Bruce Bursford Explained

Bruce Bursford (29 April 1958 – 9 February 2000) was a British sportsman from Dereham, Norfolk who broke the record for the fastest speed on a bicycle on a treadmill at 334.6 km/h in 1995.[1] He designed the bicycles Ultimate and Millennium.

History

Bruce Bursford was a schoolboy cycling champion and claimed nine speed records.

The idea for a bicycle to be made using the advanced materials and techniques usually found in aerospace and Formula 1 came from Bursford himself. In 1995 he achieved 334.6 km/h breaking the record by 88 km/h[2] on a rolling road in the Malcolm Campbell building[3] at Brooklands Museum in Surrey, England. To achieve the speed, conditions were simulated whereby Burford was "towed" until he reached 100mi/h. The towline was then "released", and he was left to pedal.

Bursford's speed was attained during a half-minute interval with him reaching 60mi/h in two seconds at the start of the attempt.[4] This feat was achieved on his specially-built bike called the Millennium Cycle. The record-breaking machine used silica tyres filled with helium and ceramic bearings designed to revolve with minimum friction.[5]

Bursford's 'Ultimate' bike won him a Millennium Product Award.

Uri Geller helped him train his mind during record bids.

Bursford died in a collision with a truck while training on the A47 at Easton near his home in Dereham, Norfolk.[6]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Speed of the fastest human, cycling. Aileen. Chou. 2001. The Physics Factbook. Elert. Glenn. 2019-07-28.
  2. Clark, Liz. The Ultimate Bicycle. Britannia, 1996
  3. Web site: Pounds 1m bike breaks record by going nowhere. Independent.co.uk. 23 October 2011.
  4. Web site: News and Race Reports for August 30 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20220922152432/http://autobus.cyclingnews.com/results/archives/august95/30_8.html . 2022-09-22 . live.
  5. http://lostajas.blogspot.com/2009/03/volando-bajo.html Photo of Bruce and his bicycle
  6. BBC news http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/638297.stm Record-breaking cyclist killed