Thứ Sáu, 18 tháng 9, 2015

North Alabama, town of Waterloo plan annual Path of Tears motorcycle ride arrives this weekend

WATERLOO, Ala. (WHNT) - The roar of motorcycles will be heard from one aspect of north Alabama to the other this weekend, as riders commemorate the Path of Tears.


This year, a single ride will take place of the divided rides we’ve seen in years past instead.

On morning hours it was relatively calm along the banks of the Tennessee River in Waterloo Thursday night, sunday this place will be packed but come. For 22 years, the small town of just a few hundred has hosted one of the biggest motorcycle trips in the southeast.

“People come in here on boats, they come in on bicycles, and they result from everywhere,” Waterloo Mayor Mel Grimes explained.

According to Grimes, he and the city council plan year-round for this event.

Grimes said after several years of parting, there is only going to be one Trail of Tears trip this year.

On the ride will begin in Bridgeport at 8:00 a Saturday.m. and end in Waterloo at 3:00 p.m., with an end at Rocket Harley-Davidson in Huntsville for lunchtime. They are the highways that will be impacted Saturday morning hours and midday:

Highway 72 from Bridgeport to Huntsville, then riders get on I-565 (leaving at 8:00 a.m.)
At approximately 10:30 a.m. riders exit I-565 West at Exit 3, to stop at Rocket Harley-Davidson (leaving there at 12:30 p.m.)
At 12:30 p.m. riders are certain to get back again on I-565, head exit and western world at Mooresville Street, Exit 2, heading to Hwy north. 72
Riders then turn still left on U.S. 72 west to head into Athens - the constant state will block usage of Athens from I-65 and the U.S. 72 ramp. Motorists cannot exit at 351. Athens Police urge motorists to consider U.S. 31 to get north and south in Athens. In the past, the event has taken from quarter-hour to one hour to get through Athens, with respect to the variety of riders.
Riders will continue to Waterloo western.

Waterloo marks the accepted place where thousands of Indians were forced onto ships and taken western.

The mayor is excited about the rides combining, and says he appears forward to the bigger than normal crowds.

“So many of the riders are here in Waterloo before the ride even starts already,” stated Grimes. “There are thousands of individuals out here and we offer free camping. Waterloo is probably the most beautiful put in place the state of Alabama.”

And the city can't wait to welcome the motorbike riders who plan to memorialize the trek.

As you can tell out of this map, the ride actually begins in Chattanooga. Participants will meet in Chattanooga on Fri, where they shall travel to Bridgeport for the official kick-off party.

Thứ Bảy, 5 tháng 9, 2015

Head Tremble - For Our Own Good?

How much will do? When does a logical person look at what's available in motorcycle showrooms and say, “Okay, that’s enough for me.” Or even more paternalistically, that’s enough for you, too. What's too much? Will there be too much?


A couple of bikes that are too dangerous to ride. I know this to be true. We had a long-term loaner Buell once, an S2-T, it damaged one of the welds that comprised its right pseudo clip-on club. It had been one hard countersteer or braking maneuver from no more having the right clip-on. Bicycles are hard to steer without pubs. Buell experienced issued a remember but ours experienced slipped through the remember breaks somehow. That bicycle was too dangerous to trip.

Kenny Roberts, Sr. once received the Indy Mile aboard a TZ750-structured dirt-track bicycle that Kel Carruthers and a bunch of diabolical people from Yamaha’s Diabolical Section had constructed for him. It was, to listen to him inform the tale, half the weight and the horsepower of the competition twice. He famously announced post-race that they didn’t pay him enough to trip that thing. The AMA prohibited that bike from competition subsequently. That bike was too dangerous to trip.

Okay, fair enough, bikes subject to NHTSA recalls to correct a defect that could put you on your mind are too dangerous to ride. So is any motorbike that Yamaha cannot pay Kenny Roberts, Sr. enough to trip. But how about the rest?

A two-part interview of KTM’s president and CEO, Stefan Pierer, by Alan Cathcart in Cycle News, inadvertently broached this issue; the response from Mr. Pierer got my attention.

