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-   -   Home and Auto "Cannonball" speed record shattered. NY to LA in under 29 hrs (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=278186)

Deberg_1990 11-01-2013 01:06 PM

"Cannonball" speed record shattered. NY to LA in under 29 hrs
 
Averaged 90Mph. I'm guessing these guys broke a few laws?


http://www.cnn.com/2013/10/31/us/new...html?hpt=hp_c3



(CNN) -- Before the transcontinental race in "Cannonball Run," the starter tells the gathered racers, "You all are certainly the most distinguished group of highway scofflaws and degenerates ever gathered together in one place."
Ed Bolian prefers the term "fraternity of lunatics."
Where the 1981 Burt Reynolds classic was a comedic twist on a race inspired by real-life rebellion over the mandated 55-mph speed limits of the 1970s, Bolian set out on a serious mission to beat the record for driving from New York to Los Angeles.
The mark? Alex Roy and David Maher's cross-country record of 31 hours and 4 minutes, which they set in a modified BMW M5 in 2006.
Bolian, a 28-year-old Atlanta native, had long dreamed of racing from East Coast to West. A decade ago, for a high school assignment, Bolian interviewed Brock Yates, who conceived the Cannonball Baker Sea-To-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash, aka the Cannonball Run.
Yates, who played the previously quoted organizer in the film he wrote himself, won the first Cannonball in the early 1970s with a time of 35 hours and 53 minutes.
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"I told him, 'One day I'd like to beat your record,' " Bolian recalled.
Ounce of prevention
It sounds like great outlaw fun -- and certainly, Hollywood added its embellishments, like the supremely confident, infidel-cursing sheik with a Rolls Royce and Sammy Davis Jr. in a priest getup -- but Bolian said it took considerable research and groundwork.
Beginning in 2009, about the time he started working for Lamborghini Atlanta, Bolian researched cars, routes, moon phases, traffic patterns, equipment, gas mileage and modifications.
He went into preparation mode about 18 months ago and chose a Mercedes CL55 AMG with 115,000 miles for the journey. The Benz's gas tank was only 23 gallons, so he added two 22-gallon tanks in the trunk, upping his range to about 800 miles. The spare tire had to go in the backseat with his spotter, Dan Huang, a student at Georgia Tech, Bolian's alma mater.
To foil the police, he installed a switch to kill the rear lights and bought two laser jammers and three radar detectors. He commissioned a radar jammer, but it wasn't finished in time for the trek. There was also a police scanner, two GPS units and various chargers for smartphones and tablets -- not to mention snacks, iced coffee and a bedpan.
By the time he tricked out the Benz, which included a $9,000 tuneup, "it was a real space station of a thing," he said, describing the lights and screens strewn through the car's cockpit.
Yet he still wasn't done.
"The hardest thing, quite honestly, was finding people crazy enough to do it with me," he said.
Co-driver Dave Black, one of the Atlanta Lamborghini dealership's customers, didn't sign on until three days before they left, and "support passenger" Huang didn't get involved until about 18 hours before the team left Atlanta for Manhattan.
If his difficulty finding a copilot wasn't an omen, Manhattan would deliver one. While scouting routes out of the city, a GPS unit told Bolian to take a right on red, in the wrong direction down a one-way road. He was quickly pulled over.
Bolian got a warning -- and a healthy dose of relief that the officer didn't question the thick odor of fuel as he stood over the vents pumping fumes from the trunk.
Record run begins
The trio ignored what some might have considered a harbinger and the left the Red Ball Garage on East 31st Street, the starting point for Yates' Cannonball, a few hours later. To be exact, they left October 19 at 9:55 p.m., according to a tracking company whose officials asked not be identified because they were unaware that Bolian would be driving so illegally when he hired them.
It really isn't something we need a whole band of lunatics doing.
Ed Bolian
They hit a patch of traffic in New York that held them up for 15 minutes but soon had an average speed of about 90 mph. In Pennsylvania, they tapped the first of many scouts, one of Bolian's acquaintances who drove the speed limit 150 to 200 miles ahead of the CL55 and warned them of any police, construction or other problems.
They blew through Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, hitting St. Louis before dawn.
"Everything possible went perfect," Bolian said, explaining they never got lost and rarely encountered traffic or construction delays.
By the time they hit southern Missouri, near the Oklahoma border, they learned they were "on track to break the existing record if they averaged the speed limit for the rest of the trip," he said.
Yeah, right. This wasn't about doing speed limits.
They kept humming west, and as they neared the Texas-New Mexico border, they calculated they might beat the 30-hour mark, a sort of Holy Grail in transcontinental racing that Bolian likened to the 4-minute mile.
Not one to settle, "we decided to break 29," Bolian said.
The unnamed tracking company says the Benz pulled into the Portofino Hotel and Marina in Redondo Beach, California, at 11:46 p.m. on October 20 after driving 2,803 miles. The total time: 28 hours, 50 minutes and about 30 seconds.
"Most of the time, we weren't going insanely fast," Bolian said, not realizing his definition of "insanely" is a little different from most folks'.
When they were moving, which, impressively, was all but 46 minutes of the trip, they were averaging around 100 mph. Their total average was 98 mph, and their top speed was 158 mph, according to an onboard tracking device.
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"Apart from a FedEx truck not checking his mirrors before he tried to merge on top of me, we didn't really have any issues," Bolian said.
Do not try this at home
He concedes his endeavor was a dangerous one, especially when you consider Bolian slept only 40 minutes of the trip, and co-driver Black slept an hour. But Bolian went out of his way to make it as safe as possible, choosing a weekend day with clear weather and a full moon -- and routes, when possible, with little traffic or construction.
"I had plenty of people at home praying I'd make it safely, and, more importantly, had my wife praying that I wouldn't have to do it again," he said, adding he has no children, which was also a factor. "That was one of the spurs to go ahead and get this over with. That's probably the next adventure."
Asked if the technological advances since the previous record holders made their run gave him an advantage, Bolian replied, "Absolutely." Because two teams broke the 32-hour mark in 2006 and 2007, he had a detailed "guide book" on how to do it, where they had to rely on word-of-mouth tales from the 1980s.
"I thank Alex for that. We're all adding chapters to the same story of American car culture," Bolian said. Alex Roy did not respond to an e-mail seeking comment.
Bolian had hoped to revisit that high school interview and tell Yates he'd followed through on that promise to break his record, but Yates now suffers from Alzheimer's.
"I'll pay him a visit just for the sake of it," Bolian said, "but I can't tell him."
Where the Cannonball scofflaws aimed to make a statement about personal freedom, Bolian said he has the utmost respect for law enforcement. His goal was merely to "add myself and pay tribute to this chapter of automotive history," he said.
Bolian also hopes that he shattered Roy's record by such a stark margin that it discourages would-be Cannonballers from attempting to break his record, and it's not just a matter of his own legacy, he said.
"It really isn't something we need a whole band of lunatics doing," he said.

