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Human-Powered Vehicles and the Race Across America: There's More to it than
Speed
By Chris Kostman
Originally published in VeloNews, September 8, 1989
There's more to bike racing than speed, and this year's first ever
human-powered vehicle four-man relay division of the annual transcontinental
Race Across America proved this quite dramatically. The event was originally the
brainchild of Bicycling Magazine, but when a plethora of corporate-sponsored
teams didn't appear out of the woodworks to enter, Bicycling withdrew and the
folks at the Race Across America and its parent the Ultra-Marathon Cycling
Association decided to stage the event regardless of field size or depth. Much
like the recent trans-Australia solar-powered car race, this event was designed
to encourage and foster exciting new innovations in transportation
technology. The focus was definitely on the bike and not on the
athlete propelling it.
Numerous teams expressed an interest in competing, but when push came to
shove just four teams showed up on the August 19 starting line of this historic
event. The four teams could immediately be divided into two camps, the hi-tech,
heavy-sponsored recumbent HPV's and the lo-tech, limited-sponsorship streamlined
standard bicycles. The first camp included HPV #1, the Diet Coke Lightning built
by Tim Brummer of Lompoc, CA and consisting of a recumbent cycle with nose cones
on either end and adjustable lycra body surrounding the entire set-up with the
rider's head projecting out from the top and sitting behind a clear windscreen.
Lighting's riders were ultra-marathon cyclists Pete (3 category transcontinental
record holder) and Jim Penseyres, Bobby Fourney, and Michael Coles. HPV #2 was
the
Dupont/ The Sharper Image/ Easy Racers/ Gold Rush America built
by Gardner Martin of Watsonville, CA and consisting of a recumbent cycle
completely enclosed by a ultra-streamlined Kevlar body. Its riders were
ultra-marathon cyclist Michael Shermer, Canadian National
Team pursuitist Dan Tout, former US National
Team member and Gossamer Albatross cycle-pilot Greg Miller, and
land speed record holder (65.4 mph on a lightweight version of
the Gold Rush), former Olympian and US National
Team Member "Fast Freddy" Markham.
The second camp of teams hoped that the recumbent HPV's would prove incapable
of navigating and surviving 3,000 miles of real world roads and conditions and
hoped to be in position to take the lead when the HPV's "crashed and burned".
HPV #3,
Team Chronos, used a traditional Klein road bike equipped with a
BreezeCheater fairing with integral lycra body suit and was comprised of HPV
tinkerers, professionals, and more traditional cyclists Randall Olsen, Brian
Spence, Paul Anderson, and Thane Hall, all of California. HPV #4,
Team Strawberry, used a traditional Orbit road bike also
equipped with a BreezeCheater fairing and its riders included Greg Ewing, Alan
MacDonald, and Mike Haluza. These four teams' route would take them from the Two
Wheel Transit Authority summer sale at the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa
Mesa, CA to Battery Park in Manhattan over a route 2,908 miles in length
crossing 15 different states. This was the identical route over which the 8th
annual standard division of the Race Across America was concurrently
progressing, having begun six days prior.
The race began at 3 pm Eastern time and immediately headed out across the hot
and windy Mojave desert. Riding the interstates and with hellatious tailwinds,
Easy Racer and Lightning were cruising at speeds of up to and over 60 miles per
hour. One hundred miles into the race, the route took an abrupt 90 degree left
turn and the bikes were now pummeled with the same hellatious wind to their
side. The more adaptable Lightning simply peeled back its lycra body to make
less of a wind block, while the Easy Racer was buffeted back and forth furiously
until finally thrown into a ditch with Shermer at the helm. Race rules required
that the identical fairing and structure of the HPV be used for the entire race,
thus Lightning was able to utilize its adjustable lycra body as conditions
dictated, while Easy Racer was stuck with its faster but more ungainly and
unmodifiable Kevlar body.
After climbing up to the high desert and leaving the windy conditions behind,
Easy Racer took the lead from Lightning and the "race" was apparently over for
the next 2,500 miles. With riders switching every 20 to 60 minutes, and
utilizing the fastest human-powered vehicle ever built, Easy Racer stretched its
lead to over a half hour by the Arizona border, two hours by Gallup, New Mexico,
and two hours and 42 minutes by mile 1,238 in Ashland, Kansas. Without so much
as a flat tyre, Easy Racer covered 549 miles its first day, 685 miles their
second, and reached the halfway point of 1,455 miles with an elapsed time of 2
days, 7 hours, and 50 minutes. Lightning rolled through the same point three
hours and twenty-five minutes later. Shermer's pre-race prediction that "We have
the fastest bike and the fastest riders. There's no doubt we'll win" seemed to
be coming true.