“But let’s be honest,” said Pierer, “if your Superbike is reaching 200 horsepower or even more, it’s impossible to argue it belongs on the street. It really doesn’t, anymore … As soon as the RC16 is available for customers we will stop with the RC8. The design (of the RC8) is outstanding. I'd say it’s still condition of the artwork, and there is nothing else like it. It’s a vintage Superbike. But with the upsurge in safety concerns, I’m scared bikes such as this don’t belong on the street, only on a closed course.”

 


Convinced that I have to have misunderstood what I acquired just read, I went back and read it again. Cathcart was asking Pierer about KTM’s future plans, Pierer indicated KTM’s desire to compete in MotoGP, and he has concerns about the bureaucrats in Brussels in his role as a chief executive in the ACEM - think Euro-version of our Motorbike Industry Council here stateside. Pierer cites the probability of an EU-wide bike ban. The RC8 will be phased out to be changed by what they are phoning an RC16. The RC16 will never be homologated for the street. Why?

“No, because we at KTM believe a sport bike with such performance doesn’t have any place on the general public roads,” Pierer explained.

I used to be taken by that declaration aback; I've heard and read similar sentiments before, albeit from much different sources. The message didn't shock me, the messenger did. The chief executive and CEO of a major motorcycle manufacturer just conceded the wrongheaded rationale of not only the pointyheads in Brussels that could prefer to ban bicycles from Western european tarmac, but also of all the “safety” zealots here stateside that have tried to restrict or eliminate “race-design motorcycles” from public roadways. That’s a remarkable concession for a placed industry insider to make highly, and an initial to my knowledge.

It is interesting on several fronts, not minimal of which is that Pierer’s claims echo a few of the same language used by Senator John Danforth in explaining why he introduced his legislation, “The Motorbike Safety Action of 1987.” In his intro of the costs, Danforth explained his concerns to the U.S Senate and the American people in an extended printed statement;

‘“Mr. President, in 1984, the Japanese began offering what can only just be described as “killer motorcycles” in this country. These are race bikes which were developed for use on the monitor but they are being driven on our roads … Top rates of speed for some of these bikes can range up to 162 mph … the marketing of these killer cycles is a lesson in corporate irresponsibility.”’

Just a little over 30 years Pierer’s words echo the Senator’s sentiments later.

Senator Danforth didn’t emerge from some sort of mystical eyesight that compelled him to opportunity forth and propose eliminating performance bikes. The driving drive behind the bill’s intro came in the form of the Insurance Institute for Highway Basic safety (IIHS), a business that represents and advances the interests of its people, the insurance industry namely.

The IIHS has perennially campaigned to have performance bicycles eliminated from the marketplace, and it produced a guide because of its account, the insurance companies, to use in establishing blacklists of certain bicycles that, in their view, the insurance companies should no more offer to insure. Having failed to eliminate the bicycles, I suppose, the next best thing from the IIHS’ viewpoint was to remove the insurance coverage for them. The rationale was not difficult; no insurance plan leads to no bicycle loans being secured against reduction, and fewer loans means fewer powerful bikes on the highway, roughly their thinking went.

The IIHS was hoist alone petard when its own “study”, which was not peer reviewed, was debunked. non-e other than USC’s Dr. Hugh “Harry” Harm, the lead researcher in the landmark, “Harm Report,” was one of the principle critics of the IIHS study’s technique at that time.

Senator Danforth’s legislation was stillborn, and regardless of the best initiatives of the IIHS, its campaign to remove performance bikes has not been successful to time. That is an issue that appears to surface perennially and is likely to continue to achieve this. Particularly now, as the global world gets smaller in a global market that ties our fates closer together, we have not only U.S concerns to take account of, but the EU as well also.

Which brings us back to Mr. Pierer. He's certainly a thoughtful man and a good businessman, and KTM is doing very well and processing some world-class bikes. He has legitimate concerns about the near future with an vision on Brussels and any forthcoming European union regulations that could affect KTM and their customers. All this begs the relevant question, how much will do? And who, if anybody is going to place the brakes on? And should they?

 

 


“…we at KTM think that a sport bike with such performance doesn’t have anyplace on the public roads.”