Archie F. Swin 11-01-2013 01:08 PM

And I get pulled over for 79 in a 75 in Texas.


In a Nissan

ptlyon 11-01-2013 01:08 PM

And luv can't even get her license renewed...

Strongside 11-01-2013 01:08 PM

I once drove from Phoenix, AZ to Kansas City, KS in just under 17 hours. Trip is supposed to take 18.5...still one of my proudest life achievements.

Mile High Mania 11-01-2013 01:12 PM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dZ5QpdM3B30

ptlyon 11-01-2013 01:24 PM

I don't see what the big deal is, I once did it in just over 3 minutes on Crusin' USA

Marcellus 11-01-2013 01:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ptlyon (Post 10146844)
And luv can't even get her license renewed...

LMAO

Looks like Richard Rawlings has another car to buy for his Cannonball collection.

KC native 11-01-2013 01:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Strongside (Post 10146847)
I once drove from Phoenix, AZ to Kansas City, KS in just under 17 hours. Trip is supposed to take 18.5...still one of my proudest life achievements.

heh I did Fort Worth to KC in 6.5 hours and it usually takes 8 if you're an efficient road tripper like me.

Pretty proud of the 6.5 hours too.

Phobia 11-01-2013 01:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Strongside (Post 10146847)
I once drove from Phoenix, AZ to Kansas City, KS in just under 17 hours. Trip is supposed to take 18.5...still one of my proudest life achievements.

