Investigators secretly detonated a working replica of the car bomb used in the failed Times Square terror attack, creating a large explosion that destroyed other vehicles and scattered flaming debris, law enforcement officials said Tuesday.

The test in central Pennsylvania showed that the homemade bomb, had it been constructed and detonated properly, would have killed or wounded an untold number of pedestrians and damaged buildings along the block where the car was abandoned by Faisal Shahzad on May 1, the officials said.

"It would have been extremely deadly," Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said Tuesday when asked about the test after an event at a Washington think tank.

Kelly didn't go into specifics about the FBI test. But two other officials told The Associated Press that it was conducted late last month in a remote area 30 miles outside of State College, Pa., and that a video of it was played for a gathering of authorities earlier this week.

The officials spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the test. The FBI's New York office declined to comment.

The test was first reported Tuesday in the New York Post, which quoted an unnamed source saying that the results suggested the bomb could have been more deadly than the 1995 Oklahoma City car bombing that killed 168 people. One of the officials who spoke to the AP said that was an exaggeration, because the Oklahoma City bomb - also made of fertilizer - was roughly 10 times larger than the one left in Times Square.

Calling himself a "Muslim soldier," Shahzad pleaded guilty June 21. During his plea hearing, the 30-year-old traced his plot to a 2009 trip to Pakistan, where he said he received explosives training and funding from the Pakistani Taliban for his one-man scheme.

For the test, the officials said the investigators also used a Pathfinder, but rigged it with the higher-grade fertilizer and more sophisticated components.

The explosion obliterated the SUV, cutting it in half, the officials said. It also turned a car next to the SUV into a flaming wreck, and sent it flying for a distance that in Times Square would have vaulted it over a car parked across the street and into the New York Marriott Marquis.

Two other cars were left in one fiery, tangled wreck in the middle of the mock street, the officials said.

With the AP's Eileen Sullivan, from Washington.

Third LI high school threat in three days ... NYPD commissioner resigns ... Ethnic grocers Credit: Newsday

Justin Timberlake in court today ... Nassau hires former Trump adviser ... FeedMe: Apple cider doughnuts

Third LI high school threat in three days ... NYPD commissioner resigns ... Ethnic grocers Credit: Newsday

Justin Timberlake in court today ... Nassau hires former Trump adviser ... FeedMe: Apple cider doughnuts

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited Digital AccessOnly 25¢for 5 months

ACT NOWSALE ENDS SOON | CANCEL ANYTIME