Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Cannonball Run

Episode Date: July 30, 2022

In 1914, Erwin “Cannon Ball” Baker crossed the United States on a motorcycle in 11 and a half days.  Fifty-seven years later, a writer and editor for Car and Driver magazine set out to honor his ...trip by driving from Manhattan to Los Angels.  Ever since, people have been trying to replicate their journey in ever shorter times.  Learn more about the Cannonball Run and the highly illegal quest to drive across the United States on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast!  https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Darcy Adams Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen   Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Search Past Episodes at fathom.fm Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Everything Everywhere is an Airwave Media podcast." or "Everything Everywhere is part of the Airwave Media podcast network Please contact sales@advertisecast.com to advertise on Everything Everywhere. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 In 1914, Erwin Cannonball Baker crossed the United States on a motorcycle in 11.5 days. 57 years later, a writer and editor for Car and Driver magazine set out to honor his trip by driving from Manhattan to Los Angeles. Ever since, people have been trying to replicate their journey in ever shorter times. Learn more about the Cannonball Run and the highly illegal quest to drive across the United States as fast as you can on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. What if your perceptions about the past were wrong? ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed. It effectively turned day into night. And how it shaped the world now.
Starting point is 00:00:57 Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR. The United States is a pretty big country. The distance as the crow flies from New York to Los Angeles. Angeles is 3,944 kilometers, or 2,451 miles. If you traveled by horse, that trip could take you the better part of a year. If you traveled by early steam locomotives, the trip from coast to coast might have taken you a few weeks. Once automobiles were developed, the desire for individuals to attempt this crossing in
Starting point is 00:01:29 just a few days became irresistible. The first documented attempt at trying to set a transcontinental land record was set by Irwin George Cannonball Baker. Baker was a factory worker who went into vaudeville and then, in charge. the new field of motor racing. He used his Indian motorcycle and set out from San Diego, California for New York City. In 1914, he completed the trip in 11-5 days on a route that didn't include a single paved road. To put this into perspective, just five years later, the U.S. Army set out on a motorized transcontinental trip on the nation's first true coast-to-coast road,
Starting point is 00:02:05 the Lincoln Highway. The Army group, which included a young Dwight Eisenhower, took 58 days. In 1933, Baker made the same trip, this time on much better roads, and with a 1932 Graham-page Blue Streak automobile. This time, he made the trip in 53 hours and five minutes. Baker was later influential in the world of auto racing, and was the first commissioner for a racing organization known as NASCAR. Records for coast-to-coast trips across the United States were never formally kept, but as automobiles became more popular and accessible after World War II, and with the development
Starting point is 00:02:40 of the interstate highway system, more people began driving, and the automobile became a central part of the culture. With that, there became more efforts to regulate driving. Speed limits were implemented, single-class driver's licenses were imposed on most drivers, and the automobile industry began focusing more on comfort and safety over raw power. The one man who stood against these trends was the editor of Car and Driver magazine, Brock Yates. He felt that the United States interstate system should be regulated like the German Autobahn, and graduated driver's licenses should be issued on the basis of a driver's skill and experience. On May 3, 1971, he set out with one of his writers, Steve Smith, and his son, Brock Jr., to drive across the country to prove his point. They began their journey at the Red Ball Garage on East 31st Street in Manhattan.
Starting point is 00:03:26 It's literally just a parking ramp whose only distinction is that it's open 24 hours a day. From there, the team drove their Dodge van that they named Moon Trash 2 across the United States to the point. Portafino Inn in Redondo Beach, California. They made the trip in 40 hours and 51 minutes. Just six months later, they decided to do it again. This time, however, they weren't alone. Instead of just driving across the country by themselves, they decided to turn it into a race.
Starting point is 00:03:54 Dubbed the Cannonball Baker C to Shining Sea Memorial Trophy Dash. The route was the same as their first trip six months earlier, from the Red Ball Garage in Manhattan to the Portofino Inn in Redondo Beach. There was no specified route that anyone had. to take. The first race was won by Brock Yates and his new partner, Dan Gurney. They shaved a full five hours off of the previous 1971 attempt and completed it in 35 hours, 54 minutes. And they did it in a bright red Ferrari. This very unofficial and highly illegal race was held again in 1972, 1975, and 1979. The 1979 event was the last official, unofficial cannonball run. The concern was
Starting point is 00:04:36 that the speeds were getting too high, and now too much attention was now being brought to the race. The winner of the 1979 race won with a time of 32 hours and 51 minutes, which was a new record. Yates drove in the 1979 race with the Hollywood stuntman turned director Hal Needham. Needham had recently directed the hit movie Smokey and the Bandit with Bert Reynolds. Yates and Needham completed the race in a converted van that was painted to look like an ambulance. If that sounds familiar, it's because Needham and Yates took their account. experience and wrote a screenplay, which resulted in the 1981 film The Cannonball Run, directed by Hal Needham, written by Brock Yates, and starring Bert Reynolds and a very large supporting cast.
