As Bugatti enters the final stages of testing for the Chiron Super Sport, its engineers have driven the car through to top speeds of 273 mph (440 km/h) at Volkswagen’s Ehra-Lessien testing facility.

The Chiron Super Sport is essentially a slightly more luxurious variant of the record-breaking Chiron Super Sport 300+ that set a top speed record of 304.77 mph (490.48 km/h) in 2019.

Bugatti leaves no stone unturned when testing its cars through to their top speeds and uses approximately 100 additional sensors to record important data including temperature and air pressure.

Read More: Bugatti’s New $3.9 Million Chiron Super Sport Is An SS 300+ With All The Luxury Built Back In

Like the Super Sport 300+, the Chiron Super Sport is powered by a 1,578 hp and 1,180 lb-ft (1,600 Nm) version of the company’s 8.0-liter quad-turbocharged W16 engine. Changes were also made to the car’s transmission that means it doesn’t need to change into seventh gear until it hits 403 km/h (250 mph).

“Following successful road tests at up to 380 km/h, we are now refining the handling of the vehicle at up to 440 km/h to allow the Chiron Super Sport to perform with uncompromising safety, even at this incredible top speed, and give the driver a good, and above all, safe feeling at extremely high speeds,” head of chassis development at Bugatti Jachin Schwalbe said in a recent statement.

The Chiron Super Sport also has the same slippery bodywork as the 300+. As such, it features an extended tail section, a revised front fascia with a new splitter and circular air vents on the front fenders, and sports unique wheels.

Whereas Bugatti is building just 30 examples of the 300+, production of the Chiron Super Sport will be capped to 60 units.