Tag Archive for 'speed'

Daddy G

When was the last time you felt serious G-force? The most likely case is a car crash, in which case you probably don’t remember it. If it was for fun then a roller coaster probably offers the leisure seeker the highest G out there. In sports Luge riders can reach up to 5 times their bodyweight, and air racers hit 9G in tight turns.

The effects of any sustained G-force aren’t particularly fun – blackouts, tunnel vision, inability to move the limbs at all, unconsciousness and death are all possibilities. People believed that the human body could only take so much. One man set out to explore the limits of G tolerance, and in the process saved a huge number of lives by endangering his own.

John Stapp

Colonel John Stapp

Colonel John Stapp was a USAF flight surgeon who dedicated his career to transport safety. In the late 1940s he was assigned to the Aero Medical Laboratory’s most pressing research – the effects of deceleration on humans.

At the time it was assumed that no one could survive more than 18G and planes were being designed to this specification. Evidence gradually emerged that pilots were surviving higher G impacts only to be killed after the structural failure of their aircraft.

It became clear that research was necessary to measure what the human body could tolerate. The initial plan was to use a 13 stone dummy named Oscar Eightball, the reasoning being that if 18G was fatal it would be ridiculous to subject a live subject to anything approaching that.

Dr. Stapp inspected Oscar and announced that he had done the calculations and he himself would eventually be the test subject, despite warnings that he would be turned into a sack of jelly.

To simulate the forces in a crash a rocket sled was used. It was located at Muroc Army Air Field (now Edwards Air Force Base – the home of the X planes and The Right Stuff) on a track originally built to test captured V2 rocket motors.

Rocket Sled

The Gee Whiz

The sled was designed to replicate aircraft landing velocities followed by the violent deceleration of a crash. Rocket motors brought it up to 200 mph over a 2000 ft railed track and metal scoops plunged into water generated the effects of a sudden slow down.

In December 1947 after 35 test runs with Oscar, Stapp rode the rocket. His first ever run simulated 10G which he described as ‘exhilarating’. Over a period of time speeds and impacts increased and Stapp made a nonsense of existing theories, taking up to 35G, forcing designers to start making helmets, harnesses, seats and cockpits much stronger.

His list of injuries began to grow as the experiments progressed. He cracked collarbones, ribs, broke his wrist twice, burst blood vessles in his eyes and went temporarily blind on several occasions, but his dedication never wavered.

Research moved on to the effects of ejecting at high speeds during the 1950s and Stapp was once again the willing test subject. A new  rocket sled named ‘Sonic Wind’ reached 632 mph and came to a dead stop in 1.4 seconds to replicate ejection at 1800 mph. Stapp experienced 46G and survived.

Go Force

Stapp in action

He was soon dubbed ‘The Fastest Man on Earth’, ‘The Bravest Man in the Air Force’, around the base itself he was known as the ‘Careful Daredevil’, a B Movie was made about his exploits, but Stapp was only interested in using his newfound celebrity to push the issue of car safety as he realised his findings were just as applicable to the road.

By demonstrating to the Air Force that as many pilots were dying in car crashes as plane crashes, he persuaded them to build one of the very first car crash test facilities and it became a cause he dedicated the rest of his life to. He brought together manufacturers, legislators and researchers to act on his results and to this day the Stapp Car Crash Conference is one of the world’s leading forums in improving crash safety.

Next time you put on your seatbelt you know who to thank.

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Skeleton Run

It’s nearly winter Olympics time and we can’t wait. Even if the poor old Canadians have to slap snow on their hills by hand it’s still one of the only conventional sporting events that captures our undivided attention.

Before the event begins we can easily guess the nationalities that’ll dominate, but there is one corner of winter sports that shall be forever British.

The Cresta Run in St Moritz, Switzerland is probably the most famous winter sports venue in the world. You would expect it to be festooned with sponsorship and folks swanning around in rubberised unitards, but that isn’t the case at all. It’s an amateur racing club founded by British officers in 1885 and a regular human can still turn up for a burn in their jeans.

Cresta Runner

Working off the hangover

The club originated during the 1870s. British guests of the Kulm Hotel of St Moritz developed steerable sleds to race each other through the streets. The residents of St Moritz began to kick up a storm about having their daily business put at risk by high speed toffs bombing past.

