Road & Track (USA)

JOIN ROAD & TRACK EDITORS FOR THE SECOND ANNUAL RALLY THROUGH WINE COUNTRY!

TECHNOLOGY IS OFTEN BABY STEPS. LET’S CELEBRATE THE GIANT LEAPS.

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YOU’LL ENJOY...

+ Scenic group drives curated by editors winding through Northern California.

+ Track day at Sonoma Raceway for autocross and hot laps.

+ Stays at luxury resorts in Napa Valley and Sonoma Valley.

+ Unforgetta­ble culinary and cocktail experience­s.

+ Tastings at local vineyards and tours of private car collection­s.

+ Access to Road & Track editors and legendary special guests.

Anyone who follows the curving arc of technology knows a little about Moore’s law. In its simplest form, this oft-cited doctrine (not a “law” by any standard), named after semiconduc­tor maker and Intel co-founder Gordon Moore, states that the power of the microchip will increase by about 40 percent every two years. This, in essence, is the driving force behind every investment made in Silicon Valley: Growth is good; growth is inevitable. Let’s all get rich.

Even Moore knows this type of growth cannot be sustained forever. But we’re acclimatiz­ed to expect it—in iphones, with their gradual march to complete domination; in internet-connected appliances in our kitchens. And of course, in our cars, which seem to get smarter, faster, and more sophistica­ted with each successive generation. The first electric cigarette lighter a century ago has gradually led us to the dizzying interface of huge finger-grease-smeared 14-inch dash screens.

But the really interestin­g aspects of technology are the automotive moonshots, the big leaps forward. These are what interest us in the Breakthrou­gh issue, Vol. 14. Inspired by another of our nerd loves, President Kennedy’s call to spend what amounted to 2.5 percent of the GDP to bring man to the moon in the Apollo program, Road & Track went looking for the true breakthrou­ghs pushing designers to cross a sort of technologi­cal rubicon— and the noble attempts that fell short.

Drivers are being asked to go electric, but that’s not an incrementa­l move. The closer you get to the transforma­tion, the more critical the big breakthrou­gh becomes. We can build all the top-shelf EVS we want, but without a reliable charging infrastruc­ture, what’s the point? Ask anyone who owned a Model S in Florida when Hurricane Ian bricked their EV what it feels like to live without juice. There are promises to add a half million chargers in the U.S., but these machines are prone to failure at troublingl­y high rates.

That’s why, despite all the reasons to dislike Elon Musk and his cheap hucksteris­m, we really have to give him credit for the Supercharg­er network, Tesla’s signature innovation. It works, it’s ubiquitous, and it will be studied as a brilliant marriage of innovation and the power of a well-integrated vertical company. Lawrence Ulrich investigat­es in “Elon Musk’s Biggest Coup Ain’t Rockets” (page 062).

We look at breakthrou­ghs from many angles. Editor-at-large A.J. Baime talked to five racing drivers about defining moments in their careers (page 072). One of our newest contributi­ng editors, Mike Spinelli, watched the fan car in person this year at Goodwood—and, like everyone else in attendance, was stunned by the uncanny speeds it reached. So for this issue, he went deep on vacuum cars over the years and why this radical tech never caught on (page 050).

Not every breakthrou­gh lands a man on the moon, but car enthusiast­s desire heroic acts and big thinking. Leave the slow march to the iphone.

MIKE GUY

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

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 ?? ?? When the astronauts of Apollo 11 set foot on the moon in one of humankind’s biggest technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs, they couldn’t have predicted just how monumental­ly Moon Boots would upend the snow-footwear market of the Eighties.
When the astronauts of Apollo 11 set foot on the moon in one of humankind’s biggest technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs, they couldn’t have predicted just how monumental­ly Moon Boots would upend the snow-footwear market of the Eighties.
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