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Who are your Land Speed Racing Heros?

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by M.D., Jul 1, 2008.

  1. jcmarz
    Joined: Jan 10, 2010
    Posts: 4,631

    jcmarz
    Member
    from Chino, Ca

    Burt and his Indian, hands down.
     
  2. George Poteet (400+) and Danny Burrow (300+) because they are my friends and they have balls.

    Dick (Bandit) Valenzuela because he is also my friend and a veteran of the golden years on the lake beds and salt.

    And finally Bill Burke, because I walked by his house every day on my way to elementary school in the mid 50s and always had neat stuff in his garage and driveway. He not only changed the sport he tickled the hot rod gene in me and made it come out.
     
  3. triumph 1
    Joined: Feb 9, 2011
    Posts: 591

    triumph 1
    Member

    Burt Munro............ fo sho!
     
  4. oddcraig
    Joined: Aug 14, 2011
    Posts: 87

    oddcraig
    Member

    I second this!! Seen the movie 100 odd times myself
     
  5. LANCE-SPEED
    Joined: Aug 10, 2006
    Posts: 2,259

    LANCE-SPEED
    Member

     
  6. PKap
    Joined: Jan 5, 2011
    Posts: 593

    PKap
    Member
    from Alberta

    Mickey Thompson. My dad is not a car guy at all, but he had a paperback copy of Mickey's biography. I read it at about 10 years old, and really affected my fascination with cars. To read about a guy with no high school laying out the challenger chassis in chalk on the floor, figuring out one shifter moving four transmissions, feeding four diffs to turn land speed tires that he had to design... And then going 400! Amazing. I think in 58-59 he set 30+ different records.
    In the 80s I read about Al Teague and his liner in a single car garage and was impressed by him too. The whole scene at Bonneville is filled with guys like that. While I do admire guys like Poteet and Kugel, because it's not only money in this sport ( there are a lot of big money spent yet unsuccessful efforts) it's the guys with creativity and ability overcoming lack of funding that I cheer for more.


    Posted from the TJJ App for iPhone & iPad
     
    270ci likes this.
  7. DAVEG2
    Joined: Feb 27, 2010
    Posts: 332

    DAVEG2
    Member

    Craig Breedlove
     
  8. Marty Strode
    Joined: Apr 28, 2011
    Posts: 8,913

    Marty Strode
    Member

    I bought some parts from one yesterday, Roy Fjastad!
     
  9. MoparJoel
    Joined: May 21, 2012
    Posts: 860

    MoparJoel
    Member

    My Step-great Uncle, Bill Summer's Goldenrod. God I wish I was older to have really known him before his passing. Bill and Bob's Legend will be passed down through out the family tree, I will do all my power to make sure of that.
    [​IMG]

    Uploaded with ImageShack.us
    Mopar runs deep in the family...
     
  10. firingorder1
    Joined: Dec 15, 2006
    Posts: 2,147

    firingorder1
    Member

    I don't think you need worry too much. The Goldenrod will live on for a very long time. I was fortunate enough to be able to see it being restored at Mike Cook's. A fabulous machine. Looking at the details Bill and Bob Summers came up with ingenious solutions and incredible workmanship.
     
  11. battersea boys
    Joined: Dec 29, 2005
    Posts: 717

    battersea boys
    Member
    from surrey

    Anthony Hopkins
     
    czuch likes this.
  12. Don't have time to read all 13 pages, but Norm Thatcher better be there somewhere!
     
  13. rocksolidnate
    Joined: Feb 4, 2013
    Posts: 121

    rocksolidnate
    Member
    from Viroqua Wi

    Burt Munro
    Art Arfons
     
  14. Danica Lynnae
    Joined: Oct 12, 2012
    Posts: 20

    Danica Lynnae
    Member

    Joe LaCosta and he's VERY MUCH ALIVE!!!!
     
  15. mrdodge
    Joined: Sep 9, 2008
    Posts: 335

    mrdodge
    Member

    The list is huge.
    All the volunteers who make it all happen, they're all heroes in my book.

    Being a kiwi, Burt Munro is right up there

    But the guy I look up to the most is a guy from NZ called Chris Harris.
    Chris went to Bonneville in 1988 with a 27 roadster and a dream. A dream that was cruelly shattered when he wrecked the car and came home in a wheelchair.
    That hasn't stopped him though, and he's been back a number of times since with a well built and engineered 32 roadster with his son Lincoln driving. Lincoln has a 200 hat and they held the C/GR record for a year or two. They are coming back this year to continue the quest for a B/GR record after a mechanical hiccup cut them short last year. And , remember, these guys aren't driving a few hundred miles,or even across the country. They're travelling halfway around the world to "have fun, go fast & stay safe"

    The "Bonneville" people are a marvellous bunch. And I love going there.

    If you haven't been, get there. You'll never regret it:)
     
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  16. Scumdog
    Joined: Mar 3, 2010
    Posts: 630

    Scumdog
    Member

    How about this guy:

    "By contrast, Wright's July 2, 1955, record was simply and unassailably a world record for any motorcycle - two runs averaging 185mph (298kmh).

    Stunningly, these were achieved not on the huge expanses of Bonneville but on a narrow Canterbury road still drying out from rain the night before and on a pretty-much standard production motorcycle.

    However "standard" is a word that fails to do justice to the almost impossibly glamorous 1000cc V-twin Vincent Black Lightning.

    Just 31 were built and they were effectively a competition-prepared version of the British company's road-going Black Shadow.

    The capabilities of Wright's Lightning had been further tweaked - greased? - in New Zealand by the attentions of a brilliant precision engineer, Scottish immigrant Bob Burns, who provided the streamlined shell and turned the engine to breathe a little extra magic into its innards.