In an attempt to keep residents and guests happy the owner of the Kulm Hotel and a Major Bulpetts built a natural ice run away from the town. The run descends 514 ft and is 1200 metres in length. Built from scratch every winter and open for 9 weeks until the end of February, riding takes place every morning.

The Cresta Run operates skeleton toboggans only. Unlike the Luge, riders go down head first and any steering and braking has to be done with spiked boots and shifting of the body weight as the toboggan has no control mechanism. The fastest average speed of the run is 53 mph and speeds top 80 mph by the end.

Serious skill is required. A conventional ice track is capable of holding an uncontrolled object within in its walls right down to the end, the Cresta Run is a more open half pipe that’ll do its best to throw anything off at the earliest opportunity.

Fledgling riders receive the ‘death talk’ from an experienced Cresta Runner. An X ray collage of nasty injuries over the years on the clubhouse wall is a testimony to the dangers involved. Limbs have been lost, trigger fingers torn off and the odd death has been known to happen.

The Cresta Run has two starting points. Beginners must set off at first from the clubhouse and if you pass with flying colours you’re allowed to begin at the top, much further up the course.

The most famous bend is known as Shuttlecock – an open bend that has a 1 in 14 chance of throwing you off the course. The outside of the bend is padded with straw and snow in preparation for disaster. If you’re one of the flyers you gain the right to wear the Shuttlecock Club tie.

The run is open to anyone on practice days if they join as a supplementary member for a price of around £300. They supply the equipment, you bring the clothing and insurance. Traditional clothing is encouraged, perhaps a pith helmet gets a discount. You must be over 18 and (whisper it) male.

If you demonstrate enough enthusiasm and other members vouch for you, you too can become one of the 1300 or so full members. You’ll be in good company, it’s a favourite haunt of upscale society as well as gritty British armed forces types.

Fancy it? Then have a look at www.cresta-run.com

And to give an idea of what’s in store here’s a video of a mortal doing the run for charity www.thesnowballproject.com

Defintely one for the things to do before we die list.

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Man’s Corner

Balls Of Steel is a much-abused term, but in this case it doesn’t even begin to describe the skill and courage on show.

Guy Martin

Guy Martin

This vid below is on board with Guy Martin , a man who talks almost as fast as he rides, during the Isle of Man Tourist Trophy. We’ll have a more detailed look at the event itself another day, but for those not in the know the TT is the world’s premier road racing event for motorcycles.

The TT takes place over a 37 mile course over closed public roads on the Isle of Man. It’s been running since 1907 and in that year the winner’s average speed was 38.21 mph.

This lap was recorded during the 2007 TT and it just fell short of a 130 mph average speed. We think you’ll agree that this looks plenty rapid enough.

And, no, it ain’t speeded up.

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Sweet & Low Down

We’re feeling smug tonight after breaking a world record time on Colin Mcrae Dirt 2, so let’s check out one of the lesser known records in the real world, one that may not be familiar but is definitely one of the most extreme.

There have been plenty of individuals willing to push the outer envelope. You have your Donald Campbells, Craig Breedloves, Chuck Yeagers and the list continues into the hundreds. Some of these people had the backing of governments, corporate sponsors or wealthy patrons. Others had to improvise a little more.

Darryl Greenamyer set the world low altitude speed record on the 24th of October 1977. The record required 4 passes at a height above ground level of less than 100 metres. An altitude of no more than 300 metres was to be exceeded between passes and no landings were allowed between them.

He officially clocked 988 mph at a height of less than 60 feet above the desert floor. At that speed and height someone told him his brain would be processing sights that were 150 feet behind him. And he achieved it with a plane cobbled together by hand from the remains of at least 12 others that he named The Red Baron.

the red baron

the red baron in action

988mph? That may not sound too impressive but low altitude flight is a very different beast compared to further up. Fuel consumption and drag increases enormously in the thicker air. To give an idea, the range of his aircraft at high altitude would have been around 1500 miles at a fast cruise. He covered 130 miles during the record attempt and landed on fumes.

Greenamyer’s steed was a Lockheed F-104 Starfighter, the first combat plane capable of sustained flight at Mach 2. The Starfighter was the perfect machine for the job. Its thin wings mean low drag and turbulence and combined with its endurance, handling and grunt there’s probably no plane out there that could take the record today without unfeasible amounts of expenditure and development.

