Samstag, 16. Januar 2016

Three Chattanooga siblings compete -- and break bones -- in 1000-mile motorcycle race


Gallery: Brothers in BajaThree siblings compete — and break bones — in 1,000-mile motorcycle race



Jared Wingfield was about 70 miles from the finish line of the Baja 1000 when he and his Honda CRF 450X motorcycle overshot a turn and tumbled down a small hill.


Even though he hadn’t seen another competitor for miles, his first thought was to get out of the way lest one of the Super Trucks that were also in the race followed the same path and ran him over.


Sitting there in the early morning darkness last November, his next thoughts were to take inventory of the damage to his body. Thanks to adrenalin, he didn’t think too much of the pain in his side, though he later discovered he had broken three ribs. He was, however, concerned about the pain in his right arm. That hurt. Luckily, it wasn’t broken.


His next thoughts concerned the condition of the bike, then he thought of his brothers, Jackson and Joseph, and fellow rider Braxten Gallian and the other 16 people who made up the Wingfield Bros. Racing Team and who were waiting on him at the finish.


The sun wouldn’t start coming up for another hour or so, and he was too far away from the finish line for his radio signal to reach his teammates, so he turned to getting back on the bike.


“I knew they were waiting for me,” Jared, 34, says. “It wasn’t just about finishing to say I finished. Not finishing would have meant letting a lot of people down.”


A couple months later, sitting in a downtown Thai restaurant, Joseph and Jackson nod their heads in total agreement. Race rules require that the same bike that starts the race has to finish it.


“You worry about getting hurt, but mostly you worry about breaking the bike,” Jackson says. “If you break the bike, you’ve ruined it for everyone.”


Jared managed to get up, pointed the bike towards the finish line and kept calling out to his team on the radio.


“You’re out there all alone and it can be lonely and surreal,” he says. “Having the sun start coming up and hearing them finally come over the headset was the best feeling.”


How Jared, Jackson and Joseph came to be on Mexico’s Baja California Peninsula on Nov. 21 at the world’s oldest — and most dangerous — off-road race is almost as remarkable as the fact they finished, broken bones and all.


Life on wheels


The Wingfield brothers all grew up in Chattanooga riding dirt bikes. For the most part, they were ridden on the family farm. Only Jackson, 36, has ever raced in an official motorcycle race, and he did that only once. Yet they dreamed of competing in the Baja 1000, which they say is to motocross what the Masters is to golf or the World Cup is to soccer.


“For a kid who grew up on a dirt bike, it’s the dream,” says Joseph, 39.


But that’s all it was for decades for the Wingfields until Jared bought a CRZ 450X and casually suggested last January that the three should do the race.


Sitting with the brothers, it doesn’t take long to see how close they are. Each is tall, thin, athletically built, dark-headed and quick with a smile. Jared and Joseph work for the family-owned Wingfield Scale and Jackson works for Kenco logistics company. They like listening to each other’s recollections of their adventures in Baja and easily fill in details of daring when one of the others leaves something out.


At first, the idea of competing in the Baja 1000 was just talk, they admit, but eventually they all got serious about it. Still, competing in the Baja 1000 is not as simple as filling out an application and mailing it in along with the entry fee.


Drivers require a fairly large support team (some teams have as many as 100 people), plenty of money for food, gas, equipment, lodging, etc., and planning, experience, skill and luck.


“A lot of things had to fall into place,” Joseph says.


The No. 1 factor was sending an email to Johnny Campbell, the winningest Baja 1000 racer of all time, having won it every year from 1997 to 2005 and again in 2007 and 2008. It was his knowledge and experience that allowed the Wingfields to take part in the race. After some communication and a test ride, Campbell not only trained them, he helped organize the team, put a race plan into place and built the bike through his JRC Honda racing team.


“We had the nicest bike in the whole race,” Jackson says.


Two other key components were finding a local sponsor in Tim Kelly and Southern Honda Powersports, and having Tim Youngblood sign on as volunteer crew chief, which he did on his own dime.


“Those were both huge,” Joseph says.


Kelly says he wanted to get involved because he appreciated the gumption of the guys for wanting to tackle such a trial.


“That’s it,” he says. “They’re local and I just admired their guts for wanting to go and do this. This thing is brutal and to have a local group that wanted to go out there is admirable and we wanted to be a part of it.”


In the race


The first Baja 1000 was 48 years ago and today features around 300 teams (about half of whom do not finish each year). They compete in several classes, including motorcycles, stock Volkswagens, production vehicles, buggies, trucks and customized race vehicles. Some years the race starts and ends in Ensenada, Mexico, and in others it starts in Ensenada and ends in La Paz.


