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Post by wilmywood8455 on Feb 23, 2024 7:43:42 GMT -8
That's insane. He blows a tire he is vaporized in the crash
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Post by wilmywood8455 on Feb 23, 2024 9:21:36 GMT -8
From the Wynn's Racing Facebook page ... In 1957, the Wynn’s Friction Proofing “Streamliner” powered by three tandem engines did just that when it was used to establish a new world land speed record of 270 mph.
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Post by truenorth on Mar 21, 2024 11:28:37 GMT -8
René Stapp was a French racing driver who in 1932 attempted to break the land speed record with one of the most outlandish, and ugliest, cars to ever attempt to do so. The car was built in Paris between 1930 and 1932, then taken to the popular Daytona Beach venue in the United States for an attempt at the land speed record. Power was supplied by two Bristol Jupiter radial aero engines. Some web sources also describe the car itself as being named "Jupiter". Assuming a generous 600 bhp per engine in racing trim, this would have given a power comparable to Malcolm Campbell's cars and so it wasn't an obviously impossible contender. However the general engineering was at the Heath Robinson level and failed to inspire confidence. The car was destroyed by fire on the beach at La Baule, a popular motor-racing venue of the period.
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Post by truenorth on Mar 21, 2024 11:30:45 GMT -8
^William Heath Robinson was an English cartoonist, illustrator and artist, best known for drawings of whimsically elaborate machines to achieve simple objectives. In the UK, the term "Heath Robinson contraption" gained recognition as a noun around 1912; the earliest citation in the Oxford English Dictionary is of 1917
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