If Senator Danforth was concerned with sport bicycles in the 1980s that could top out at 162 mph, I can only imagine what his modern day counterpart would be like today - apoplectic maybe. While performance criteria have continued to rise, performance numbers only are not the sole way of measuring the “protection” of any motorcycle. We have observed other advancements as well, everything from the rise of track times producing more experienced riders, more advanced riding gear to safeguard the overzealous, and most critically maybe, the introduction of a whole host of digital rider aids to keep errant pilots upright. The increasing prevalence of everything from start control to bank-sensitive Ab muscles and an option in engine maps to take into account weather and riding conditions results in what, I believe, are arguably the safest bikes this world has ever seen.

Inform me what in your estimation is more threatening: a 1972 Kawasaki H2 Mach IV shod with an individual front side disc, a hinged body, and wheels chiseled from granite? Or the latest iteration, a 2015 Kawasaki Ninja H2 with well over twice the hp and enough new age technology to account for each ham-fisted move under power or brakes, or heeled over upright, wet or dry, that mankind can conceive?

A moped is a potentially lethal object in the hands of the irreconcilably idiotic - that’s confirmed - but a smart rider understands the throttle moves both ways. For each and every performance progress evident in today’s bicycles, rider protection has rapidly advanced as well, and it is manufactured into a lot of today’s machines.

Underneath line from my knothole is this: Full-tilt big-bore sportbikes are just as safe, or unsafe, as the individual piloting them. I’m willing to concede that exercising top-shelf sportbikes to anything within their potential on public roads is practically impossible for most mere mortals in virtually all conditions. Not merely would it not be unwise to take action, it could also be damn near impossible. Track days are best for that type of WFO exercise.

However, I think we, as riders, need to be careful in lending credence to any claim that such-and-such bikes do not belong on public roads predicated on only public perception or concerns of future regulations decreasing the pike. The arguments that propped up Danforth’s “killer motorcycle” bill back in the ’80s, and the same old exhausted tune trotted out by the IIHS that promulgated insurance blacklists, were specious back then, and remain without merit today.

Ride hard, be safe, look where you want to go…

 

Thứ Hai, 31 tháng 8, 2015

United kingdom motorcycle company fined $2.9M for failing woefully to statement safety defects

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is fining Uk motorcycle manufacturer Triumph $2.9 million for allegedly failing woefully to report safety defects on vehicles bought from the U.S. to federal government regulators.


The agency said the company failed to properly notify officials about 1, 300 recalled motorcycles that were found to have faulty steering mechanisms in September 2014.

The agency said the business didn't report the pace of completed repairs and offer copies of service bulletins that were supposed to be submitted to owners of the vehicles.

Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said the fine, which is the latest in a string of large penalties doled out with regards to recalls, is an indicator of the Obama administration's dedication to U.S. road safety.
“Manufacturers must comply with their reporting commitments. The statutory regulation requires it, and public security needs it,” Foxx said in a statement. “When companies neglect to meet those responsibilities, we will hold them responsible.”

The Obama administration has been looking to crack down on vehicle manufacturers lately after coming under fire for its oversight following widespread recalls at General Motors and Takata in 2014 that involved parts found to be defective years back.

Lawmakers first took the highway basic safety agency to task last spring because of its handling of recalls at General Motors that affected about 2 million vehicles. NHTSA officials were accused of failing woefully to notice the trend of accidents regarding GM's faulty ignition switches for quite some time before issuing the recall in February.

The highway safety agency faced criticism again this year more than a recall involving faulty air bags made by Japan auto parts manufacturer Takata. Takata initially claimed the faulty airbags affected about 8 million cars, but the recall was later extended to add 34 million cars.

The agency said Mon that Triumph has decided to pay $1.4 million in penalties for the recall failures and spend an $500,000 on safety improvements. The business would be accountable for another $1 million in fines if it violates the conditions of the contract.

NHTSA Administrator Mark Rosekind touted the settlement as a sign that regulators are more vigilantly watching auto and motorcycle companies than they had been in days gone by.

"Today’s enforcement action penalizes history violations, and it promotes the proactive basic safety culture manufacturers must adopt if they are to reduce protection defects and identify them quicker than they occur,” he said.

Thứ Năm, 27 tháng 8, 2015

Vintage motorcycle collection to hit auction block

After 30 years, the long-closed Greenfield Honda Shop will be liquidated and 130 lots of classic Honda approximately, Harley, and BSA motorcycles will be auctioned. Additional lots of memorabilia and parts will be sold, making this public sale a can’t-miss event. As the onsite sale will attract large attendance, those who cannot attend the auction personally can bid with confidence online with Proxibid and know they are transacting in the only Market place with a fraud prevention system designed specifically to protect high dollar buys like the collector motorcycles available in this sale.


