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A man built himself a steampowered bicycle and its pure awesome.

10/13/2017

 
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A British engineer has designed and built his own steam-powered bicycle that can travel at 20m ph.
62-year-old Geoff Hudspith, the man behind the machine, said: "When it's underway it's surprisingly well-balanced because the weight of the boiler is balanced by the weight of the water tank on the other side at the back."
The steam powers a double action single cylinder, this turns a flywheel, which powers a chain on the front wheel.
The bike has a range of around ten miles on one tank of water.
Geoff has turned down several offers to buy it, even for high sums of money.
"I even had a bloke in Denmark, some years ago now, who was so taken with it he wanted to swap a house for it," Hudspith recalls.
"And well, I just thought; 'Well, you know, is this bloke serious or what?' You know. I suppose I should have taken the house and just made another steam bike."

If You Run Over A Supercar In Front Of The Owner, You're Going To Get Hit

10/12/2017

 
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A scumbag youth runs over a Lamborghini Aventador SV in San Francisco. What happens next will not shock you, and you probably won't even think he got enough of a beating...The first rule of car club is that you do not mess with anyone else’s car. The second rule of car club is that you do not mess with anyone else’s car. The third rule… you get the idea. One arrogant young scumbag in San Francisco has just found out the stupid way what happens when you commit the cardinal sin.
In the first of two videos on the same Insta post, we see a cocky little git run – actually run – up the bonnet and windscreen of a Lamborghini Aventador SV, over the roof and jump off the back. We honestly don’t know whether the lad has learning difficulties to be doing something so wrong, so disrespectful and so outrageous, but having run away and escaped the first time, in the second video (swip/click) he tries again.
He’s quickly grabbed by the car’s owner, flung to the ground with a hail of verbal abuse and, eventually, after being dragged up and back down again, lies still on the floor. We can’t tell whether he’s actually been knocked out – we don’t see a blow anywhere near hard enough for that, and it’s possible that the contemptuous idiot is pretending, to try to win the assembled crowd’s sympathy – and maybe sue for compensation down the line. We suspect this one isn’t over.


lamborghini gets stepped on , breed of speed , supercar wrecked

This could quite possibly be the greatest truck sales pitch ever.

10/9/2017

 
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When you run over your own salesmen to prove how great this truck is. You are on another level. The glorious ​1953: the ROLLIGON, a very rare truck.
tags: breed of speed , rolligon truck , off road , nathan finneman , sirdrifto , 4x4 , salesmen run over

Driver gets the perfect revenge on car that blocked their driveway

10/8/2017

 
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Coming home after a long day only to find your precious driveway has been blocked is frustrating. And unless you want to involve the cops or know who's car it is, there's not really much you can do.


Instead of calling in backup, this dude decided to take care of things himself. After scoping out the car, the man managed to hook a tow line to the car blocking his driveway. But he didn't move it to a nice, new spot, he decided to leave the car right in the middle of the street.
According to the clip's timestamp, the car remained blocking the street for three hours until police finally arrived and had the car's owner remove the vehicle. 

Peregrine Falcon Chases Wingsuit Pilot!

10/8/2017

 
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WHOA! This amazing footage shows wingsuit pilot Brendan Weinstein being chased by a peregrine falcon while wingsuit proximity flying!
tags: breed of speed , wingsuit hawk , falcon skydive , nathan finneman , sir drifto , winsuit amazing

Amazing Race in the Rain with Felipe Massa & Robert Kubica

10/5/2017

 
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How these guys are evening seeing what's ahead ot them at these speeds is a miracle itself. Enjoy the video, its downright impressive.

Felipe Massa vs Robert Kubica in rain = epic! from Breedof Speed on Vimeo.

tags: breed of speed , massa , formula 1 , nathan finneman , sir drifto , rain f1 , robert kubica , amazing f1 race

Watch this racecar driver go from last to 1st in a matter of seconds

10/5/2017

 
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2005 Lotus Trophy Race 2, Dean Evans was determined to get in 1st, and from the video, he wasn't kidding.
tags: breed of speed,. last to 1st , lotus racing , sir drifto , nathan finneman

HOW THE BUGATTI CHIRON IS BUILT EXPLAINS WHY IT'S SO DAMNED EXPENSIVE

10/3/2017

 
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Horsepower figures are insane these days! The news of a new 350 horsepower sedan (Saloon, if you must) is usually followed by a "Meh" or just slightly more air exhaled through people's nose. They casually shrug their shoulders, "Impress me!" they say, as the thought of a 0-60 mph of 5 seconds warrants a 'Ain't nobody got time for that' meme.
What people don't fully appreciate is the hundreds of thousands of man-hours dedicated to the sheer design, development, and testing of these extremely capable cars. In this documentary about the development of the Bugatti Chiron, it shows the immense amount of over-engineering that goes behind developing something that can do up to 420 kph.
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tags: breed of speed , bugatti , nathan finneman , bugatti factory, amzing builds

