Friday, September 9, 2016
Is It Possible To Jump The Cape Cod Canal In A Car?
The story of a man who drove his car into the Cape Cod Canal grabbed headlines this week. They say it was a suicide attempt, and they're probably correct. However, what if it were a little bit more than a suicide attempt?
I may be 100% wrong, but I can't shake the feeling that the man in the Ford Focus may have been trying to jump the Cape Cod Canal. I'm thinking of an effort akin to Evel Knievil's attempt to jump a rocket over Idaho's Snake River Canyon in 1974.
While suicide is a rotten option to choose, one must admire the man who tries to do it with Style. I'd bet that 100 people have jumped to their deaths into the Canal, but perhaps only one (I'm being told someone may have tried it in the 1940s) guy tried to kill himself while jumping over it.
There's an All Or Nothing, Death or Glory sort of hardcore appeal to this act. If you're going to push all of your chips onto the table and ask for the Eternal Answer, you may as well do so while crossing the most dangerous item off of your bucket list. When the one thing that you're normally afraid of losing when pondering ridiculous stunts has no worth, stunt-planning moves along much more quickly.
The Canal is incidental to this story. If this guy lived in Buffalo, I'd imagine that he'd probably have gone over Niagara Falls in a barrel. If he lived in Rwanda, he'd have slapped a silverback in the face. If he lived in Pripyat, he'd run have around nude and drank from the streams.
The plan was flawed for many reasons, some of which were apparent immediately. Other flaws reveal themselves to the expert (or the guy who spent a morning researching Stunt Jumping) upon deeper examination.
For starters.... if you try to kill yourself and live, your plan had flaws. You become the Polish kamikaze pilot from the 1970s joke book.
If you assign the man a higher motivation than suicide, you must also point out more specific flaws. His jump across the Canal ended 40 feet away- an impressive jump, but not one that you'd need to clear the 450 foot wide Cape Cod Canal.
I was undersexed as a kid, and therefore spent most of my Physics classes staring at legs... but I did stay on-task long enough to pick up some vocabulary that will come in handy here. The plan had fatal flaws (fatal flaws in a suicide attempt produce a Bizzaro-style polar opposite effect where the jumper lives) in the areas of Speed, Mass, Acceleration, Incline, Resistance and Drag.
There was also a pine tree-sized hole in his Exit Strategy plan, but we'll get to that later.
If you open Google Maps and look at the area at the end of Perry Avenue, it will help with comprehension. You'll notice that Perry Avenue is a straight drag, and you'll see an odd structure at the end of it. That's Three Mile Look, which serves as a Canal observation point 99.99999% of the time and as a ramp .000001% of the time. It is the smaller of the two numbers that concerns us today.
Three Mile Look isn't what a stunt man is looking for in a ramp. Other attempts to jump larger rivers involved an almost vertical climb. The other jumps also didn't involve the driver smashing through wooden railings before takeoff.
Three Mile Look also is about 2 stories above the Canal, maybe 3. An object falls 9.8 meters a second for every second that it is in the air. the Canal is 450 feet wide, about 1.5 football fields.
There's other math, but it confuses me. You could use Real Math, which means solving the s=ut+½at² equation.Good luck with that.
I prefer to use Vin Diesel Math, which is where I find an article written in a science journal about a similar jump performed in one of those Fastest And Furiousest movies. I hope this math works for you, because we may also get into Burt Reynolds Math and Keannu Reeves Math if we tangent off into the Smokey And The Bandit or Speed franchises.
Vin is in Dubai, way the hell up in the Etihad Tower Complex. The limey guy from The Transporter movie is chasing him with a rocket launcher. Even though he's on the 45th floor of a skyscraper, there happens to be a $3 million Lykan HyperSport supercar all fueled up and ready to aid in Vin's escape.
Vin gets it up to 100 mph in an apartment living room (the Lykan, of which only 7 were made, can reach that speed in 2.8 seconds)`and then jumps the car out of one building into one nearby, dropping a few stories in the process.
The buildings are 100 yards apart, a bit more narrow of a distance than the Canal, but my Math flaws will erase those distances.
