Tennessee Car Hauler Fire Destroys Five Supercars Worth $1.5 Million

Five supercars were lost in a transporter fire in the U.S.

September 25, 2025 at 6:54 PM / News

In Tennessee, a fire inside a car hauler destroyed five high-performance machines — two McLaren 720S, a Corvette Z06, a Corvette Stingray, and an Audi R8. The loss is estimated at $1.5 million. Fortunately, no one was injured.

The blaze turned into a nightmare for car enthusiasts last week when the transporter carrying the cars back from a track day at Atlanta Motorsports Park, part of the Crown Rally event, caught fire.

According to local media, the truck driver was alerted by another motorist who noticed smoke. He managed to pull over into a parking lot and call firefighters, but the flames spread quickly through the trailer. By the time crews arrived, the supercars were reduced to charred shells, and the trailer’s interior resembled a smelter.

Photos released by the Chattanooga Fire Department shocked even seasoned car fans: melted carbon fiber, twisted alloy wheels, and the barely recognizable outline of a Corvette were all that remained of the once-glamorous lineup that had recently turned heads on the track.

The official cause of the fire has not yet been determined, though it’s believed the blaze may have started from one of the cars inside the trailer. Thankfully, no lives were lost. Still, for fans of speed and design, the destruction of these machines feels like the loss of rolling works of art.

You may also be interested in the news:

Tech Billionaires’ Cars: From Modest Sedans to Exotic Supercars
New Battery Chemistry and Up to 70 kWh: Popular American EV Gets a Major Update
2027 Ford Bronco Raptor Pickup Becomes Jeep Gladiator’s Ultimate Digital Nightmare
Volkswagen Tiguan and Taos Shift Production: Argentina Says Goodbye to Seven-Seat AllSpace, Amarok Prepares Hybrid Breakthrough
Suzuki Updates Its Logo for the First Time in Over 20 Years
Huawei’s Most Affordable $22K Model Becomes a Bestseller in Just One Hour
Jaguar Land Rover Struggles to Restart Production After Major Cyberattack
Breakthrough in Battery Tech: Engineers Keep Improving Lithium-Ion Cells