A few of the most eye-catching and extraordinary a lot in this sale include:
- 1979 Honda CBX: This lot is entitled, and a genuine bicycle from the closed Greenfield Honda Shop. With only 295 mls on the odometer, the bike runs with all original parts. This is an incredible addition to any collection, and it is offering at no reserve!
- 1962 Honda Benly: This rare and original Honda Benly was only imported for a couple of years, causeing this to be a hard-to-find collector piece. They have a 3 cyclinder, 750CC engine, and has 10,553 on the odometer. The vintage 1962 Benly is the perfect find for motorbike enthusiasts.
- 1985 Honda Platinum Wing GL-1200L: This never-been-sold demonstration model is a lovely, like- new bike from the Greenfield Honda Shop. This platinum bicycle has 3 around,000 miles logged.
- 1969 BSA Rocket 3: The 1969 BSA Rocket 3 is a uncommon and unique find. It has been serviced, cleaned, and it is in good shape. It has a three cylinder, 750CC engine, and it is titled.
“The Greenfield Honda Shop is a piece of automotive history, and it’s gained a lot of attention among collectors” said Yvette VanDerBrink, owner and auctioneer of VanDerBrink Auctions, LLC. “If you’re a enthusiast of Honda and vintage motorcycles, you won’t want to miss this auction, whether you bid onsite or online with Proxibid.”

Chủ Nhật, 23 tháng 8, 2015

Vintage Motorcycle Celebration showcases classic bicycles paired with vintage tales

The Seattle Cossacks Motorbike Stunt and Drill Team end a performance by slapping hands with the audience at the fourth annual Vintage Motorbike Festival at LeMay-America’s Car Museum in Tacoma on Saturday. Peter Haley Personnel photographer

Saturday dave Secrist had a beautiful 1964 Ducati to show off at a vintage motorcycle festival, but it wasn’t his bicycle that stoked jealousy among the people who dropped by to meet him.

What made them envious was the complete story of how Secrist came to own the classic motorcycle.

It had been found by him in a barn, he’d tell other collectors.

Then, underscoring his fortune, he’d add that its original owner “virtually gave it” to him.

His tale was the kind of story that inspires enthusiasts to scavenge garage sales and antique shops looking for valuable finds.

It also was one of the highlights at the fourth annual Classic Motorcycle Celebration at the LeMay-America’s Car Museum in downtown Tacoma. The function brought collectively more than 2,000 site visitors who checked out about 250 motorcycles that dated back to 1909.

The festival continues Sunday with a 74-mile motorcycle road trip hosted by the Vintage Motorcycle Enthusiast Golf club that begins at the museum at 9 a.m. (Sign up starts at 8 a.m.)

This year’s festival had a few familiar attractions, such as a series of stunts by the Seattle Cossacks. Associates of the motorbike stunt and drill team linked hands as they drove across a grass field and shaped pyramids on moving motorcycles.

 


It also featured a competition where collectors asked judges to rate motorcycles in a mix of categories, such as antique American and classic Italian.

Judges toting dark brown clipboards looked focused as they moved from bike to bike, inspecting restored and original machines.

“We’re looking for the best of many, many really good bikes, and that’s hard to do,” said Terry Kellogg, a judge visiting from Seattle.

The festival is a partnership between your museum and the motorcycle club. Its chairman this season was Mark Zenor, 58, of Graham, who is the owner of five vintage motorcycles.

“It looks like once you start (restoring) one, you get another one always,” he said.

Secrist, 48, of Edgewood, programs to leave his Ducati almost as it was found by him two months ago in a Pierce Region barn.

“It’s going to be original,” he said. “It could only be original once.”

He’s a glazier who moves for work often, conference customers at their homes. He loves to get them speaking with see if they have any distributed interests.
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He jokingly calls those conversations “fishing, or trolling.”

It pays off. It once led him to a classic 1941 Willys-Overland coupe.

“I’m turning over rocks,” he said.

Earlier this full year, one of his customers mentioned that he had an antique Ducati stashed away within an old barn. They kept talking, and Secrist got a glance at the device eventually.