Despite their lack of racing experience, the Wingfields raced in the Pro Moto Class division and, while all racers must finish within a 32-hour window, the Wingfield team did it in 24 hours and 18 minutes, finishing 10th overall.


Some people do the race entirely on their own while some race in teams with each driver doing multiples legs. Each of the Wingfields and Gallian did two legs each. Joseph’s two legs were 72 and 165 miles. He did them in 2 and 4.28 hours, respectively. He broke his leg in a similar wipeout to Jared’s late into his second and final segment of the race, but he also managed to gut it out and finish.


He also attained the highest speed, topping out at 102 mph. Jared managed to hit 92 mph at one point, while Jackson says he spent some of his riding time going under 10 mph, which the terrain required. The three averaged around 40 mph.


“You can’t just go wide open,” Jackson says.


The course and the route change from year to year, but it always takes the riders through populated and paved areas as well as over mountains, rocks and river beds and through areas where no other living thing can be seen for miles. Competitors spend a lot of time standing up on the bike in order to see better and to use their legs as additional shock absorbers.


Teams try to match drivers and their differing skills to the course. Some are better climbers — or boulderers — and some are better navigators, for example.


Part of the strategy required to complete, much less survive, is planning pits stops. For the Wingfields, the 3.2-gallon tank on the bike equated to about 50 miles of racing before it needed to be filled, but air filters and tires also needed constant replacing.


Those are relatively easy aspects of the ordeal, or at least they’re the ones you can plan for. What’s harder to anticipate are the cows or cacti that suddenly appear in your way, or the locals who booby-trap the course by rolling rocks into blind spots or digging holes or by changing the directional markers just for giggles.


The bowling-ball-sized rocks that appear out of nowhere are a hazard as well, as are the patches of silt, a talc-like substance that creates a blinding cloud when the vehicles hit it. It’s difficult enough to maneuver through it alone, but if you are trailing another vehicle, you are essentially driving blind through it, Joseph says.


The teams received the actual race coordinates 14 days before the race started at around 6:30 a.m. on Nov. 20, and the riders had the chance to practice their individual routes during two pre-race legs. Jackson says those were helpful, but the course they actually raced was often far different than the pre-race one. Weather, ruts created by so many vehicles saboteurs who seemed to revel in watching the vehicles wreck changed things.


But not all the locals were out to create havoc, Jackson says. Most “were great.”


“We took tons of stickers (bearing the team logo), which we handed out, and I signed a ton of autographs,” he says.


Between the three brothers, the Wingfields have 14 sons, and they made the entire adventure a family affair. They say the entire experience was much more than a motorcycle race; it was about pushing yourself to the limits, bonding, adventure and “going big.”


“It was a delightful experience,” Jared says.


“It was beautiful, with lots of dangers,” Jackson adds.


Staring off into the distance, a smiling Joseph finally says, “Next time we’ll race with our sons. The whole family.”


Contact Barry Courter at bcourter@timesfreepress.com or 423-757-6354.



Three Chattanooga siblings compete -- and break bones -- in 1000-mile motorcycle race

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'Shadowhunters' TV Series: Alberto Rosende Talks Simon's Future

The Eye



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(Photo : Facebook/Shadowhunters) Alberto Rosende opens up about his “Shadowhunters” character.


“Shadowhunters,” the TV series based on Cassandra Clare’s bestselling “The Mortal Instruments,” has already premiered on Freeform. While viewers already had a taste of what the show is about, there are still a lot more to expect, according to Alberto Rosende, who plays Simon in the series.


In an interview with KSiteTV, the actor teased: “We do so many things… we go through so much together… I mean, the relationships in the show change constantly, and to see people growing and changing and going through things and having to fight for things they care about is something that is extremely interesting.”


While he didn’t say he can guarantee it, Rosende said that his character will also go through some changes as the show goes on.


“I feel like one of the beauties of Simon is he represents the rest of the Mundane world, so he represents all of the fans who are going to be watching the show,” he said. “I think the reason they feel for him is because he is a Mundane. He is one of them, kind of dragged into this world, and then taken through this huge journey.”


Related: ‘Shadowhunters’ TV Series Showrunner Promises Surprises For ‘The Mortal Instruments’ Fans 


Rosende added that he is looking forward to seeing his character becoming more sure of himself despite being the odd one in the world he has become a part of.