The Lykan HyperSport has a top speed of 240 mph, considerably higher than even the best Ford Focus out there. They both weigh 3000 pounds or so. The guy jumping the Canal has one advantage over Diesel (two, if you count "isn't that worried about dying") in that he has all of Perry Avenue to use to build up what isn't that difficult of a speed to obtain. Perry Avenue is about 50 feet longer than the distance he'd have to jump. He might need to be going 150 MPH, but we'll worry about that later.
If you're keeping score at home, he has a shot at going fast enough, but he doesn't have enough ramp to get the necessary height with which he could drift a bit.
That height is important, because it will take him 3 seconds to get across the Canal at 100 mph, and he'll be losing speed as he flies. Every second that he is falling, he loses about 30 feet of height. Granted, he'll be going up for part of the flight, but 30 foot drops every second of descent aren't what you're looking for when your launch ramp is 30 feet high.
Acceleration at the point of launch is also important, as it is what keeps your nose from landing first. Speaking of landings, the Canal guy would have been in for a painful one had he gotten across the Canal. The only flat surface is the bike path, which is 30 feet across or so. It is bordered on either side by boulders and forest.
Ironically, he would have landed on Perry Avenue if he made the jump. I just noticed this now, but it appears that Perry Avenue was split in half by the construction of the Canal. He'd need a stout East wind, as the Cape side of Perry Avenue is to the west of where the mainland Perry Avenue ends. Fortunately, or perhaps after years of planning and waiting, the attempt to leap the Canal was performed during a Tropical Storm where Bourne was suffering stiff east winds.
It sounds so crazy, it has to be true. Cape Cod has a FTW-style Evel Knievil. He's just not that swift. "A" for effort, though... maybe an "A+" for imagination.
How would a professional handle the same leap?
For starters, some trees would have to come down. Three Mile Look, for all of her flaws as a launching ramp, is better than the Three Hundred Trees any jumper would land into on the other side of the Canal. Three Mile Look would have to be rebuilt with greater incline. A lot of trees would have to come down on the Cape side.
He'd probably need a car that is much more modified than the Ford Focus. The speed needed to jump would be easy enough to attain with a modified vehicle. However, this is where I should point out that, for all of his broken bones, Evel Knievil was never injured during his jumps. He was injured by his landings. I don't know how they modify cars to do stunt jumps, but they'd have to find out and do that.
Evel was jumping a river three times as wide as our Canal. He was also using a steam rocket. Vin Diesel did his jump in a car that can outrun a F-16 until takeoff. Burt Reynolds and Sally Fields only had to jump a stream.
Reynolds' jump over a dismantled bridge was more in the range of what the Canal guy should have tried. That jump was made with a rocket similar to what Evel Knievil used for his Snake River jump, as a 1977 Trans-Am wasn't powerful enough for the leap. It covered about the same 40 foot distance that the Canal jumper managed, and took off from a similar height. It was driven by a stuntman.
It also destroyed the car, which tells you all that you need to know about the feasibility of jumping a regular-person car across the Cape Cod Canal.
Labels:
bourne,
buzzards bay,
cape cod,
Cape Cod Canal,
stunt car,
stunt jump,
Vin Diesel
Location: Buzzards Bay, MA, USA
Cape Cod Canal, Bourne, MA 02532, USA
Thursday, September 8, 2016
Hermine Surf Check: Plymouth, Duxbury and Marshfield
We went to Duxbury and Marshfield Tuesday to check out what Hermine was doing up there. As it turns out, she wasn't doing much to Green Harbor.
Brant Rock was serving barrier beach duty for this storm. I was shooting from where Charlie's used to be.
The waves did hit the wall in Duxbury, but they barely hit it.
These rocks were placed here long ago to mark where the Trans-Atlantic cable came ashore. It's still there, buried under a ton of sand.
The former Gurnet Inn, now a rich person house.
Duxbury did get some nice waves... just nothing that made me happy to have skipped out on Westport or Truro.
Green Harbor had some wall-splashing. I would have moved forward and got out of that shadow, but I didn't want to get soaked.
The seas yield a treasure here and there. Wire traps wash up less than wooden ones used to.
I'm not sure if these waves are the work of Hermine...
... or maybe even Gaston, throwing waves at Duxbury from way out to sea...
... or just a strong East wind.
If you're missing your Tiki Torch Beach Stairs, hit me up in the comments and we can talk reward money.
I need to remember this vantage point for a day when I have a better camera or bigger waves.
... like in Plymouth the day before.
