Skip to main content

Faster than a speeding cow – your local bus maybe?

A methane-powered bus has set a speed record for a regular city bus of nearly 124km/h at a test track in the UK, according to media reports. The bus, from the southern city of Reading, was converted to run on compressed methane from cow manure and was painted black and white like a Friesian cow. Mechanics removed the bus’s engine governor that restricted the vehicle’s speed to 90km/h. The bus then broke the record on the banked high-speed circuit at Millbrook Proving Ground, near the city of Bedford.
May 22, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
A methane-powered bus has set a speed record for a regular city bus of nearly 124km/h at a test track in the UK, according to media reports.

The bus, from the southern city of Reading, was converted to run on compressed methane from cow manure and was painted black and white like a Friesian cow.

Mechanics removed the bus’s engine governor that restricted the vehicle’s speed to 90km/h. The bus then broke the record on the banked high-speed circuit at Millbrook Proving Ground, near the city of Bedford. %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal Click here Visit &quot;poo powered bus breaks land speed record&quot; page false http://metro.co.uk/2015/05/20/poo-powered-bus-breaks-land-speed-record-5207435 false false%> to see a video.

The cow waste was broken down by anaerobic digestion to produce biogas, which was then liquefied and stored in several fuel tanks within the expanded roof of the bus.

The bus’s speed would not be a Guinness World Record because it failed to exceed 241km/h. But the vehicle did make an appealing sound, apparently. Chief engineer John Bickerton said it was an “impressive sight” as it swept by on the track. “It sounded like a Vulcan bomber - the aerodynamics aren't designed for going [124km/h]," he said.

A statement from Millbrook said the code name for the bus is Bus Hound, which pays homage to a British-based group called the Bloodhound Project which is hoping to reach a land speed record of around 1,610km/h next year – more than 33% above the current record.

The Bloodhound Project is designed to inspire the next generation of science, technology, engineering and mathematics experts. The Bloodhound vehicle is 13.4m long with two front wheels within the body and two rear wheels mounted externally within wheel fairings. It weighs 7.5tonnes and the engines produce more than 100,670kwN.

The vehicle will be tested at Hakskeen Pan, a dry lake bed about 200km north of the town of Upington in South Africa’s Northern Cape region. To see the Bloodhound project, %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal click here Visit bloodhound ssc project page false http://www.bloodhoundssc.com/project false false%>.

Related Content

  • Chinese inventor puts together vacuum cleaner-size petrol car
    December 15, 2014
    Traffic congestion and the cost of running a car have been pushing Chinese car manufacturers to think small, especially for electric vehicles. Electric scooter and motorcycle have long been popular and in the past several years more and more small electric cars are appearing on crowded urban roads One popular three-wheel electric vehicle has a large retractable bubble top, making it look like a futuristic car from a low-budget 1950s Hollywood movie. It may have a top speed of only 30kph, as the BBC report
  • Bentley Systems calls for submissions to 2016 Be Inspired Awards
    June 2, 2016
    Bentley Systems, a global provider of software solutions for advancing infrastructure, has announced a call for submissions to the 2016 Be Inspired Awards programme. The deadline for entries is June 10, 2016. The awards, which are selected by independent juries of industry experts, recognise the extraordinary work of organisations that help advance the world’s infrastructure by designing, engineering, constructing, delivering, and/or operating safer, more resilient, sustainable, and intelligent roads,
  • VIDEO: Kangaroo takes out cyclist down under
    July 25, 2016
    It caught all the cyclists by surprise when a young bounding kangaroo decided to hurl itself at the peloton during a bicycle race in Australia. A fellow racer trailing behind took the video. The targeted cyclist was severely bruised from hitting the deck and he needed stitches. But the marauding kangaroo apparently died from its injuries when it slammed into the bike at a right angle. Cyclists being taken out by kangaroos is more common than most non-Australians would think. Click here to see one cycl
  • Top down parking in South Africa
    July 3, 2015
    Some events defy understanding, many of which happen on the road. But this accident in South Africa really puts gives the imagination a workout. Nobody was injured when a car came crashing through the roof of a small house in Durban, according to the Times Live newspaper. Click here for the report. A person was asleep in a room close to where the vehicle buried itself into the home. The driver, too, escaped and claimed he recalls going over some kind of ramp that launched the car into the air and over the