Showrunner Ed Decter also teased that some plot lines will come from Clare’s other books, including “The Bane Chronicles.”


In an interview The Hollywood Reporter, Decter said: “What we try to do is if we need to solve a problem or to tell a plot point, what we do is first look t othe whole of Cassandra’s literature and find a solution within her books that help us out with a plot point or a story point that we want to do.”


“Shadowhunters” airs Tuesdays on Freeform.



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Jan 16, 2016 09:00 AM EST



5 Ways to Finally Lose Your Spare Tire—and Keep It Off For Good

My friend is that guy who polishes off those last wings you didn’t eat, orders an appetizer with every meal, and comes back from hitting the head at the ballgame with a dark lager and a 12” Philly Cheesesteak.


About a year ago he decided he wanted to slim down. So he went paleo. Adios chips, Chipotle, and cheesecake. Hello chicken, kale, and coconut milk.  (What CrossFIt calls paleo, isn’t really what our ancestors eat. Here’s The REAL Paleo Diet.) 


He told me the diet seemed uncomplicated—it gave him a clear definition of what he could and could not eat—and, hey, lots of people at his gym did it, and they looked fit. 


And his approach worked! When I saw him three months after his declaration to eat like a caveman, he was visibly less hefty—he’d lost about 20 pounds, he said. 


But when I saw him a handful of months later, he was back to teddy bear mode. 


What gives? We all know someone who’s committed to a diet—whether it’s Paleo, Zone, Atkins, or South Beach—and seen success, then ultimately ended up where they started. Why do diets fail so many people?


“Going from an ‘anything goes’ way of eating to a very strict diet is like going from only knowing how to ride a bike to trying to drive a stick shift Ferrari on the Autobahn,” says Krista Scott-Dixon, Ph.D., who develops nutrition coaching curriculum for Precision Nutrition.  “You might manage for awhile, but eventually you’ll crash.” 


The reason why you crash isn’t because you have faulty willpower, commitment, or self-respect. It’s due to two key factors. 


1. You Never Break the Rules
Crash dieters have a tough time adjusting on the fly. 


Whenever you’re on a diet, you probably live in a black-and-white reality, where some foods are “bad,” and others are “good,” explains Scott-Dixon. It’s this thinking, however, ultimately sets you up for failure.


A person who eats to maintain their desired physique—also known as a year-round healthy eater—however, understands that many foods—even “bad” ones—have a place in his diet and lifestyle. He gets that it’s totally OK to have a weekly “cheat day” or to indulge every so often.


To illustrate this point, Craig Weller, a nutritionist with Precision Nutrition, says to imagine putting a plate of nachos in front of a crash dieter and a year-round healthy eater. 


“A healthy eater might have a few nachos and be done,” he says. “And that’s totally fine because he realizes that everything else he’s doing is healthy, so those few nachos don’t really matter in the grand scheme of his overall lifestyle.” 


“On the other hand, I see so many crash dieters who think nutrition is an all-or-nothing proposition,” he says. 


You have one nacho that doesn’t fit into your diet’s “rules,” and—bam!—all bets are off. You finish off the entire plate, and that’s the end of your diet, Weller says. 


Suddenly, you find yourself right back at where you started. 


2. You’re Out of Your Element
Stress easily derails crash dieters, says Weller. 


That’s because your new way of eating is not your normal behavior. Figuring out what food to buy, how many portions to eat, if a restaurant serves meals that a caveman would eat—are all added anxieties. 


So when life suddenly throws you a curveball—a traffic jam right before an important meeting, a fight with your partner, a sleepless night—your diet (a big stress) is the first thing to go, Weller says. You default to your old habits. The autopilot setting that you’re used to. 


That’s when one nacho turns into an entire plate.


For a year-round healthy eater, food isn’t a stress. There’s no anxiety associated with every meal. They’ve figured out a formula that’s worked for them over the years. 


When stress crops up, their diet stays on autopilot, while your diet, well, crashes and burns. 


The Answer for Crash Dieters
This isn’t to say that “crash diets” don’t get results. 


The nutritional foundations that they’re built upon can absolutely help keep your weight in check—for a short time, at least. But if you want to keep the pounds off, you need to be able to sustain the diet.


Sure, you can lose your spare tire in 45 days like a diet promised, but it’ll be back.


Consider this: In 2005, a study from the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that just 20% of people who begin a diet and lose weight manage to keep that weight off for a year or more. 


Of that 20%, the people who were able to keep the weight off for 5 years were able to keep the weight off for the rest of life, the study found. 


