World’s fastest mobility scooter hits record 107.6 mph

It must’ve been a slow week at an Isle of Man bodyshop when mechanics David Anderson and Mathew Hine decided to “tweak” a mobility scooter for a bit more speed . The garden-variety Days Strider model was designed to go 8 mph, so naturally the pair added an 80-horsepower, four-cylinder, liquid-cooled Suzuki motorcycle engine. That made the chassis and tires woefully inadequate, so they also redesigned the frame and added go-cart wheels. “But that’s not really a mobility scooter anymore, ” you may say. Well, the Guinness folks specify that “from the outside the vehicle must appear like a traditional motorscooter. … [but} the engine may be modified or replaced in a way that seems suitable to gain a higher speed.” With Hine at the wheel, the run actually happened in August 2014, but it took Guinness quite a while to certify the feat. The official world record of 107.6 mph was measured as an average over a quarter-mile stretch of the test track, and handily beat the previous mark of 71.59 mph. Judging by the wheelie bars, it could take any comers in a drag race, too. Chest Cam footage of one of the runs this run was 107.6 mph we did that speed on a regular basis too just didnt manage to get over it …..yet! there is still tomorrow Posted by Andersons Bodyshop on Saturday, August 30, 2014 Via: The Verge Source: Guinnness Book of World Records

More:
World’s fastest mobility scooter hits record 107.6 mph

Who Knew? New York City Has a Floating Prison

Most people know that New York City has its own little Alcatraz, called Riker’s Island. But few know that there’s another prison in the East River, this one floating next to the new Fulton Fish market in the Bronx. The Vernon C. Bain Correctional Center is a 47, 000-ton, five-story barge with 800 beds spread over 16 “dormitories” and 100 proper jail cells. At 625 feet in length and 125 feet wide, it also holds a gym, a basketball court, a library, three chapels, a rooftop exercise area, an IMAX theater and a casino. Okay, it doesn’t really have an IMAX theater and a casino but I wanted to see if you were paying attention. Tide and punishment Built in a Louisiana shipyard in the late ’80s, the floating prison was towed up to New York in the early 90s, and it looks for all the world like it was designed by a child playing with blue and white Legos. The unattractive structure is also, according to the Guinness Book of World Records, “The world’s largest prison ship.” (Go New York.) All A-board of Corrections As for why we even have the thing, a New York Times article detailing its opening says the ship was built “as a way of trying to develop prison space more quickly and to avoid complaints from community groups about building jails in densely populated neighborhoods.”  The D.O.Sea And the 800-bed facility wasn’t cheap: As the writer of this tugboat blog points out, “She was built…at a cost of $161 Million, which as usual, means it would have been cheaper to send the inmates to Harvard instead.”

More:
Who Knew? New York City Has a Floating Prison