the outside is glued. Christian von Koenigsegg himself pointed out that the rear wing is a real airfoil, built only from Lego. The design crew spent nearly 10,000 hours on this thing – over seven months of snapping bricks together.

Forget computers and robots – the team hand-built every single exterior panel. That’s over 2,000 panels, each packed with dozens of Lego bits, all painstakingly arranged to mimic the real Sadair's Spear.

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Lego

One Repair Stop Before The Record

Of course, things didn’t go off without a hitch. On the first downhill blast at Goodwood, the Lego diffuser decided to make a break for it. The team hustled the car back to the paddock for a pit stop, swapping out Lego pieces by hand and checking temps – just like a real race crew – before sending it back out for round two.

Second time’s the charm. Lundh floored the brick-built hypercar to 111 km/h, and even he was impressed by how planted it felt and how well the brakes worked, considering the whole thing is basically a rolling Lego sculpture.

For those who want a version that fits inside the house instead of a race paddock, Lego Technic also unveiled a 1:8-scale Sadair's Spear. The 4,104-piece set includes working Ghost Mode, a nine-speed sequential transmission, functional steering, a removable roof, and a detailed V8 engine. It goes on Lego Insiders Early Access beginning July 1, before a wider release on July 4, carrying a price tag of $449.99.

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Lego

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