A group of humans put one of its humans in a crazy, covered bike. That human broke a world speed record for a human-powered vehicle. Aaaand now I feel even more like a motionless fat-accumulating sloth.
It all went down Thursday morning in Battle Mountain, Nevada, at the 16th annual World Human Powered Speed Challenge. AeroVelo, a three-year-old Toronto-based design firm whose partners include Google and the University of Toronto, broke the 200-meter men’s record with a speed of 137.94 kilometres per hour. The previous record was 133.78 kilometres per hour.
The victorious vehicle is the Eta speedbike, a 55-pound, aerodynamic, bullet-like bike enclosed with a carbon-honeycomb shell and whose frame is made with carbon fibre. Inside, the driver nearly lies down, almost parallel with the ground, a bit like a recumbent bike. To navigate, the pilot consults an on-screen display powered by dual SD cameras, while pedalling his or her way into fame.
The contest is still underway, so amazingly, it’s possible that another vehicle could even best the Eta’s blistering 138 kilometre per hour clip. Whew! It will take more than a Huffy to beat that one.
[International Human Powered Vehicle Association via Engadget]
Top GIF via AeroVelo YouTube (footage from a 2014 race)
Bottom image via AeroVelo Facebook