Miracle Thunder 3.40 Review
The interface is split into processor brands. The two most used tabs for this version are:
Within these tabs, you will see buttons like: Miracle Thunder 3.40
Let us entertain the impossible for a moment. 3.40 seconds for a quarter-mile (1,320 feet) equates to an average velocity of 388 feet per second, or 265 miles per hour. That is faster than a Formula 1 car on a straightaway. The kinetic energy required to accelerate a 1,000-pound animal to that speed in under four seconds is roughly equivalent to a small explosive device. The g-forces would liquefy a jockey. The interface is split into processor brands
Skeptics, of course, have a field day. The most plausible explanation is that Lester the clocker had a stroke, or his stopwatch malfunctioned—perhaps the “3.40” was actually 34.0 seconds for a quarter-mile (a glacial pace) and the decimal was misplaced. Others suggest the watch was measuring something else: the time between the break and the first sound of hoofbeats, or the time it took for the starting gate to fully open. Within these tabs, you will see buttons like:
But the believers push back. They point to the peculiar name: “Miracle Thunder.” Why would anyone invent a horse named that? And why 3.40? If you were fabricating a legend, wouldn’t you choose a round number like 3.00 or 4.00? The specificity—3.40—has the ring of a real measurement, however flawed.
We subjected the Miracle Thunder 3.40 to a series of rigorous tests against a popular 36V flagship from a well-known brand.