I did that in 16 in a F-350 towing a trailer.

mike_b_284 11-01-2013 01:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Strongside (Post 10146847)
I once drove from Phoenix, AZ to Kansas City, KS in just under 17 hours. Trip is supposed to take 18.5...still one of my proudest life achievements.

KC - Flagstaff 15 hrs. Wasn't really trying. wide open spaces and no cops. The next day saw a million cops in the 2nd half of AZ

Deberg_1990 11-01-2013 01:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Phobia (Post 10146927)
I did that in 16 in a F-350 towing a trailer.

Wow, did you wear a diaper to save time?

mike_b_284 11-01-2013 01:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mike_b_284 (Post 10146928)
KC - Flagstaff 15 hrs. Wasn't really trying. wide open spaces and no cops. The next day saw a million cops in the 2nd half of AZ

Just figured the avg speed. 74 and change. not as impressive as I thought.

stevieray 11-01-2013 01:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Strongside (Post 10146847)
I once drove from Phoenix, AZ to Kansas City, KS in just under 17 hours. Trip is supposed to take 18.5...still one of my proudest life achievements.

I rode a Honda Nighthawk non stop from Phoenix to Denver..left at 4 am..arrived at 8pm..

....last hour was brutal.

KC native 11-01-2013 01:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Race Card native (Post 10146922)
heh I did Fort Worth to KC in 6.5 hours and it usually takes 8 if you're an efficient road tripper like me.

Pretty proud of the 6.5 hours too.

Just calculated the average speed required to do that. 84.6 MPH ROFL

Reaper16 11-01-2013 01:48 PM

A friend and me once drove from KC to Chicago in under 5 and a half hours. It was on Thanksgiving, and we never saw a single cop until Chicago. We were going 92 mph a lot of the way.

Valiant 11-01-2013 01:52 PM

Awesome read. We drove from kc to south padre. Lil over 17 hours. The trip navigator said I averaged 80. That is with gas stops. I was flying. Hit every city perfectly with no slowdown.

Dayze 11-01-2013 02:34 PM

Fresno to Fort Collins in around 19.5 hrs. that SUCKED.

TinyEvel 11-01-2013 03:12 PM

I got from Los Angeles to Kansas City in 5.2 hours.
Southwest, bitches!

cosmo20002 11-01-2013 03:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Deberg_1990 (Post 10146835)
"Cannonball" speed record shattered. NY to LA in under 29 hrs.

I could do that.

/Terry Bradshaw, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Jamie Farr, a couple hot chicks in a Lambo

TEX 11-01-2013 03:22 PM

The Gumball Rally in the '76 was a GREAT movie! Must have rode my bike 50 times to watch it that summer - every day before the pool. LOL!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQcmR4RlEBk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8LzFoECu--g

ping2000 11-01-2013 03:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Marcellus (Post 10146919)
LMAO

Looks like Richard Rawlings has another car to buy for his Cannonball collection.

I thought on the show he said he and Dennis held the current record from 2007?

Marcellus 11-01-2013 03:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ping2000 (Post 10147385)
I thought on the show he said he and Dennis held the current record from 2007?

They did I think this broke it.

Edit:

Quote:

The mark? Alex Roy and David Maher's cross-country record of 31 hours and 4 minutes, which they set in a modified BMW M5 in 2006.
Doesn't match this-

http://jalopnik.com/260307/did-rawli...inental-record

Strongside 11-01-2013 03:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Strongside (Post 10146847)
I once drove from Phoenix, AZ to Kansas City, KS in just under 17 hours. Trip is supposed to take 18.5...still one of my proudest life achievements.

I forgot to mention that I was on a bicycle, assholes.

Frazod 11-01-2013 03:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dayze (Post 10147170)
Fresno to Fort Collins in around 19.5 hrs. that SUCKED.

My longest nonstop drive was Newport, RI to Fenton, MO. 1,030 miles according to the mileage calculator, in 17 hours, alone, back before they started raising speed limits over 55. That sucked, too.

The Franchise 11-01-2013 03:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by frazod (Post 10147415)
My longest nonstop drive was Newport, RI to Fenton, MO. 1,030 miles according to the mileage calculator, in 17 hours, alone, back before they started raising speed limits over 55. That sucked, too.