Starting point is 00:05:19 I'm guessing that the vast majority of you thought immediately of that movie when you saw the title of this episode, and I will further guess that at least many of you might not have even known that the movie was based on an actual race of the same name. While the Cannonball Run, as an official, unofficial event might have been over, the movie only increased the interest in cross-country racing. There was a spate of similar races over the next few years, including U.S. Express, the C-to-C Express, and the Lap Around America. In 1983, a new record was set by drivers Doug Turner and David Deem, who drove the route in a Red Ferrari 308 GTE in 32 hours and seven minutes. After 1983, the excitement from the movie wore off, and there weren't really any more big
Starting point is 00:06:02 races or improvements in the record. Despite significant improvements in cars and technology, the 1983 record stood for over 20 years. However, in the 21st century, a small group of enthusiasts began to take a new approach to the cross-country record. But before I get into these new record attempts, I want to go through exactly what goes into such a record attempt. The 1983 record of 32 hours and 7 minutes required an average speed of almost 90 miles per hour or 145 kilometers per hour. There is nowhere in the United States where that speed is legal. That means your first big concern is the police. To set a record, you need conditions to be almost perfect.
Starting point is 00:06:43 This means if you get pulled over, even once, that might be enough to ruin a record attempt. Given the speeds you probably will be going, you might even get arrested. Assuming you avoid the police, you will need an efficient route. This means not only reducing your distance, but avoiding rush hours and construction zones. If you don't plan ahead, you could hit a giant construction zone outside of Kansas City where you sit in a line of cars for hours. Also, because the route starts in Manhattan, which is one of the worst places in America to drive a car, you're probably going to want to start around 2 to 3 in the morning to avoid traffic. Likewise, you'll want to avoid traffic when you arrive
Starting point is 00:07:16 in Los Angeles, which would be just as bad. Finally, you need to address the issue of fuel. You want to reduce the number of fuel stops to as few as possible, and when you stop, you want to spend as little time refueling as possible. The first serious attempt at breaking the 1983 record took place in 2006. Alex Roy and David Marr took a customized BMW N5 and set out to break the record. This wasn't part of a race with other cars. This was just a race against the clock. They broke the record with a time of 31 hours and four minutes. Their car was filled with electronics to get updates on traffic conditions and to avoid the police. Their cover story, if they were to have been pulled over was that they were storm chasers. They didn't release details of their record for over a year
Starting point is 00:08:00 until the statute of limitations on speeding expired in most states. They hit a top speed of 157 miles per hour and even recruited spotter aircraft in some areas. That record was smashed in 2013 by the team of Ed Bolian, Dave Black, and Dan Huang. They got a 2004 Mercedes-Benz, CL 55 AMG, from the start to finish, in 28 hours, 50 minutes, taking more than two hours off the record and breaking the 30-hour mark. They averaged a speed of 98 miles per hour and hit a peak speed of 182 miles per hour or 290 kilometers per hour. They had a total of 67 gallons or 254 liters of fuel capacity with two extra fuel tanks put in the trunk. That record was then shattered on December 10, 2019, by a three-man team of Arnie Torman, Doug Talbot, and Berkeley. Chadwick. They drove a 2015 Mercedes-Benz E-63 AMG sedan and punched in a time of 27 hours, 25 minutes,
Starting point is 00:09:01 again taking another hour and a half off the record. They had an average speed of 103 miles per hour or 166 kilometers per hour and reached a top speed of 193 miles per hour. They only spent a total of 22 minutes on four fuel stops. Their car was again filled with electronics, including an infrared camera to spot police cars from a distance as well as an extra large fuel tank. When 2020 came around, the pandemic offered a once-in-a-lifetime chance at these record attempts. The lockdowns resulted in a dramatic reduction in cars on the highway as well as police. In April of 2020, an anonymous team who hasn't released their names yet, but did provide corroborating GPS data, clocked a new record time of 26 hours, 38 minutes, again, knocking
Starting point is 00:09:50 almost another hour off of the record. In just the next month, the team of Arnie Torrin, Doug Talbot, and Spotter Dundell Derush set a new record which still stands of 25 hours, 39 minutes. They did this in a modified 2016 Audi S6, and they actually changed the front of the car to make it look like a Ford Taurus police car. The average speed for the entire trip was 110 miles per hour, with a moving speed, not including their stops of 112 miles per hour. In June of 2020, there was supposedly a solo run made in 25 hours, 55 minutes,
