A real-life Mad Max?
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[February 09, 2017]
Markus 'Max' Stöckl hits a top speed
of 167.6 km/h on a standard mountain bike.
For two years, Markus ‘Max’ Stöckl laid out a plan to put himself in the
record books yet again.
And in just 11 seconds and at a speed of 167.6 km/h with a standard
mountain bike, whose components you could buy yourself in the high
street, he reached that speed hurtling down a mountain with no name in
Chile’s Atacama desert.
Stöckl has a penchant for the record books. Brought up in the Austrian
mountains, his thirst for speed was established at a young age, his
place in the speed annuals first cemented in 1999.
In the interim, records have been set at the French ski resort of Les
Arcs and on a volcano in Nicaragua among others. For his latest attempt
on 13 December - sealed following eight practice runs - it was the
barren Chilean desert with barely anything in sight from the 4,000 metre
highest point from which he set off.
With the gravel slope of 45 degrees deemed the perfect angle for his
record, the 43-year-old's pulse hit the 170 beats per minute mark, the
wind whistling past his ears on a 1,200-metre descent in a place 11,000
from his home in Austria’s Tyrol mountains.
Speaking emotionally moments after the finish and his latest record, he
said: “I’m back on the mountain without a name in the middle of the
desert. It’s tricky because it’s all rocky and loose at the start. It
was such a long time and standing up there was like we already cried at
the start. It was great fun.”
But for Stöckl, as thrilling as the successful record attempt was, it
was just as much about the two years in its making.
“The whole project is an adventure,” he said. “This is the top bit of it
but also travelling here with all the stuff and making our way through
the middle of the desert.”
His journey to 100km/h and then 120, he insisted, was straight forward
but, as the descent ran out, the increased speed was harder to come by.
“It’s hard to reach top speed,” he explained. “After 160, each km/h is a
huge effort. If you want to reach a certain goal then you have to put it
all in.”
Stöckl was a sight to behold on the bike. In a specially designed,
figure-hugging suit, he effectively had rudders attached to his legs
under the material and a helmet in two parts - the first a normal
helmet, the second aerodynamically designed to ensure the less air
resistance possible, the logic being the less air resistance, the
quicker he could go.
A carbon-fibre helmet, outfit and bike were all tested in a wind tunnel
to find the best design and seating position for his latest record
attempt.
But perhaps the most notable part of the record attempt is that the bike
is one that you or I could put together… albeit with some effort and
expertise.
[to top of second column] |
Markus Stoeckl performs during VMax 200 at the Atacama Desert, Chile
on December 10, 2016 // Grit Koenig / Red Bull Content Pooll // For
more content, pictures and videos like this please go to
www.redbullcontentpool.com
“It’s a standard mountain bike so there’s no part on the bike that you
cannot buy,” he added. “Sure, it’s a high-end bike with the best parts
of it but you can buy any part, nothing has been specially made.”
The preparation to get there included testing runs on all manner of
surfaces from the snow of home to the Chilean mountains, including his
fair share of falls, unsurprising with the speeds in question.
Whether this latest record has quenched his thirst for the record books
remains to be seen. Lying on the ground fresh after the attempt, he
spoke of a desire to return home to his family.
But after his previous record in Nicaragua, he said the fires still
burned inside. That volcano run, in his mind, “wasn’t fun enough - it
wasn’t a real challenge”. But in Chile he claims to have “found that”.
“It’s important that it feels like an adventure,” he said. “We are
travelling to another continent, heading into the desert for countless
hours, sleeping in tents under the mountain with a good bunch of guys –
it all makes for so much excitement. You never know what is going to
happen from a start point before you try it."
The footage, firing out a cloud of dust visible from some distance,
suggests the record itself was fairly straightforward but Stöckl admits
to being perpetually on the precipice of just one wrong move, his only
protection being a built-in airbag to his riding outfit.
“When above 160km/h, each and every extra kilometre per hour requires an
enormous effort. If you want to get an idea of the air resistance, you
only have to stick your hand out of the car window when you’re driving
at 150 or 160 km/h. This force has an impact on the bike and the entire
body. Even though I’m no weakling, physically it is something that I
have to contend with too!”
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