The reason: By that point, they knew how to bend the rules to make their diet work for them. Their diets were on autopilot. 


“Learning to eat healthy is like learning to speak a different language,” says Weller. “You learn a little at a time until you’re proficient.”


Here’s what Weller and Scott-Dixon say does work: Take it slow. Pick just one simple healthy eating habit and practice it for at least two weeks. 


That’s the ideal amount of time it takes to learn how to easily implement the practice into your life, and for it to lose its stress factor, says Scott-Dixon. After that two-week period, the habit becomes automatic.


Then, adopt another healthy eating habit for two weeks. And continue to repeat this process.  


Start here: incorporate these simple, stress-free steps into your life, one at a time. When one step’s time period ends, don’t stop doing it, simply incorporate the next one. 


They’re effective individually, but together they have the ability to permanently transform your body and turn you into a year-round healthy eater for the rest of your life.


Weeks 1 to 2
Eat slowly

Stop scarfing. Research consistently shows that eating slower and mindfully keeping track of how much you’ve consumed during a meal can help you eat less, says Brian St. Pierre, MS, RD, CSCS, Director of Performance Nutrition at Precision Nutrition. 
 
Weeks 3 to 4
Eat protein 

Protein is a super nutrient: It builds and maintains muscle and burns fat, while also helping you feel more full, so you’ll eat less overall. That’s why you should aim for two palm-size portions of protein at each meal (six to eight palm-sized portions per day). 


The best source: meat, fish, eggs, Greek yogurt, cottage cheese, or a scoop of protein powder.
 
Weeks 5 to 6
Eat vegetables 

Yes, vegetables are loaded with health-promoting vitamins, minerals, and phytonutrients. They also deliver minimal calories, and because they’re filled with water and fiber, they help you feel full.


Another way to think about it: Vegetables essentially take the place of more calorie laden, “unhealthy” foods that used to fill your plate.  Aim for two fist-sized portions of vegetables at each meal (six to eight fist-sized portions per day).
 
Weeks 7 to 8
Get enough sleep

You might be surprised to learn that sleep is just as important as diet and exercise when it comes to how you look, feel, and perform, says St. Pierre. 


“That’s why we have clients figure out a way they can create a dependable sleep routine.” Aim for 7 to 8 hours every night. Find out how in 7 Sleep Doctors Reveal Their Favorite Tricks for Falling Asleep
 
Weeks 9 to 10
Unwind

Too much life stress can impact your weight. “Stress is a killer,” says St. Pierre. “It stores fat, eats muscle, ruins health and crushes your fitness performance.” 


That’s why taking just 20 minutes each day to do something—anything—that reduces your stress can improve your physique, and also allow you to make better food decisions. Try meditation, petting your dog, walking, reading, or even building Lego sets. 


Michael Easter is the Fitness Editor of Men’s Health.



5 Ways to Finally Lose Your Spare Tire—and Keep It Off For Good

Autonomous, eco-friendly cars shine at North American International Auto Show

(Relaxnews) – Even though CES has started taking some of the shine off the glamour of Detroit as an event for debuting a new car or vehicular innovation, the 2016 North American International Auto Show still had its fair share of star cars shinning a light on the path the industry is taking towards greater environmental responsibility and greater autonomy.


“Of the 57 introductions at NAIAS, nearly 90 per cent were worldwide debuts, which is an incredible testament to the global position of importance that NAIAS plays in automaker’s new vehicle and technology launch strategies,” said 2016 NAIAS Chairman Paul Sabatini.


And although Buick’s latest concept dazzled, the most important reveal was that of a rather ordinary-looking mid-size executive sedan, the Mercedes E Class.


“Over the years, [it] has consistently redefined the benchmark in the business-class segment. It is now carrying this tradition forward with a host of first-rate innovations. The new E-Class takes another major step towards fully autonomous driving,” said Daimler board member Prof. Dr. Thomas Weber.


How big a step? It is the first production car licensed for autonomous test-driving in the U.S. state of Nevada and the first that can drive itself at speeds of up to 209 kilometres per hour. And although fully autonomous cars are a long way from being a reality, the E Class represents the pinnacle of what’s not just possible, but tried and tested at this moment in time.


Alongside the E Class, new models from Ford and Volvo were promoted primarily on their active, semi-autonomous safety systems. The new Ford Fusion will be the first Ford sold in the US with a pedestrian detection system and hands-free parallel and perpendicular parking, while Volvo’s new S90 will be the first car to go on sale in the US with autonomous highway driving features as standard.