The previous owner “felt bad about it sitting in the barn,” Secrist said.

He carried it from the barn and discovered that it didn’t need much work to get working.

Secrist’s display at the event inspired one apparent question from other collectors: “Everybody’s asking, ‘Where’s the barn?’”

He wouldn’t tell.

 

Thứ Ba, 11 tháng 8, 2015

Why ‘Kid Is Smarter Than Einstein’ Tales Are Junk

The Internet was abuzz this week more than a 12-year-old British girl who has an IQ that is supposedly greater than that of both Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking.


Many outlets published stories on Nicole Barr’s very brain, including the U.K.’s Western Daily Press and Reflection, as well as Yahoo Cosmopolitan and Parents magazine. And most of them indicated she is smarter than the famed scientists.

Barr’s score of 162 puts her in the top 1 percent of the population, Ann Clarkson, a communications supervisor for United kingdom Mensa, told Yahoo.

Einstein and Hawking are believed to have IQs of 160. Kids, like Barr, who rating higher tend to be compared to them and tales about children being “smarter than Einstein” pop-up with some regularity.

But there’s one problem that the geniuses put together can’t solve - it’s very difficult, if not impossible, to say what Einstein or Hawking’s IQs are, Clarkson told The Huffington Post within an email.

“There is, so far as anyone knows, no evidence that Einstein ever took an IQ test,” Clarkson said. “I think Hawking probably has, only if as part of his treatment for motor neurone disease, but it appears he has never made the rating public.”

Clarkson said the 160 amount is a regularly quoted “guess” that “opens up a whole different issue about the difference between IQ and genius.”

So if anyone tells you they’re smarter than Einstein, inform them it’s a matter of relativity.

http://breakingnews24h.com/

Chủ Nhật, 19 tháng 7, 2015

With his motorbike company up for auction, Erik Buell craves another comeback

His business is scheduled to be sold at public sale Tuesday, but that hasn't extinguished Erik Buell's enthusiasm for making yet another comeback in the motorbike industry.


Buell is the founder of Erik Buell Racing, an East Troy manufacturer of bicycles centered on performance and rate until it shut down instantly in Apr, leaving about 130 employees unemployed and the company seeking court safety from lenders.

It was the sequel to Buell Motorbike Co., which Harley-Davidson Inc. owned for greater than a 10 years before dropping the brand in 2009 2009 and leaving Erik Buell to start over on his own.

Now, the 65-year-old business owner is without a business again as he awaits the results of the public sale of the property of Erik Buell Racing, under circumstances statute that's similar to federal bankruptcy laws.

At his home in Mukwonago, Buell works on metal sculptures in his garage and answers questions from the court-appointed receiver who's handling the auction.

What he wants really, however, is to get back in to the motorbike business, where he's known for product innovation and a competitive spirit that has led to racetrack victories against some of the world's largest bicycle manufacturers.

If he previously his way, Buell said, his company would be building motorcycles and race on a world stage again tomorrow.

"We're able to literally be shipping motorcycles, within a few days probably, as soon as we cut back an assembly team. The bicycles are just seated there, covered in plastic, waiting around to be finished," he said.

In its six-year lifetime, Erik Buell Racing hand-built $40,000 motorcycles for racing enthusiasts, developed a mass-production version of these bikes that sold for approximately $18,000 each, and cultivated dealerships in the U.S. and European countries.

In 2014, Buell was worried about not having enough space in his small factory as he ramped up production and put his anatomist efforts into overdrive. He spent his own money into the opportunity and received help from Hero MotoCorp., a motorbike manufacturer in India that obtained a 49% stake in Erik Buell Race for $25 million.

The business hired dozens of people, including engineers, and was doing extensive product development work for Hero. Erik Buell Racing bikes were earning accolades from motorcyclist magazines and were successful in world-class races in america, Europe and Asia.

Just what exactly sent the ongoing company tumbling into virtual personal bankruptcy?

It grew too fast, Buell said, and the costs got before his financing.

"We thought that people could balance everything...but we just couldn't. That's what required us out," he said.

Court public records show that Erik Buell Racing has $20.8 million in possessions and $20.4 million in liabilities. Previous employees are owed $202,000 in paid time off, and some of the largest amounts owed to creditors include $733,000 to Mito Technology Co., a Japanese engine design company, and $390,000 to Porsche Anatomist Group.

