A street-legal Beetle with a jet engine

This Beetle is hot as hell, literally

This blazing-fast "School Bus Jet"

A VW bus that goes from 0 to 270 mph in 7 seconds

A jet-powered truck that can hit 375 mph

A 634-mph beast that broke a world record

This 1991 Toyota MR2 with twin-turbine jets

From powering helicopters to powering a Toyota

The definition of Insanity

Old-school cool

This famous, destroyed Vampire

This 2,100 horsepower jet semi

This turbo jet Mustang funny car

This 10,000-horsepower jet funny car

This famous jet car wit big aspirations

This 1,000 mph beast is also a rocket car

This custom built jet car of the '60s

Check out this jet-powered dragster in action

Designed by mechanical engineer Ron Patrick, this street-legal Volkswagen Beetle has two engines: A stock one in the front, and a 1,350-horsepower helicopter turboshaft engine (General Electric Model T58-8F) that he converted into a jet.

Caption by / Photo by Ron Patrick

Here, you can see Ron Patrick's jet engine in action. Due to the damaging heat generated (exceeding 1,200 degrees Fahrenheit will, you know, 'cause problems), he's limited to three starts in a hour.

Caption by / Photo by Ron Patrick

Designed by Gerd Habermann, this "School Bus Jet" is built with a 25,000-horsepower Westinghouse J34 turbine.

Caption by / Photo by Roland Weihrauch/AFP/Getty Images

How do you improve on a Volkswagen Bus? Try adding a 1986 Rolls-Royce Viper 535 jet engine, pulled from a decommissioned Strikemaster jet.

Caption by / Photo by Getty Images

The Flash Fire Jet Truck seen here, powered by a 1,200- horsepower Pratt and Whitney engine, goes from 0 to 60 mph in a single second.

Caption by / Photo by Barcroft

Designed by John Ackroyd and driven by Richard Noble, the Thrust2 jet car held the title of Fastest Car In The World from 1983 to 1997. 

Caption by / Photo by Getty Images

Built by ToyJunkies, this Toyota MR2 is powered by two GE T58 turbine engines. It has reached speeds of 187 mph, "with a lot more room to go," ToyJunkies explained.

Caption by / Photo by ToyJunkies

The T58 engines used on this Toyota were designed for powering helicopters. Learn more about this incredible car and its specs at Roadkillcustoms.com.

Caption by / Photo by ToyJunkies

The Insanity, a custom car by Ryan McQueen, uses two Rolls-Royce jet engines to pour on the power.

Caption by / Photo by Ryan McQueen

Not all jet cars are homebrews: This photo from 1954 shows off General Motors' experimental XP-21 Firebird, a gas turbine-powered car.

Caption by / Photo by FPG/Getty Images

Driven by Colin Fallows, the Vampire afterburner jet car once held the British Landspeed Record of 300.3 mph (average). It famously crashed during a 2006 shooting of the show Top Gear, where it hit (unverified) speeds of 314 mph.

Caption by / Photo by Matthew Lewis/Getty Images

Bob Motz's "Semi Jet Truck" gives an epic flame-throwing live demo at a show in Detroit.

Caption by / Photo by Paul Warner/Getty Images

Nicknamed "Firestorm," this Ford Mustang funny car was built with a 10,000-horsepower General Electric J85-5 turbo jet pulled from a Northrop F5 Strike Fighter.

Caption by / Photo by Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images

Driven by Martin Hill, the Fireforce 2 is a 10,000-horsepower, jet-propelled car that tops out at 270 mph.

Caption by / Photo by Andrew Milligan - PA Images

No list of jet-powered cars would be complete without this, the Bloodhound SSC. The supersonic car, a private venture with in-kind support from the UK government, has been designed to break the land speed record of 760 mph.

Caption by / Photo by Matt Cardy / Getty Images

Powered by a Rolls-Royce EJ200 jet engine and a Falcon Hybrid Rocket Motor, the Bloodhound SSC is aiming for a speed of 1,000 mph when it races across a South African track lake bed track in October 2018.

CNET was trackside for the Bloodhound rocket car's first speed run.

Caption by / Photo by Andrew Hoyle/CNET

Bill Fredericks poses with his own jet car, the Valkyrie, in 1962.

Caption by

Wonder what it looks like when a jet-powered racer starts up its jet engine? YouTuber DTRockstar recorded a video of Black Ice, a jet-powered dragster, as it reaches 246 mph.

You can watch that video here.

Caption by / Photo by DTRockstar via YouTube
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