The man himself also had the Right Stuff for the job. Greenamyer was a former Lockheed test pilot and he’d already broken the piston-engined world speed record. During his years at Lockheed he’d flown the F-104 countless times and was convinced that it was capable of setting more records.

Darryl Greenamyer

A standard working day for Mr Greenamyer

The only question was how he would obtain his own example. In the mid 60s the F-104 was still a front line aircraft and military types are never keen to give up their hardware to civilians. He resolved to build his own from scavenged parts.

It took 13 years to create the Red Baron. It was assembled from bits found in scrapyards, job lots bought blind that included fridges and chunks of helicopter, one part was somebody’s office paperweight, a significant portion of the fuselage came from a preproduction mockup that required every rivet replacing.

By the time the plane was finished in 1976 it was a miracle of resourcefulness and a full on airborne hotrod weighing 20% less than a standard Starfighter and having 25% more thrust from a US Navy loaned engine.

It was taken out to Mud Lake Nevada and upped the low altitude record by 90 mph. The Red Baron actually exceeded 1000 mph but the timing equipment malfunctioned and 988mph remained the official speed. It hasn’t been beaten to this day.

That wasn’t enough to satisfy Mr Greenamyer. A few weeks later modifications began to take the world altitude record. It wasn’t to be. On a test flight the landing gear failed and he was forced to eject. The Red Baron’s story was over.

F-104 rb

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The Train Rider

If you look hard enough you can turn any situation into an opportunity for a rush. If you’re bored with your daily train commute then here’s some inspiration for you and you may even save on the train fare.

This fella was known as the train rider. His videos of him attaching himself to German high speed trains and surfing them at speeds of over 200 mph were given added poignancy by the news that he’d died of leukemia soon after.

Except it wasn’t true.

The man in question is Alexander Richter. He began by working up from slower regional trains. To avoid prosection his lawyer suggested he buy a ticket every time he hung off the end of a train. Thanks to this advice he avoided a potential ten year sentence after the police caught him in the vicinity of a train sporting a suction device – not many people can claim that. Faking your own death begins to make sense after The Man gives you a scare like that.

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Dooownhill

It’s hard to think of many better feelings than really flying downhill on a mountain bike. Whether it’s winding through a technical trail or bombing down a smooth forest track, it always seems to end too quickly.

And a handful of people on remote mountainsides have taken things just that little bit further.

The quickest speed we’ve pulled off has probably been somewhere above 50. At that speed eyes were streaming, tyres were twitching and smacking into insects felt like shots from an rifle.

Eric Barone holds the current world record at 138 mph.

Using a custom built bike, aerodynamic suit and helmet and a snowy mountain he streaked into the record books in 2000.

Decidcing that wasn’t enough, Mr Barone wanted to prove that he could go faster on soil.

After a global search he discovered the Cerro Negro volcano in Nicaragua. The clean slopes and soft ash of the volcanic surface were ideal.

In 2002 he topped 101 mph on a standard mountain bike. A few moments later he set off on a carbon fibre prototype bike. He hit 108 mph and took the record for soil. Seconds after that things stopped going to plan.

Apart from some broken ribs he was fine and vowed he was still willing to beat his own records.

Prototypes are well cool, but it would also be nice to see how a standard mountain bike would fare on a snowy surface too. Luckily Markus Stoeckl has done it for you.

In 2007 he topped 130mph on Chilean snow slope riding an Intense M6. The slope was a mile long with a 45 degree incline.

So if you can drum up an Alienesque helmet, full body condom, sexy calf extensions and a nice steep slope, cover it in snow and let us know how it went.

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KartMania

The Isle Of Man is a place where speed is in the air.

Not only does it not have a speed limit outside of the towns, but it’s also one of the very few places in the British Isles where public roads can be closed for motorsport events due to the island having its own legislature.

This dispensation has given rise to such iconic events as the Manx Rally and Isle of Man TT motorcycle race.

These events are extreme enough, but the Manx Kart Grand Prix is right up there too. Running through the streets of Peel, the top drivers use 250 international superkarts to weave among the kerbs.

These machines have disc brakes, six-speed sequential gearboxes and about 95 bhp to play with.

That may not sound all that but with no weight to push along 0-60 arrives in less than 3 seconds and they can top 170 mph with aero kits.  They can out brake and out corner almost any car and at some circuits superkarts hold the outright lap record.

A friend of mine has been known to take his out for a spin at night on the streets, but I’ll leave it to the professionals below to show you what that might feel like.

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