Former employees will be at the head of the line as it pertains for you to get what they're owed, according to attorneys, while unsecured lenders could be forced to share what's still left after employees, secured creditors, the court-appointed receiver, consultants and attorneys are paid from the proceeds of the asset sale.

Buell expectations the continuing business will be sold without trouble, so the buyer could start producing motorcycles, and he hopes he would have a job in the new venture.

"Given the right situation, and the right people up to speed, it's what I'd like to do. I have lots of energy for it still," he said.

Some have said that Polaris Industries, the Medina, Minn., maker of Triumph and Indian motorcycles, could be a buyer. That would give Polaris a sport bicycle it doesn't have finally, along with usage of Buell's other product designs.

But the business also could be sold in pieces, with some buyers acquiring things like the factory machines, tooling, EBR-owned motorcycles, bike parts and office equipment, while others might acquire the company's intellectual property.

The assets owned by Hero are not contained in the auction, nor are other things such as leased equipment and employee-owned tools and personal property.

The auction shall be held at the Milwaukee Athletic Club in downtown Milwaukee, in support of qualified bidders shall be permitted to attend.

The court-appointed receiver, Milwaukee lawyer Michael Polsky, will review the bids and determine what's in the best interest of creditors. Thursday then, there will be a hearing in Walworth County Circuit Court to approve the full total results of the auction.

Within a court document, Polsky said he believes the "going-concern value of the assets" is greater than their liquidation value.

Buell hasn't said whether he will be among the bidders, but he said some social people have shown interest in buying all of the assets in one piece.

In hindsight, Buell said, it could have been better to run the business at a more measured pace.

"It demanded more money than we had access to. We thought that the money was had by us to pay the gap, but when it fell through at the last minute, there was nothing at all we're able to do," he said.

Contending in world-class racing was expensive, but Hero and other sponsors covered those costs, so they didn't cut deeply into Erik Buell Racing's revenues, relating to Buell.

"It was good promotion for all of us, but it wasn't whatever arrived of our marketing budget," he said.

If the business is restarted, Buell said he's sure some of the employees would come back.

"We had a bunch of fantastic products. We really proved that American executive is completely world course," he said.

Some dealerships, however, said they would watch out for carrying the brand again.

They spend a lot of their own money to market products and support them with customer support. If bicycles don't sell, or the manufacturer doesn't honor its commitments, a dealer could have no choice but out of business.

"There's lots of risk for the incentive," said Kirk Topel, chief executive of Hal's Harley-Davidson, in New Berlin, which carried Erik Buell Racing motorcycles.

Buell's most recent bicycle, the 1190RX, was gaining traction available on the market before the ongoing company closed.

Inside a 45-day period previous this year, Hal's sold more 1190RX bikes than it sold in every of 2014, according to Topel. The dealership experienced some customers to arrive looking designed for Buell motorcycles rather than Harleys, he said.

Dealers had hoped that a few of Buell's designs would surface in smaller, less-expensive motorcycles. They hoped to have the ability to carry the Hero brand also, but that never happened.

Some dealers said they greatly admired Buell for his design talents however, not his ability to perform a company.

"The guy has made some really cool bicycles. He's definitely got skill," said Joseph Tortora, a seller in St. James, N.Y.

Tortora said he was disappointed when Erik Buell Race closed, but he wasn't totally surprised because the business was struggling with retail bonuses and guarantee reimbursements at his dealership.

"I was very cautious in the number of bikes I took....I would like to consider myself a practiced veteran of the industry, and I have seen several brand walk out business," he said.

In racing circles, Buell has been an underdog focusing on a tight budget always.

In the 1970s, as a rider, he recorded the fastest qualifying time for a rookie in the past history of the Daytona 200. It had been significant for a guy who traveled from race to race in a truck with two motorcycles in the back, sleeping between the bikes while an intermittent hitchhiker shared the driving on his long-distance outings.

When a competition in California was canceled because of rain, Buell borrowed money from other racers to cover his trip home to Pennsylvania. He had counted on successful in the race, and his winnings could have covered his expenses.

Now he wants to remain in your competition as a bicycle designer.

"I am an engineer in mind," Buell said, "and I wish to show that technology from the U.S. can compete with the best stuff in the world."