Homeowners' Association Is Very Upset About Man's WWII Tank But They’re Welcome To Try And Tow It

10/3/2017

 
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I know not everyone agrees with this, but as far as I can tell, life can be interesting, and the purpose of a Homeowners’ Association is to prevent any evidence of that fact from being demonstrated. At least that’s what I’m taking away from the situation with Tony Buzbee, his authentic WWII Sherman tank, and the HOA in his Houston, Texas neighborhood.
Buzbee is a well-to-do attorney with the sort of knocking-around money that allows him to spend $600,000 on one of the American tanks that landed at Normandy, and went on to liberate Paris and then roll in into Berlin to help end the European part of WWII. The tank is a significant piece of history, and appears to have been restored to a very high standard.
That tank that once helped to free Paris is now street-parked in front of his house on River Oaks Blvd. The neighborhood is very wealthy, and it’s not really that surprising that the HOA has a problem with a tank being parked on the street.
 Though there’s no specific ordinance against the tank—which, to be fair, is fairly compact as far as tanks go and not a bad choice for a general-use city tank—the HOA is not having it and sent a stern letter to Buzbee to remove it.
The letter from the River Oaks Property Owners’ group calls the tank a “safety issue,” and suggests it “impedes traffic” and causes “serious concerns for neighbors.”
Let’s just think about these concerns really quickly here. As far as the tank being a ‘safety issue,’ I guess that’s possible in the sense that any obstacle near a road, like a tree or a parked car or a hydrant can be a ‘safety issue.’ But it’s not roaming the streets firing its main gun or anything like that.
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As far as impeding traffic, it’s not really physically any different than a parked car on the road, which seems to be allowed, and the road has four lanes, with the different directions divided by a large median area, so at worst it’s bringing two lanes of same-direction traffic to one, for a bit, like any parked car.
Because it’s a tank, there may be some extra traffic from people coming to look at it, too. But it’s not causing a roadblock or anything like that. And, as far as the ‘serious concerns for neighbors,’ I’d just like to know what those are. Are they afraid this will open a floodgate and every neighbor will start to park WWII battle vehicles in front of their homes?
Are they concerned some local Nazis may be offended? Or that the Fourth Reich Lunar Base will spot the tank through their telescopes and decide that the River Oaks area is now a primary target for the particle beam they’ve been developing for all these decades?
Really, the problem is it’s a novel thing, and HOAs hate novelty. Neighborhood kids seem to like playing on it, and local news reports have found mostly positive responses to the tank from neighbors. Eventually, the tank will end up at Buzbee’s ranch, so it’s not even permanent.
Local TV station KHOU talked to Buzbee, who is remaining defiant, saying
“The problem is there is no action they can take. They can ticket it or they can try to tow it, but the truth is unless I decide to move it, it’s not going anywhere.”
I know all the usual arguments about property value and as a homeowner, I understand them in theory, but come on. This is a fascinating thing to have in a neighborhood, and as far as property value losses, I’m crying my eyes out for these poor million-and-billionaires just scraping by in that filthy Royal Oaks wealth-hole. I hope somehow they can make it through this national nightmare of having a well-maintained historical artifact nearby!

B-17 Wreckage a Haunting Hike in Colorado’s High Country

10/2/2017

 
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High in the Comanche Peaks Wilderness, the Flowers Trail cuts a stunning path through still-thawing meadows painted with colorful blooms.
But along with the beauty comes a tragic back story.
On June 13, 1944, an Army Air Forces B-17 flying a training mission out of Rapid City, S.D., went off course and slammed into a snow-covered mountainside a quarter mile from the Flowers Trail, killing four of 10 on board.
Seventy years later, the wreckage remains – a haunting display of crumpled metal, rusting engine blocks and severed wing tips strewn over a remote talus field 30 miles west of Fort Collins.
Known as the Crown Point B-17 crash site, it’s become a pilgrimage spot, sought out by World War II buffs, aviation enthusiasts and hikers seeking a sense of adventure and a visceral tie to history.
Although it’s among the better known World War II-era crashes in the state, it’s not the only such debris field tucked away in Colorado’s high country.
Between 1941 and 1944, the military investigated nearly 130 fatal training crashes, in which 410 people were killed, according to Larry Carpenter of Estes Park, a retiree who maintains ColoradoAirCrashes.com, a database that maps World War II-era training crashes.
Most of the other crash sites were near Army air stations at lower elevations and, because the wrecks were accessible by vehicle, military recovery teams cleaned up every trace, Carpenter said.
But when planes went down in the rugged Rocky Mountains, there was little to be done except detonate the downed aircraft with explosives – leaving debris fields to be discovered by the dogged.