Alongside autonomy, the other major theme at this year’s show was greater responsibility, whether via hybrids, plug-in electric or fuel cell.


“We believe Mirai and hydrogen fuel cell technology represents the future of sustainable transportation,” said Jim Lentz, Toyota North America CEO. Toyota is even inviting other companies to use its patents. “We hope sharing this technology with the auto industry will bring us closer to achieving a future hydrogen society helping us to improve lives for generations to come,” continued Lentz.


For its show car, Audi unveiled a hydrogen powered crossover, the h-tron Quattro, and Mercedes and BMW have also indicated their desire to explore the technology, but for the moment, hybrids are key.


“The BMW i3 is the world’s third-best-selling pure electric car,” said BMW board member Dr. Ian Robertson (HonDSc). “We are transferring our knowledge from BMW i and will electrify the whole fleet. This year we’ll add several new models as plug-in hybrid versions, including the BMW 3 and 7 Series.”



Autonomous, eco-friendly cars shine at North American International Auto Show

Auto Insurance policy And also Leasing

When leasing an automobile, it’s less complicated to stick to the same firm for your


auto insurance policy. What you have no idea, nonetheless, is that you could wind up


paying excessive for your coverage and it’s far better to look in other places for


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When you rent, the car that you will certainly drive comes from the leasing


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Freitag, 15. Januar 2016

Trikes Versus Bikes

In the US, vehicles with three wheels are officially considered to be “motorcycles” even though they may be completely un-motorcycle-like. A motorcycle with a sidecar can certainly be seen as a motorcycle even though it doesn’t handle like one. A three-wheeler like the Can-Am Spyder is still pretty motorcycle-like since the rider’s seating position and controls are familiar to a motorcycle rider. Then there’s the Polaris Slingshot, which has two side-by-side seats and a steering wheel—and here the divergence from motorcycles is complete.


Still further from motorcycles—though legally in the category—is the Elio, a three-wheel car. It has two wheels in front and front-wheel drive, with a single un-driven rear wheel. It has two seats, with the driver in front, passenger in the rear. It also has a full body enclosing everything except the front wheels.


The Elio is not fully developed and not yet for sale. Elio Motors was founded in 2008, and after many delays early Elio buyers might see their vehicles in 2016. Since the Elio—legal issues aside—is definitely a three-wheeled car, why write about it in this magazine? Because our experience as motorcyclists can tell us some interesting things about the Elio, a “motorcycle” that’s not a motorcycle.


In looking at promotional information on the Elio, a couple of numbers jump out at you. First, the highway mileage is projected to be 84 mpg (the website hedges by saying “up to” 84 mpg). Second, the price: targeted at $6,800.


This is where our experience as motorcyclists comes in. The Elio will have a 900cc in-line three-cylinder engine driving its front wheels. Compare that engine to the Yamaha FZ-09’s 847cc triple. The twin-cam, four-valve FZ makes an honest 107 hp. Fuelly.com gives us an average user-reported mileage of around 43 mpg. Since that number is the average of city and highway, let’s guess that the highway mileage is 55 mpg.


The Elio mill is a single-cam, two-valve design and will have a lower state of tune (I’d guess 70 hp) so it won’t be as thirsty. Two-mode variable valve timing will help. But then it will be hauling 1,600 pounds versus the FZ’s 760—assuming both vehicles are carrying two people and some cargo. That’s an 840-pound difference. The Elio is basically carrying two extra FZ-09s!


The Elio should be a bit better aerodynamically than any true motorcycle—faired or un-faired—but only a bit better because the Elio’s front wheels are out in the airstream with wheel fairings but not blended with the body. With better aerodynamics, but massively greater weight, I would guess that a highway mileage figure of 60 mpg might be possible. It will probably be closer to the FZ’s 55 mpg. But 84 mpg as automotive highway mileage is commonly measured? Not on this planet.



RELATED READING:






Vehicle regulations put two- and three-wheelers in the same classification. Do you?






And then there’s the price. The FZ-09 is right at $8,200, and we can assume since Yamaha has been in business quite a while that it makes a profit building a relatively simple machine. In contrast, the Elio specifications show a fully enclosed body with rollover and side-beam protection, airbags, safety glass windows, two automotive seats and belts, and a five-star automotive crash rating. The luxuries include a stereo, electrically operated windows, heating, and air conditioning. Will this sell for $6,800 and make the company a profit? Only on planet Elio.


