Cache Across Maryland 2015 Geocoin
Trackable Options |
Found this item? Log in. |
Printable information sheet to attach to Cache Across Maryland 2015 Geocoin
Print Info Sheet |
|
-
Owner:
-
mar1sa
Message this owner
-
Released:
-
Monday, September 11, 2017
-
Origin:
-
North Island, New Zealand
-
Recently Spotted:
-
In the hands of TwigNZ.
This is not collectible.
Use TB769RJ to reference this item.
First time logging a Trackable? Click here.
this is a proxy tag I have the original with me to be discovered at events
Motorcar racing has taken place at the salt flats since 1914. Racing takes place at part of the Bonneville Salt Flats known as the Bonneville Speedway. There are five major land speed events that take place at the Bonneville Salt Flats. Bonneville "Speed Week" takes place mid-August followed by "World of Speed" in September and the "World Finals" take place early October.
These three events welcome cars, trucks, and motorcycles. The "Bub Motorcycle Speed Trials" are for motorcycles only. World records are contested at the Mike Cook ShootOut in September. The Southern California Timing Association and the Utah Salt Flats Racing Association organizes and plans the multi-vehicle events, but all event promoters contribute to prepping and maintaining the salt. "Speed Week" events in August were canceled for the second year in a row in 2015, due to poor conditions of the salt in certain parts of the flats. The salt flats had been swamped by heavy rains earlier in the year, which usually happens, but the rains also triggered mudslides from surrounding mountains and onto a section of the flats used for the land-speed racing courses.
The motorcycle land-speed record is the fastest speed achieved by a motorcycle on land. It is standardized as the speed over a course of fixed length, averaged over two runs in opposite directions. These are special or modified motorcycles, distinct from the fastest production motorcycles.
The first generally recognized motorcycle speed records were set unofficially by Glenn Curtiss, using aircraft engines of his own manufacture, first in 1903, when he achieved 64 mph (103 km/h) at Yonkers, New York using a V2, and then on January 24, 1907 on Ormond Beach, Florida, when he achieved 136.27 mph (219.31 km/h) using a V8 housed in a spindly tube chassis with direct shaft drive to the rear wheel.[1] An attempted 'return run' was foiled when his drive shaft came loose at speed, yet he was able to wrestle the machine to a stop without injury. Curtiss' V8 motorcycle is currently in the Transportation collection of the Smithsonian Institution.
The 1907 record made Curtiss the fastest person on earth in any vehicle on land or air (the automobile record stood at 127.66 mph (205.45 km/h) (steam powered), the rail record stood at 131 mph (211 km/h) (electric powered), and in the air, where weight considerations made the internal combustion engine dominant, the air speed record was still held by the Wright Brothers, at a mere 37.85 mph (60.91 km/h)). (see also Blitzen Benz)
The first officially sanctioned Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM) record was set in 1920, when Gene Walker rode an Indian on Daytona Beach at 104.12 mph (167.56 km/h). The first FIM-sanctioned record to exceed Curtiss' 1907 speed did not occur until 1930, at Arpajon, France, when a special OEC chassis with supercharged 1,000cc v-twin JAP engine averaged 137 mph (220 km/h) over the required two-way runs. In the 1930s, an international battle between the BMWs, ridden by Ernst Henne, alternated records with various JAP-powered English motorcycles (Zenith, OEC, Brough Superior). BMW set a final record before World War II, in 1937 (173.68 mph (279.51 km/h)), which stood for 11 years.
After the Second World War, the German NSU factory battled English machines (Vincent HRD, Triumph) for top speed honors through the 1960s, when Japanese-engined streamliner motorcycles appeared, and alternated with Harley-Davidson-engined machines through 1990. The last Harley-Davidson record of 322.15 mph (518.45 km/h) stood for 16 years, before a Suzuki-powered machine averaged 342.8 mph (551.7 km/h) in 2006. Since then, the BUB team, using a custom-built V4 engine, has alternated with the twin Suzuki engined Ack Attack team. Since late 2010, the Ack Attack team has held the motorcycle land speed record at 376.36 mph (605.69 km/h).
Gallery Images related to Cache Across Maryland 2015 Geocoin
View All 5 Gallery Images
Tracking History (34650.6mi) View Map
TwigNZ took it to Monte Gurugú
|
Andalucía, Spain
- .14 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
TwigNZ took it to Plaza de las Palomas
|
Andalucía, Spain
- .47 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
TwigNZ took it to Fósiles en La Plaza de España
|
Andalucía, Spain
- .91 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
TwigNZ took it to Mármol en la Plaza de España
|
Andalucía, Spain
- .96 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
TwigNZ took it to La Mezquita Mayor de Sevilla
|
Andalucía, Spain
- .46 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
TwigNZ took it to EL MISTERIO DE LAS 7 RELIQUIAS: LA PIPA DE MAIGRET
|
Andalucía, Spain
- .18 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
TwigNZ took it to Gloria Nazarenorum
|
Andalucía, Spain
- 12,177.71 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
TwigNZ took it to La Sirene du fond des mers (Kapiti Coast)
|
North Island, New Zealand
- 25.13 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
the Seagnoid discovered it
|
|
Visit Log
|
Found in the hands of TwigNZ as he is packing for Europe
|
TwigNZ took it to Off Track: Wellington (Level 1)
|
North Island, New Zealand
- 30.95 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
data on this page is cached for 3 mins
|