    The Tram Rd setting at Swannanoa, 35 kilometres northwest of Christchurch, was bordered by gravel verges, wire fences, some people and, on one side for part of the 1km stretch, a hedge.

    On Wright's first run a sound like a gunshot pierced even the scream of his engine. He'd hit a bird, but continued untroubled.

    Although the Vincent was handling well, a thought intruded into Wright's concentration about the 150mph mark.

    "I realised as I was gripping those 15-inch width handlebars, and with the stark knowledge that I had only 2 inches of steering leeway, that I was now completely in the hands of the good Lord above."

    On the second run, just at the point where the high hedge on his left side stopped, a wind gust hit the side of the Vincent's fish-shaped shell pushing it across the road and towards spectators. An instinctive and exquisitely delicate correction saved who knows how many lives. This time Wright stepped off his bike with a chalky complexion, to confirmation from an International Motorcycle Federation timekeeper that the 187mph run meant he was now the world-record holder.

    Burns then attached a simple sidecar to the bike and broke the record for sidecars, his two runs averaging 162mph (261kmh).

    Russell Wright was born in 1929 in Invercargill, the eldest of four children of Charles Herbert and Isabella Wright."

    I guess a whole lot of you have not heard of Russell Wright - and he came from the same city as Burt Munro.!!:D
     
    banjeaux bob likes this.
  17. klawockvet
    Joined: May 1, 2012
    Posts: 580

    klawockvet
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    What a great post. There are so many great ones who have been to the salt. I have to add elaborate on Don Vesco however. Not only was he an innovator with balls of titanium, he was down to earth and was willing to share with anyone he met. I met him in 87 or 88 when he took time from his extremely busy schedule to help me, a nobody, run a production class bike. I owe him for a record which I would have never have gotten without him. When I was working in Socal a couple of years later, I would go by his shop in Temecula and hang out. He was always cordial and full of helpful advice. While there are others who were humble, helpful and fast they could never be a better person than Don. He was the coolest Dude I ever met. I miss him.
     
  18. bobadame
    Joined: Jan 20, 2009
    Posts: 174

    bobadame
    Member

    Don't know if anyone has mentioned Jim Feuling. Hell of an inventor, engineer and a racer. I have one of his experimental Quad 4s
     
  19. OneRustedDodge
    Joined: Jan 28, 2007
    Posts: 184

    OneRustedDodge
    Member

    Mickey Thompson
    Art Arfons
    Ak Miller
    Art Chrisman
    Earl Evans
    Alex Xydias
    Gene Winfield
    Craig Breedlove
    Dr. Nathan Ostich
    The Summer Bros.
    Barney Navarro
    Russ Eyres
    and the list goes on...
     
    kasselyn29 likes this.
  20. OBFB HA/GR
    Joined: Jun 2, 2008
    Posts: 455

    OBFB HA/GR
    Member

    Yes MR DODGE,Chris is an inspiration to us all. The way he has embraced the whole deal and got into racing with Lincoln is amazing. He too is my Hero, followed closely by Bert.
     
  21. 97
    Joined: May 18, 2005
    Posts: 1,983

    97
    Member


    <iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/-XjoExOoDXU?rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
     
  22. Salt Rat
    Joined: Jul 17, 2016
    Posts: 3

    Salt Rat

    And many of Vans engines are still in the garage, and in his late 70's is still building engines. The C motor is currently in a newer firebird.
     
  23. RichFox
    Joined: Dec 3, 2006
    Posts: 10,020

    RichFox
    Member Emeritus

    How about this guy? Crashes his home built car, at 427 mph. Gets out and turns off the electrics. Helps get the car loaded. Drives himself to SLC for xrays and such. Bob Dalton index.jpg
     
  24. czuch
    Joined: Sep 23, 2008
    Posts: 2,688

    czuch
    Member
    from vail az

    Our own McTim.
    Y-Block guy. With a Y-Block.
     
    mctim64 likes this.
  25. buffaloracer
    Joined: Aug 22, 2004
    Posts: 816

    buffaloracer
    Member
    from kansas

    Xydias
    Main
    Miller
    Noice
     
  26. I look up to the little guys who raced for personal glory. I would consider guys like Charles boogie Scott who went 238 mph at age 72. Rich Fox who raced for many years. Phillip Landry a local who races a turbo charged Flathead in Fox body Mustang.
     
  27. RichFox
    Joined: Dec 3, 2006
    Posts: 10,020

    RichFox
    Member Emeritus

  28. jimmy six
    Joined: Mar 21, 2006
    Posts: 14,932

    jimmy six
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Heros in LSR come to each in many ways. I'm not sorry to say if your wealthy, buy a car, pay an engine builder, and set records because it was a dream you get my respect. That's all. If you build your own car in a garage, your own or others, skin it, paint it, true your own tires/rims, assembly the engine your self whether you set a record or not you have reached "hero" status with me.
    There have many mentioned here so I need not mention them again. One cannot do everything alone but many have come close. Records are a great accomplishment and possibly the only item many look at but some of our heros in LSR never reach it but attain the hero status by reaching the goal of doing their best...
     
    Surf City and RidgeRunner like this.
  29. zz29
    Joined: Sep 7, 2017
    Posts: 258

    zz29
    Member

    Well, mine is Dave Koskela who did 263mph in 1979. And only because he’s friends with my father in law and I can call him if I have any questions and hear wild stories of racing and building his cars.


    Sent from my iPhone using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
     
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  30. jimmy six
    Joined: Mar 21, 2006
    Posts: 14,932

    jimmy six
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Dave is a friend of mine too . .
     

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