George Poteet
George Poteet is a Memphis-based[1][2] land speed racer and winner of the 1996 Ridler Award.
Poteet's 1937 Ford roadster (built by Don Pilkenton)[3] won the 1996 Ridler Award.[4][5][6] This car would go on to take "America's Most Beautiful Roadster", top prize at the Oakland Roadster Show.[7]
In 2011, Poteet drove Speed Demon (built by Ron Main) to 426 mph (686 km/h) at Bonneville,[8] and eventually breaking both the C/BFS and D/BFS (supercharged fuel streamliner) records.[9] After making "the fastest piston engine pass ever",[10] Speed Demon was displayed at the 2018 Detroit Autorama.[11]
Notes
- Larivee, Bob (2015). Hot Rod Detroit. Oxford, Michigan: DP Publishing. p. 161. ISBN 978-0-692-30899-8.
- Autorama.com (retrieved 3 January 2019)
- Hot Rod Magazine online (retrieved 3 January 2019)
- Larivee, Bob (2015). Hot Rod Detroit. Oxford, Michigan: DP Publishing. p. 161. ISBN 978-0-692-30899-8.
- Autorama.com (retrieved 3 January 2019)
- Mlive.com (retrieved 3 January 2019)
- Hot Rod Magazine online (retrieved 3 January 2019)
- Squatriglia, Chuck. "This is what 426 mph looks like." Autopia. Wired. August 24, 2011.
- (retrieved 3 January 2019)
- (retrieved 3 January 2019)
- Classicarnews.com (retrieved 3 January 2019); Detroit News online (retrieved 3 January 2019)
gollark: Yes, but it's entirely different.
gollark: > Oh IFcoltransG said that that option doesn't really exist for genderIt doesn't. Gender transitioning is way harder and slower and more serious and also less accepted than hair dye.
gollark: A non mandatory one would be biased towards people who really care about whatever aspects of their identity it records.
gollark: I'd assume 10%ish, but nearby countries should be able to provide okay figures.
gollark: Okay, compare France or Germany or random nearby EU countries.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.