Jurors convicted a fugitive Canadian speed demon in no-time flat ​Thursday — finding the race-around​-Manhattan fool guilty on all charges for his wild ride last year.

The Manhattan panel took just five hours to find Adam Tang, 32, guilty of reckless endangerment and reckless driving.

Tang was the internet sensation who video recorded himself driving like ​a mad man, circling all of Manhattan in 24 minutes and seven seconds on Aug. 26, 2013. The footage​, posted on YouTube,​ led to his arrest.

Tang’s misdemeanor convictions are punishable by a max​imum​ of one year behind bars.

But he’s now on the fast lane for more legal woes, after skipping bail on Wednesday as lawyers presented their summations​. The flight from justice could lead to another misdemeanor charge, punishable by one behind bars and served consecutively to his driving misdeeds.

Prosecutors rested on Monday and Tang’s ​lawyers declined to put on a defense, electing to go straight to closing arguments.

Tang didn’t show up and his lawyer couldn’t reach him, prompting Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Ann Donnelly to issue a bench warrant for the defendant’s arrest.

He had his passport taken away, but Canadian authorities told The Post that he could cross the border with other documentation.​

Donnelly ordered summations and deliberations to commence without Tang.

​Tang forfeited $15,000 by skipping bail.

Juror Anthony Feliciano, 43, said no ​jurors knew Tang had taken off, until reporters told them after the verdict​ was read.

Tang’s presence or absence wouldn’t have made any difference in the final verdicts, Feliciano said.

“I don’t admire what he did [speeding around Manhattan]. He has [driving] skills but he doesn’t impress me, it’s foolish,” Feliciano said. “He got lucky that he didn’t get hurt.”

Handyman Damascus Sookbirsingh, 61, said he was the final juror to come around to voting for guilt.

Sookbirsingh said he gave Tang a benefit of doubt, until the end of the speed demon’s journey when he came up a little more traffic — but still keep zooming in and out of lanes.

“The last bit of video where he’s going fast. It was very dangerous. There was traffic,” Sookbirsingh said. “They’d [other jurors] already made their minds up, but it just didn’t seem right. But I came around.”

Manhattan DA Cy Vance said the verdicts should send a message to future, wannabe speed demons.

“The city’s roadways are not a racetrack. Adam Tang showed blatant disregard for our traffic laws, and this dangerous and illegal behavior – which he repeatedly flaunted online – placed lives at risk,” Vance said.

“His daredevil antics were rightly found to be reckless by a jury of his peers, and I would like to thank them for their service on this case.”