Daily News reports of an IT analyst who has set a new record by going
264mph on her modified bike - she is- amateur
racer Becci Ellis, 46. The world's
fastest woman has been revealed as a British mother-of-two who smashed the land
speed record by going 264mph on a motorbike her husband built. IT analyst Becci
Ellis set the record on her modified Suzuki bike, smashing the existing fastest
land speed by 20mph. Mrs Ellis, from Scunthorpe in Lincolnshire, bought the
off-the-shelf bike second hand in 2008 to use as spares but after testing it on
a track she realised it had potential to be a record-breaker.
The 46-year-old has been
riding motorbikes since she was a youngster and says it give her an adrenalin
rush. Her husband Mick has spent the last two years tweaking the 1300cc bike
and developing a one-of-a-kind turbo system so his wife can reach break-neck
speeds. And his hard work finally paid off when Mrs Ellis blasted down the
mile-long course at Elvington airfield in North Yorkshire on her beloved 500bhp
Suzuki Hayabusa bike at 264.1mph, destroying American rider Jennifer
Robertson's existing record of 243.6mph. The lightning-quick speed is the equivalent
of traveling at a 118 metres a second and it took her just over 20 seconds to
complete the course.
In UK, an insurer
is demanding that customers caught driving poorly have therapy sessions to make
them aware of the consequences of driving dangerously. The motorists will have
to undergo the same type of techniques originally designed for use with drink
and drug addicts in the 1980s. The firm, called Ingenie, is one of a number of
new firms which specialise in insurance where motorists’ cars are fitted with
black boxes that record how the vehicle is being driven. Data is sent back to
the insurer, and good drivers are rewarded with lower premiums. Normally, bad
drivers will simply be asked to pay more, but with Ingenie if the driver commits
a major error – such as driving at 100 mph on the motorway – the firm will
contact them and ask them to have treatment. The sessions are carried out over
the phone by a team of trained psychology experts who have worked with young
offenders or those with drink problems or eating disorders. The sessions work
by getting the customer to recognize their dangerous behavior and to
understand the consequences of their actions. It is based on the idea that
young drivers’ brains are not fully formed before the age of 25 and so do not
fully understand risks like speeding. If
the driver refuses to answer the call or absolutely will not acknowledge they
have done anything wrong, their policy will be cancelled.
On a different note, a
motorcycle racer, dubbed the fastest man on two wheels, died last year trying
to top 300mph on a test track in Maine. The man, Bill Warner, 44, died after
crashing while attempting to be the first man to reach 300mph over the distance
of a mile. Riding his modified turbocharged Suzuki Hayabusa, Mr Warner
previously hit 311 mph (500 kph) on the same course in 2011, using 1.5 miles of
pavement. That is considered to be the world land speed record for a
conventional motorcycle.
The World's Fastest Indian
is a 2005 New Zealand biographical film based on the Invercargill, New Zealand
speed bike racer Burt Munro and his highly modified Indian Scout motorcycle.
Munro set numerous land speed records for motorcycles with engines less than
1000 cc at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah in the late 1950s and into the
1960s. The film stars Anthony Hopkins and was written and directed by Roger
Donaldson.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
12th Oct 2014.