Mine was Tucson, AZ to Pierre, SD in about 20 hours. There is nothing worse than driving that long and having the end of your trip be when the sun is coming up. It ****s with your head.

stevieray 11-01-2013 03:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Strongside (Post 10147412)
I forgot to mention that I was on a bicycle, assholes.

meh..you coasted on the down hills.

seclark 11-01-2013 03:39 PM

you guys are some crazy assholes...i'm keeping my station wagon over in the slow lane.
sec

Halfcan 11-01-2013 03:39 PM

San fran to KC in 36 hours straight through no stops. We went through idaho and montana as well.

stevieray 11-01-2013 03:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by seclark (Post 10147429)
you guys are some crazy assholes...i'm keeping my station wagon over in the slow lane.
sec

good tunes! don't forget the good tunes!

Frazod 11-01-2013 03:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pestilence (Post 10147419)
Mine was Tucson, AZ to Pierre, SD in about 20 hours. There is nothing worse than driving that long and having the end of your trip be when the sun is coming up. It ****s with your head.

I started getting tired around sunset in western Pennsylvania. Washed down a box of NoDoz with a Mountain Dew and kept going. I was pretty twitchy by the time I got to Illinois, but made it unscathed. Got to my aunt's house around 5:30 a.m., slept for about 3 hours, and then was wide awake for the rest of the day.

Ah, to be young again.

Strongside 11-01-2013 03:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stevieray (Post 10147439)
good tunes! don't forget the good tunes!

I think that any drive over 15 hours is where music becomes irrelevant. I think you could hear every song in your collection in that time...and it's all just a blur afterward. Tunnel vision sets in. As Macho Man Randy Savage once said "Do not go down that lonesome highway."

stevieray 11-01-2013 03:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Strongside (Post 10147454)
I think that any drive over 15 hours is where music becomes irrelevant. I think you could hear every song in your collection in that time...and it's all just a blur afterward. Tunnel vision sets in. As Macho Man Randy Savage once said "Do not go down that lonesome highway."

we also take comedian mp3's on road trips

BlackHelicopters 11-01-2013 04:28 PM

Sam Kinison and Dave Attell are must have road trip CD's.

The Franchise 11-01-2013 04:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by frazod (Post 10147446)
I started getting tired around sunset in western Pennsylvania. Washed down a box of NoDoz with a Mountain Dew and kept going. I was pretty twitchy by the time I got to Illinois, but made it unscathed. Got to my aunt's house around 5:30 a.m., slept for about 3 hours, and then was wide awake for the rest of the day.

Ah, to be young again.

Yeah....I was 22 when I did it. And my friend was along for the ride. I'm pretty sure I went through a 12 pack of Mountain Dew and 2 packs of cigarettes in that 20 hour period.

SAUTO 11-01-2013 04:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Marcellus (Post 10146919)
LMAO

Looks like Richard Rawlings has another car to buy for his Cannonball collection.

He was the record holder. Bet he's crying now...
Posted via Mobile Device

Discuss Thrower 11-01-2013 04:54 PM

Hattiesburgh to Joplin in around 7.5 to 8 hours... Car GPS said 11 and Google says 9.

SAUTO 11-01-2013 04:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Halfcan (Post 10147435)
San fran to KC in 36 hours straight through no stops. We went through idaho and montana as well.

I figured diapers were your regular attire
Posted via Mobile Device

007 11-02-2013 02:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Halfcan (Post 10147435)
San fran to KC in 36 hours straight through no stops. We went through idaho and montana as well.

where did you store your urine?

Dayze 11-02-2013 03:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stevieray (Post 10146933)
I rode a Honda Nighthawk non stop from Phoenix to Denver..left at 4 am..arrived at 8pm..

....last hour was brutal.

wow. That's a haul no matter what you ride.

Dayze 11-02-2013 03:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Strongside (Post 10147454)
I think that any drive over 15 hours is where music becomes irrelevant. I think you could hear every song in your collection in that time...and it's all just a blur afterward. Tunnel vision sets in. As Macho Man Randy Savage once said "Do not go down that lonesome highway."

when I drove from Fresno to Fort Colins when I was discharged, I was damn near hallucinating; having run out of CDs. this was in 2000. went through them all probably twice.