Starting point is 00:10:26 but it's been called into question as there is little in the way of supporting evidence, and it was supposedly done in a rental car. Also in May, the team of Chris Clemens and Mark Spence, drove a modified Mercedes SL-500 to the Portofino Inn, and then turn around and drove all the way back in 74 hours and five minutes. That double transcontinental record was broken in April, of 2022 by a team of Nick Kruger, Mark Spence, and Wesley Veig, who did it in 65 hours and 28 minutes, knocking almost eight hours off the record. By this point, many of you might be thinking,
Starting point is 00:10:59 Gary, this isn't just illegal, this is dangerous. To which I would say, yep, you are correct, this is dangerous, not just to the drivers, but to everyone else on the road. Many people in this very small community think that the period for record attempts may have ended. It isn't a function of the car speed, the fuel tank size, or the police avoiding electronics. There simply will probably never be conditions like there were from March to May 2020. If the record can't be broken, most people simply won't try. One area of new cannonball run record attempts will probably come from electric vehicles. The biggest difference between an electric attempt from a traditional fuel attempt would be recharging. You can put gasoline in a tank quickly. Charging a battery,
Starting point is 00:11:42 however, takes more time. The current electronic vehicle record, is 42 hours and 52 minutes, set in October 2021 by Ryan Levinson and Will Wood, and they were driving a 2021 Tesla Model S long range. The only modification they made to the car was with the tires. My guess is that someone will modify an electric car with a massive extra battery such that it can go the entire distance without charging, and that will shatter the current record, even if they were to only go the speed limit. My interest in this story actually came from planning I did for a similar coast-to-coast record attempt.
Starting point is 00:12:15 However, for this attempt, I wasn't driving from New York to Los Angeles. It would be driving the 5,490 miles, or 8,835 kilometers, from Pruto Bay, Alaska on the shore of the Arctic Ocean to Key West Florida. This would be a totally different sort of record. It isn't just about fast cars, as much of the trip would take place in remote areas, including several hundred miles of the Dalton Highway in Alaska, which is nothing but gravel. The current record basically consists of going the speed limit the entire way. I don't know if I'll ever do this, but it's been fun to think about and plan. The people who attempt cannonball run records are known as the fraternity of lunatics.
Starting point is 00:12:54 And I can't say I can really argue with that description. They invests thousands of dollars into something where official records aren't even kept, and if you break about your accomplishments too much, you could get arrested. Everything Everywhere Daily is an Airwave Media podcast. The executive producer is Darcy Adams. The associate producers are Thorne Thompson and Peter Bennett. Today's review comes from listener McCabe, 1965, over on Instagram. They write,
Starting point is 00:13:22 Hi, Gary. After much searching through the vast sea of podcasts, I found everything everywhere, and I really enjoy it. I've gone through trying out several history podcasts, and with the exception of yours, it was frustrating. Many had hosts who with too much banter, goofing around, or their voices were monotone and sounded like the teacher from Ferris Bueller. Your voice kind of sounds like the late Casey Kasem.
Starting point is 00:13:42 I'm in a car about six hours a day for work, and everything everywhere is always on. I started a couple weeks ago, and I'm currently on episode 622. I strive to be a member of the Completionist Club, and a way to earn the key to the executive washroom. I couldn't find where on Everything Everywhere's webpage to give the star rating. But now it's a solid five. I am searching with the help of Benedictine monks using ancient scrolls to find the fabled
Starting point is 00:14:04 sixth star. Your topics are great, the knowledge, the presentation, all of it are great. Thank you. Well, thank you, Kevin. Define the sixth star. The secret is not Benedictine monks. You need to go on a national treasure-like search through the estates of George Washington and General John Pershing. Only they knew the secret of the sixth star.
Starting point is 00:14:24 And I think it might be located in the capstone of the Washington monument or something like that. And as for my voice, remember, if you leave a review or send a long-distance dedication, you two can have it read on the show. At last comes the motion picture from the greatest book of traffic citations ever written. Cannonball run, two. Pardon me, sir, I'd like to see your license of our mic. You want cars. Cannonball, Godin'all!
Starting point is 00:14:53 You want curves? Down and dirty. You asked for it. You got it. Cannonball run, too. And this time, there's no limit.

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