After three days, Easy Racer had covered 1847 miles and was maintaining close
to a three hour lead. Lightning was also enjoying an excellent crossing,
although battling a continuing problem with front tyre blow outs, but simply
couldn't ride fast enough to catch the Easy Racer. After three days, Lightning
rider Pete Penseyres commented "They just gotta slow down, because if they
don't, we can't win!" Hereafter the Lightning
team would rotate their riders every hour, rather than every two
hours, allowing a slightly higher average speed. This was the first nail in the
coffin of the Easy Racer. Three more nails were pounded in within the next 24
hours as a train stopped across Easy Racer's path in Missouri, halting their
progress for some 15 minutes. Shortly thereafter, nearing the Mississippi River,
the Easy Racer
team got lost during a road construction detour, and then that
night near Casey, Illinois they were halted for 22 minutes by an irate local
cop. Pete Penseyres' famous statement "The race doesn't begin until the
Mississippi" was becoming the quote to live by.
With the Lightning's new rotation schedule allowing a faster average speed
and Easy Racer encountering numerous time consuming problems, Lightning moved to
a much closer 2 hour and 15 minute deficit behind Easy Racer. Entering hilly
West Virginia, the Easy Racer covered 559 miles on its fourth day, but as the
terrain became hillier their lead fell to 1:48 with 480 miles remaining. After
four days of racing, the riders and crew of all the teams were becoming
completely exhausted and the Easy Racer
team especially began making mistakes. Unlike the Lightning
team with their cumulative experience of some 30
transcontinentals, the Easy Racer
team had never before competed in an event of this magnitude,
and the difference was beginning to become readily apparent. Even on roads
without a turn for 100 miles, the Easy Racer
team began to take wrong turns. Also, the hills of West Virginia
slowed their progress as the burnt out riders struggled to guide their 50 pound
machine eastward. The 20 to 60 minute rotation struggle was proving to have been
too fast and didn't allow enough rest. Additionally, Greg Miller had gotten sick
and for a third of the race had had to sit out of the rotation schedule
completely. As the Easy Racer struggled through the hills, frantically rotated
riders, and took one wrong turn after another, the calm and steady Lightning
team narrowed the
gap. By Grantsville, Maryland, with 352 miles remaining, the
gap was narrowed to 1:15.
Navigating through Gettysburg and then York, Pennsylvania the Easy Racer
team took several wrong turns and with 192 miles remaining,
their lead had fallen to a mere 26 minutes. After 2,700 miles with basically no
sleep, not one cooked meal, not a shower, and hardly a change of clothes, the
Easy Racer support
team was "emotionally disintegrated, enormously fatigued, and
essentially afunctional" said Shermer. Flailing like a group of drowning rats in
a whirlpool,
Team Easy Racer had reached their limit and so it was that
entering Reading, PA, the calm, cool, and collected
Team Lightning pedaled right on past the Easy Racer just 150
miles from the finish. Immediately thereafter, Easy Racer took another wrong
turn, this one straight onto an onramp which entered the fast lane of a local
freeway. With Greg Miller at the helm and unable to look behind because the rear
view mirrors had been shattered during a fall at a
traffic light, the Easy Racer was narrowly missed by a speeding
18 wheeler. White with fright, Miller halted the bike on the shoulder and
declared he would not ride it again. Shermer, Tout, and Fast Freddy agreed and
so the
team exited the freeway and during an emotional crew pow-pow in
a parking lot decided they simply could not progress eastward in a safe or
reasonable manner. They checked in at the next time station with 135 miles
remaining and officially withdrew from the race.
After
Team Lightning crossed
the finish line with a time of 5 days, 1 hour, and 8 minutes,
Shermer commented "They (Lightning) legitimately passed us and beat us. RAAM is
a whole package deal of physical, technical, and organizational skills, and they
had all three and we had only two." Lightning crew chief and wife of Pete,
Joanne Penseyres commented that
Team Lightning was "very disappointed with Easy Racer's
withdrawal and we feel a lot of empathy for them. We wish they would have
finished for their own sake. We have an awful lot of respect for them."
Team Chronos placed second with a time of 6 days, 7 hours, and
40 minutes and
Team Strawberry placed third with a time of 6 days, 14 hours,
and 3 minutes. Staff and directors of the HPV RAAM commented that they would
probably not stage this event again because of the extremely high level of
danger involved.
And so in a classic tortoise and hare race, it was once again dramatically
demonstrated that fast riders and fast bikes are not the only prerequisites to
victory in any race, and certainly not in the HPV Race Across America.
From:
http://www.adventurecorps.com/when/raam/1989raam2.html
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