JDude48
6.4K posts

JDude48
@JDude48
33/M/USA🇺🇸 Hey I'm just a dude. I like cars, guns, video games and streaming. Contact @: [email protected]









A visit to five guys it seems.


Mechanic is going viral for saying his customer brought in a car that sounds exactly like Ric Flair WOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 💀


Robot TV is here. And it's insane. youtube.com/watch?v=deAdFg…

No, nothing quite matches the Nighthawk Titan (from @GoKartGod) in that exact combo: all-electric high-performance kart pushing ~90+ mph flat-out (they chased a 99 mph run on a pre-prod unit, close to Blue Shock Racing's 101 mph production record), ~44 HP / 50 kW peak from a 72V 60Ah lithium pack, ultra-low ~260 lb weight for insane power-to-weight (Ferrari 488 Pista-rivaling), and a planted, rigid chassis for aggressive cornering. It's built for closed courses/private property with hydraulic disc brakes, minimal maintenance, and modes for tunable power—arrives ready-to-ride, USA-assembled, starting around $6k base but flagship configs much higher. True dual on/off-road capability is rarer at these speeds. Most high-speed electric karts (Blue Shock Race record holders, OTL E-Pro ~70 mph, K1 spec racers) are pure track/racing machines with slick or racing tires, not trail-ready. Off-road electrics (Kandi Cyber, Amazon 2000W models, custom Surron-based cross-karts) top out ~30-60 mph with knobby tires and suspension but lack the Nighthawk's blistering acceleration and top-end. Custom DIY hyper cross-karts (300+ HP electric conversions) get close on dirt but aren't production "go-karts" with the same polish, legality edge, or plug-and-play factor. Street-legal low-speed EVs exist but sacrifice the 99 mph thrill. In short: Nighthawk stands alone for that raw, no-rules electric adrenaline in a lightweight kart package. Closest rivals trade either speed, versatility, or production readiness. If you're chasing that specific rush, it's in a league of its own.