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Today, other World War II crash sites can be found near Glenwood Springs, in the foothills west of Monument and Palmer Lake, and around Westcliffe, among other locations, Carpenter said.
Among frequently visited ruins are those of a different B-17 bomber that crashed only 6 miles from the Crown Point crash, killing eight.
That site – known as the Pingree Park B-17 crash site, from Oct. 18, 1943 – likewise can be reached from a trail network, making the Comanche Peaks Wilderness a destination for wreck chasers.
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VISITORS LEAVE TRIBUTES
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Jennifer Stanger of Littleton heard about the Crown Point bomber a year ago when a friend sent her a link on Facebook, and it quickly seized her imagination, leading to a recent visit.
After an overnight stop earlier this month at Browns Lake, a scenic refuge a few miles from the bomber site, she and her boyfriend hiked Flowers Trail to a place marked by fellow hikers with an arrow made of stones.
There began a broken path leading to what Stanger called a “museum of destruction.”
“You look at the ground that is still charred with black ash and you think: People survived this,” she said. “People walked away from this.”
Equally striking were the tributes left by visitors, Stanger said: American flags and military patches that ratcheted up emotions on the visit.
“I thought that was really sweet – that people have hiked out there to pay their respects,” she said.
That anyone survived the Crown Point crash is part of what makes it unique.
According to newspaper accounts and ColoradoAirCrashes.com, the olive drab Boeing B17F Flying Fortress was returning to Rapid City during nighttime training when a navigational error sent the plane some 70 miles off course.
After a crewman spotted something nearby in the darkness, the pilot switched on the landing lights only to see “the forest-covered mountainside just ahead,” according to Carpenter’s website.
The pilot immediately pulled up, applying full power, but as the plane’s nose edged upward, its belly slammed into the mountain. The crash happened about midnight. Both pilots and the navigator were killed instantly, but the emergency maneuver spared the lives of six of the remaining seven crewmen.
At daybreak, two of the least-injured survivors set off for help, hiking for 14 hours through snow and dense forest before reaching fishermen who drove them an hour to the nearest phone, at a Fort Collins bar called Ted’s Place.
One of them, Cpl. LeRoy Faigin, later told the Helena Independent-Record that he phoned the air station in Rapid City for help and also called his wife, who had been told that her husband was presumed dead in the crash.
“When Bernice Faigin heard her husband’s voice, she nearly dropped the phone,” the newspaper reported.
The next day, Lt. Amos Little, an airborne-qualified doctor, made history when he parachuted from a circling UC-54 to deliver medical treatment to the injured men.
The daring jump was recognized as the highest-altitude landing of its day, according to a July 10, 1944, Time magazine article, and it’s remembered as a precursor to modern search-and-rescue efforts.
“When the main rescue party arrived by land, nearly four hours later, the patients had been fed, bandaged and drugged to ease their pain,” the magazine reported.
Colorado offered tactical advantages for training because its landscape – the collision of the plains with the mountains – mirrored flying conditions in Europe and parts of the Pacific, said Troy Turner, a journalist who published a book on the period called “Colorado’s Lost Squadron.”
“The problem was, you had nothing like the navigational instrumentation that you have now,” Turner said. Bad weather, navigational challenges and the inexperience of young crewmen all factored into the training deaths, he said.
SOME SITES LOOTEDTracking down the crash sites has become a kind of “scavenger hunt,” Turner said.
“Some of them do it for the love of history. Some of them do it for the love of the outdoors. A lot of them do it for the combined adventure that’s involved with it, and the reward involved in learning that type of history.”
He added: “You put all that together, and it’s very appealing to a large community, and not just in Colorado.”

The Brown Lake Trail offers sweeping views of the Comanche Peaks Wilderness on the way to the wreckage of the B-17.In past decades, finding the wrecks involved historical research and a degree of luck, but that side of the challenge diminished with the advent of the Internet, where any number of trip reports can be found, some offering detailed instructions, Carpenter said. Though it’s illegal to pillage the crash sites, some have been picked through and looted, he said.
Carpenter began his research after a 1990 visit to Crown Point. He later tracked down Faigin for more information, and the two became friends until Faigin’s death last year, he said.
Among those who sought out Carpenter for details on crash site locations were descendants of crash victims, Carpenter said.
Before the advent of GPS, they, too, dived headlong into newspaper archives and military crash reports, hoping to find the spot where they lost loved ones.
“Many of them died without ever being able to find these sites,” Carpenter said.
Today, those new to the history come to him brimming with the same questions that Carpenter began asking after his first visit. They experience the same shock, too, he said.
“They can’t believe it. They ask, ‘We lost how many?’”
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