Brant Rock was serving barrier beach duty for this storm. I was shooting from where Charlie's used to be.
These rocks were placed here long ago to mark where the Trans-Atlantic cable came ashore. It's still there, buried under a ton of sand.
The former Gurnet Inn, now a rich person house.
Duxbury did get some nice waves... just nothing that made me happy to have skipped out on Westport or Truro.
Green Harbor had some wall-splashing. I would have moved forward and got out of that shadow, but I didn't want to get soaked.
The seas yield a treasure here and there. Wire traps wash up less than wooden ones used to.
I'm not sure if these waves are the work of Hermine...
... or maybe even Gaston, throwing waves at Duxbury from way out to sea...
... or just a strong East wind.
If you're missing your Tiki Torch Beach Stairs, hit me up in the comments and we can talk reward money.
I need to remember this vantage point for a day when I have a better camera or bigger waves.
... like in Plymouth the day before.
See you next storm! |
Labels:
brant rock,
duxbury,
duxbury beach,
green harbor,
Hermine,
marshfield,
tropical storm hermine
Location: Buzzards Bay, MA, USA
Duxbury Beach, Duxbury, MA 02332, USA
Tuesday, September 6, 2016
Hermine Surf Check: Chatham, Yarmouth, Bourne, Plymouth
Chatham Light |
Be sure to check our Nauset Light Beach storm pics, too.... |
I am inclined to agree. |
I've been in this business for many years, and it is almost never a good thing when the news is setting up in your yard. |
One of the benefits of a barrier beach like Monomoy is that you get not-that-bad surf. |
Hardest-working lighthouse on Cape Cod |
You want to park OUT of the puddles when you go storm-chasing, folks... |
Seagull Beach, Yarmouth |
Seagull Beach is south-fcing, which means that they didn't get much surf yesterday. |
Guy thinks he owns the place.... Seagull Beach, Yarmouth MA |
Sagamore's bird population also represented hard for our cameras. |
The perspective of the man who I wanted to keep standing on the jetty saw. |
18th Hole, White Cliffs Country Club. |
Cedarville, MA |
All that sand for all of these beaches has to come from somewhere... |
Labels:
bourne,
cape cod,
chatham,
chatham light,
plymouth,
plymouth county,
post tropical storm hermine,
sagamore,
sagamore beach,
seagull beach,
south shore,
tropical storm hermine,
yarmouth
Location: Buzzards Bay, MA, USA
Sagamore Beach, Bourne, MA 02562, USA
Hermine Surf Check: Nauset Light Beach
Nauset Light Beach |
This was sound advice yesterday |
We covered a few towns yesterday, check it out Chatham, Yarmouth, Bourne and Plymouth right here.. |
Sorry about the mis-dating from the camera... you'd think that a $29 camera from WalMart would perform better. |
If I had to rank the worst surf I saw yesterday, it would be 1) Nauset, 2) Chatham, 3) Sagamore, 4) Cedarville and 5) Yarmouth |
The seas were angry that day... |
The eponymous Nauset Light (one of the Three Sisters) of Nauset Light Beach. |
No one was in a hurry to get off the Cape or anything... |
Labels:
Eastham,
Hermine,
nauset,
nauset light beach,
north eastham,
orleans,
tropical storm hermine
Location: Buzzards Bay, MA, USA
Nauset Light Beach, Eastham, MA 02642, USA
Monday, September 5, 2016
The Calm Before The Storm
The Duxbury DPW blocking off the opening in the seawall is an omen signifying the arrival of Autumn. |
Duxbury Beach, 9/4/16... I'm pretty sure that this is surf from Gaston, but Hermine is helping with the wind. |
They'd better take Ol' Glory down soon, as it really has nowhere to go but Off-Pole when the wind increases. |
This is pretty much Poseidon starting to steal your stairs. He got interrupted, but he plans to return. |
Astronomically low tide,.. the surf is worked up, but not enough to reach the seawall. That's what night-stalker types on the beach call an "Ankle Breaker." |
Tropical storms make for good kite weather. Sorry for the blurry pic, and that's Manomet in the background. |
Labels:
cape cod bay,
duxbury,
duxbury beach,
hurricane,
nor'easter,
post tropical storm hermine,
tropical storm hermine
Location: Buzzards Bay, MA, USA
Duxbury Beach, Duxbury, MA 02332, USA
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