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The Ten Most Expensive Vehicles To Operate
The Ten Most Expensive Vehicles To Operate-April 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:14:30

From supercars to supercarriers, when it comes to burning dollars faster than gasoline, these ten vehicles are the absolute worst.

Bugatti ownership has , be that the latest Veyron Vitesse . Spending around 36 cents on gas with a light right foot doesn't sound terrible, but the costs rise higher the more you use it, as explains:

The Bugatti Veyron is all about big. Big horsepower, big price tag. That's kind of the whole point.

As far as road going cars its the Veyron. Its projected regular expenses are staggering for a car that is made for public (albeit very wealthy) use.

is the initial down payment according to Bugatti that you have to have in order to even consider buying one.

is what it costs to lease a Bugatti Veyron on a monthly basis. But there are a few caveats. You can only drive (technically 7 miles a day) and you can lease only for 5 years.

is what it's going to cost you just to deliver your Veyron to American shores. Yes, for the price of a 2013 Infiniti G37 Coupe, yours is just delivered.

is the average monthly that one owner reported on their Bugatti Veyron.

is the average price for a fill up of gas in the United States. City gas mileage is 8 and highway isn't much better at 13. The 1001 horsepower 8-liter engine is a thirsty beast and with gas hovering around $5 a gallon and your 26.4 gallon fuel tank, fill-ups alone are around $140.

And upon delivery, there are certain items you are required under contract to do which includes a routine annual maintenance of, detailing services around, a wheel and tire replacement every 10,000 miles with a price tag of for a set of .

Suggested By: , Photo Credit:

9.) Queen Mary 2

At a full load (2,640 passengers), that's $0.092 per passenger mile. Still worse than a Golf diesel, but not bad. Without trying to estimate crew or maintenance costs, this is what she demands:

The Queen Mary 2 burns 3 tonnes of heavy fuel oil per hour at around $650 per tonne AND 6 tonnes per hour of Marine Gas Oil at around $900 per tonee, so $7350 per hour to operate. Cruising speed is about 30 mph.

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Queen Mary 2 burns 3 tonnes of heavy fuel oil per hour at around $650 per tonne AND 6 tonnes per…

8.) Air Force One

did the math:

The cost of operating Air Force One is approximately 180k per hour. For a flight from LA to NY the average flight time is 4 hours and 47 minutes. The distance between LAX and JFK is 2,806.4 miles.

4.783*180k=860940

860940/2806.4=306.7773 ~ $306.78 per mile.

Plus the escorts. Since the service is rolled into the Air Force's General Operating Budget, it isn't a line item. However, the service is estimated to cost between 1.4 and 1.8 billion dollars a year.

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7.) Space Shuttle

knows traveling by a Space Shuttle only costs slightly more than Obama's plane!

Total program cost was about $200 billion and the total miles logged by all ships was over 500 million. That means the total cost per mile was about $390. Wow.

A bargain!

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6.) International Space Station

Or at least that's how much it was three years ago:

In 2010 the budget of the ISS from the US was 72.4 billion dollars.

The ISS travels at approximately 17100 miles per hour, with 8736 hours per year. Divide it all out (72,400,000,000/8736=n/17100=) and you get $484.65 per mile.

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5.) NASA crawler

Moving rockets is costly. knows how much:

Just did a little Wikipedia research, so take this with a grain of salt.

There are two crawlers, and they have done about 3,400 miles in their lifetimes, but I can't determine if that is combined miles or miles for each one. If it's divided, that means each has done about 1700 miles in a 47 year lifespan, giving you about 36 miles per year, and at 42 feet per gallon, it uses about 4,525 gallons of diesel per year (they have 5,000 gallons tanks).

In today's numbers, fuel costs would be around $18k per year. But they require a team of 30 to operate, which isn't cheap, and I would guess the regular maintenance isn't cheap either. They drive on specially designed roads that are made of seven feet deep of Alabama and Tennessee river rock, so the costs of those might need to be rolled in as well.

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I'd say that the most expensive land-based vehicle has to be a NASA Crawler-Transporter. It was…

4.) Saturn V Rocket

At first, mileage is terrible, but after stage 1 comes a big improvement:

Neil Armstrong's rocket to the moon, the Saturn-V, ran on liquid oxygen, RP-1, and liquid hydrogen (AKA rocket fuel) rather than gasoline, but through our trusty add the one math, we figure that if it ran on gasoline, the Saturn-V rocket which uses , would get 42 miles / 758,620 gals = almost no miles per gallon

Therefore a trip from would cost you a cool $17 million dollars.

So not only a little expensive, but considering it's 365 ft tall by 33 ft wide

parking could be a problem as well.

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According to costtodrive.com, the Saturn V is right up there:

3.) Nimitz-class Aircraft Carrier

is almost right, but they don't use these flat out, which pretty much turns them into Priuses:

A Nimitz-class nuclear powered aircraft carrier. With 5000 crew to feed and pay, jet fuel for all…

160 million per year just for the personnel.

Add aircraft fuel and maintenance parts, and you're looking at closer to $400 million per year. Add the cost of the carrier ($4.5 billion) and divide it over its lifetime (about 40 years), and you're looking at about $530,000,000 per year which is close to $1,450,000 per day.

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2.) Top Fuel dragsters

It's not Formula-1 money, but not 24 Hours of LeMons either, say :

"If all the equipment is paid off, the crew worked for free, and for once NOTHING BLOWS UP, each…

It's roughly $4000/run. I can believe that number after going to the Winter Nationals at Pomona last year and seeing a post run teardown. They throw away what looked like half the engine, there's 15 gallons of Nitromethane burned per run, 28 quarts of fuel they use for ONE RUN, the clutches are re-surfaced or discarded, the tires only last a few runs... It adds up quickly. 10 runs over a weekend and you're looking at $40k operating costs? Sure, I can understand that after seeing it first hand.

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1.) Apollo Lunar Roving Vehicle

The Moon Buggy was taken very far to be driven for around 18 miles. Given that the development cost was $12.7 million and the delivery cost was $17.2 billion per buggy in 1969 dollars, you're looking at $5.9 billion/mile in 2013 dollars. Knowing that makes it surprising that the Sultan of Brunei didn't buy one.

Suggested By: , Photo Credit: NASA

Apollo Lunar Roving Vehicle

Welcome back to Answers of the Day - our daily Jalopnik feature where we take the best ten responses from the previous day's Question of the Day and shine it up to show off. It's by you and for you, the Jalopnik readers. Enjoy! Photo Credit: NASA

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