Break The Record
In 1970, The Blue Flame became the world land speed record holder. It was the last American team to set the world land speed record, and the last on the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. The car was designed and built by Reaction Dynamics, Inc. (Pete Farnsworth and Dick Keller) in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and driven by Gary Gabelich of Long Beach, California. It had a rocket motor using liquefied natural gas (LNG) and hydrogen peroxide as the fuel. The world record set was 630.388 mile per hour in the kilometer, also the first automobile record over 1,000 kilometers per hour - at 1,014.656 kilometers per hour. That record was finally broken in 1997. Watch the YouTube video "Speedquest" to see the whole story.

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The Blue Flame - Speedquest

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MG Speed Trials at Bonneville Salt Flats 1956

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The North American Eagle

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Thrust 2 (Part 3) - Richard Noble's 633mph Land Speed Record

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What Are Those WEIRD Things Under Airplane Wings? And What Happens If They Fail?

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Silver State Classic: The Fastest Road Race in the World (1990 VHS)

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The FASTEST Cars in History - Top 5 Official Land Speed Records

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Stan Barrett Budweiser Rocket – Speed of Sound?

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The Blue Flame - Interview mit dem Konstrukteur Richard Keller

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The Homemade Jet Car That SHATTERED Records in the ’60s

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POV | 555 MPH Land Speed Record from the Petersen Archives

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Art Alfons "The Green Monster"

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The Power and the Glory - The Fastest Men On Earth (1992 BBC Land Speed Record Documentary)

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0-1000 mph in 22 Seconds

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So Genius It Makes Modern F1 Look STUPID!

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Something Evil This Way Comes

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500mph Failure: The Incredible Wingfoot Express 2 and A History of Rocket Cars 1928-1965

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Craig Breedlove and Spirit of America - 1964 crash!

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Ford GT40 - 1968 24 Hours of Le Mans

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