The production version of the McMurtry Spéirling PURE has been revealed as a candidate for the ultimate track weapon, with the British startup claiming its single-seat, track-only electric vehicle (EV) delivers Formula 1-rivalling performance in a package designed to be far easier for owners to use.

After almost a decade of development, McMurtry says the customer-specification Spéirling PURE features 95 per cent new components compared with the prototypes that have broken records at the Goodwood Festival of Speed and Top Gear test track.

To put the McMurtry’s performance into perspective, its 39.08-second Goodwood hillclimb record is 2.5 seconds quicker than the fastest time set by a Formula 1 car – driven by Nick Heidfeld – and more than eight seconds faster than the quickest road-legal car, the $9 million track-focused Koenigsegg Sadair’s Spear.

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Priced from £995,000 (A$1,917,250) before taxes and options, the car’s patented fan-assisted downforce system – which can generate up to 2000kg of downforce from a standstill – is claimed to allow the rear-wheel drive EV to corner and brake at up to 3g.

Power comes from twin electric motors producing 1000bhp (746kW), supplied by a new 100kWh battery pack using Molicel cells. McMurtry claims a 0-60mph (0-97km/h) sprint time of just 1.55 seconds and a top speed of 305km/h.

Unlike the prototype, which used a 60kWh battery, the production car’s larger battery is designed to increase running time while supporting faster charging and greater regenerative braking. McMurtry hasn’t confirmed driving range or DC fast-charging figures, but states the EV can travel 40 to 50km at LMP2 (Le Mans race car) pace.

McMurtry has also redesigned the chassis around the bigger battery pack, stretching the wheelbase by 200mm while increasing cabin space and improving visibility.