I remember waking up at 2:30 am not being able to sleep. THinking "man...i wish I could go back to sleep'....then realizing my discharge leave started at 00:00. So I said **** it; had my sea bag packed already. Brushed my teeth and out I went. I was hyped up/ecstatic I was out so that was fueling a ton of my energy

Chief Roundup 11-02-2013 07:19 AM

So how are you guys getting this great gas mileage to where you are non-stop from point A to point B?

whoman69 11-02-2013 07:43 AM

Cannonball Run (1981) stole the idea from Gumball Rally (1976)


Great job in Gumball Rally from Raul Julia and Gary Busey before they were famous.

whoman69 11-02-2013 07:46 AM

Best line from Gumball Rally

Franco: And now my friend, the first-a rule of Italian driving.
[Franco rips off his rear-view mirror and throws it out of the car]
Franco: What's-a behind me is not important.

MahiMike 11-02-2013 07:55 AM

This is so friggin' awesome! A classic movie brought to life. Now if we could only bring Farrah Fawcett back to life...)

siberian khatru 11-02-2013 08:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dayze (Post 10148474)
when I drove from Fresno to Fort Colins when I was discharged, I was damn near hallucinating; having run out of CDs. this was in 2000. went through them all probably twice.

I remember waking up at 2:30 am not being able to sleep. THinking "man...i wish I could go back to sleep'....then realizing my discharge leave started at 00:00. So I said **** it; had my sea bag packed already. Brushed my teeth and out I went. I was hyped up/ecstatic I was out so that was fueling a ton of my energy

Vanishing Point

TLO 11-02-2013 11:07 AM

I once had my 92 3000GT-VR4 up to a 135 mph on the interstate. My buddy was following me filming in his 96 Dodge Srealth RT/TT. I was young and stupid. I'm still young and stupid. It was around 3am on a long quiet stretch with no other cars around. Still a stupid thing to do.

HoneyBadger 11-02-2013 11:23 AM

I fly places.

Dave Lane 11-02-2013 11:40 AM

I drove from Wichita to KC in an hour and 15 minutes. Course I was driving a Porsche and there was a tornado running down I-35 about 50 miles north of Wichita so I just went wild. Was doing 120-140 most the way.

Oh to be young again :)

Discuss Thrower 11-02-2013 11:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HoneyBadger (Post 10148858)
I fly places.

How very bourgeoisie of you.

Sully 11-02-2013 12:27 PM

I drove from KC to Jupiter, Fla, nonstop. No speed records, did it in about 24 hours.
I had planned to stop when I got tired. The mistake I made was when I hit Florida thinking, "Hell, I'm almost there. Might as well push through."
This was after drinking with friends for two nights and getting little sleep.
Stopped to get gas in Georgia. Ran in, took a leak, got some food, started to drive off. Except I forgot to take the gas spout out of my Jeep.
So I freaked out, replaced it, even though it was detached by then, and went inside. Guy behind the counter is just looking down at his magazine, so I run in panicked, and breathing hard.
"Um... I accidentally drive off with the hose."

Not looking up,
"Yeah... I saw that..."

"Um... So... Erm..."

Still not looking up,
"Get outta here, boy."

Discuss Thrower 11-02-2013 12:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sully (Post 10148965)
"Get outta here, boy."

http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m5...cc6bo1_250.gif

-King- 11-02-2013 01:05 PM

I've drove from the plaza to Lee's summit nonstop in less than 15 minutes.
Posted via Mobile Device

Sully 11-02-2013 01:20 PM

Sometimes I can drive Noland from 24 Hwy to 40 Hwy in under 2 hours.

stevieray 11-02-2013 01:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sully (Post 10149108)
Sometimes I can drive Noland from 24 Hwy to 40 Hwy in under 2 hours.

LMAO

seamonster 11-02-2013 01:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sully (Post 10149108)
Sometimes I can drive Noland from 24 Hwy to 40 Hwy in under 2 hours.

Out on the East coast it literally does takes about two hours to drive fifteen miles...And people do it everyday high on prescription opiates and or texting.

TrebMaxx 11-02-2013 02:33 PM

My version of a cannonball run was Spokane WA to Columbia MO in 20.5 hours. My wife was the co-driver. Made great time on I-90 through Montana, Wyoming and S. Dakota with 100+ mph stretches. We only stopped when we needed gas or for taking a leak. If we did have to use the restroom before we needed gas we would top off with fuel anyway. Had car stocked with food and Mt. Dew.


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