An acquaintance of mine has put a deposit on an Elio, and I’ve told him that he’s going to get a great deal at the contracted, guaranteed price, which almost certainly won’t hold. A company can control the sales price by losing money—Tesla reportedly still loses $4,000 per car sold—but a company can’t get 84 mpg out of a setup that will most likely give 55 mpg.


I’m all for efficient, high-mileage, innovative transportation, and I hope the Elio makes it to market; however, I just wonder how it’s gone about selling the idea to people who generally aren’t quite as knowledgeable as the motorcyclist who knows something about 900cc triples, how they perform, and what they cost.


James Parker designed his first original motorcycle in 1971; his most recent design is the Mission R electric superbike. In between, he worked on multiple other motorcycle projects, including 30 years spent evolving the RADD front suspension system used on the Yamaha GTS1000 and various other prototypes.



Trikes Versus Bikes

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Donnerstag, 14. Januar 2016

Love makes the world go round -- and Dale man's bank account shrink

What began as a quest for love ended with a large deficit in a Dale man’s bank account after he fell victim to an on-line dating scam and lost $300,000 in the process.


The Larry Island Road victim told deputies on Monday he thought he was falling in love with a woman named Michelle and began to send her money orders to fund a jewelry store she claimed to own in Charleston, according to a Beaufort County Sheriff’s Office report.


At one point in their online conversations, the victim said Michelle told him she was traveling overseas in order to purchase jewelry for the store.


While she was gone, a man named Marc resumed the conversation and told the victim he was the only person who could contact Michelle at that time, the report said.


Michelle eventually got back in touch and said she needed more money for taxes on the jewelry.


The victim sent her several money orders ranging from $8,000 to $29,000 each, the report said.


It wasn’t until the victim’s bills became overdue because Michelle had not repaid the money that he realized he had been scammed, the report said.


Deputies took the emails exchanged between all parties and the money wire transfers as evidence.


Such scams are normally run by people who know what they’re doing.


“These people work as hard at deception as normal people do working,” Capt. Bob Bromage said Thursday. “They’re techniques are only limited by their imagination.”


Bromage said the Sheriff’s Office often receives reports of credit card fraud and other scams.


In December, a Bluffton man reported to the Sheriff’s Office that he was cheated out of $15,000 by a woman he met through Skype messaging who claimed to be from Ghana, and went by the name “Godsent.”


Through many messages, “Godsent” asked the man to send her money for the shipment of several kilograms of gold she said had been found on her father’s property. The man sent the money believing she would come to the U.S. so they could get married.


The “golden” romance fizzled after the man sent a final wire transfer of $4,000 on Nov. 18 and realized he was the victim of a scam, a revelation that came after he spoke with his family.


People met through on-line dating websites may be after money if they press their counterparts to leave the website and communicate through personal e-mail or instant messaging, possess instant feelings of love, send photographs of themselves that look like something from a magazine, plan to visit and then can’t because of a tragic event or ask for money for various reasons, according to the FBI.


“If there is anything suspicious, contact law enforcement and get them involved,” Bromage said. “If it sounds too good to be true, it usually is.”


Follow Caitlin Turner on Twitter at twitter.com/Cait_E_Turner.



Love makes the world go round -- and Dale man"s bank account shrink

Mittwoch, 13. Januar 2016

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Victory's Empulse TT All-Electric Motorcycle Finds Its Way Into EagleRider Stores

LOS ANGELES, Jan. 13, 2016 /PRNewswire/ — EagleRider gives a warm welcome to the Empulse TT—the first all-electric motorcycle manufactured by Victory and now the newest addition to EagleRider’s ever-growing inventory.


Logo – http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20160111/321238LOGO 


This zero-emissions motorcycle features an adjustable suspension, aggressive Brembo brakes that can bring the bike from 30-0 in 45 feet, and one of the most advanced batteries ever developed reaching a full charge in 3.9 hours with an average range of 80 miles.


The Empulse TT is often described as a “magic carpet with handlebars” as it glides along roads without any noise, vibration, or engine heat. The stealthy bike’s silence is the wonderful sound of money being saved while sacrificing none of a motorcycle’s inherent edge and style.


VP of Sales Chris Clovis comments “EagleRider is always on the lookout for the innovative and proven motorcycles on the market that bring the most variety and value to our available selection. The Empulse TT being without a doubt one of the most impressive electric motorcycles out there was a natural choice.”


This work of motorcycling art is available for test drive or sale at our LAX and San Diego locations. Check out the links below for more details!


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Contact: Press@EagleRider.com


 



Victory"s Empulse TT All-Electric Motorcycle Finds Its Way Into EagleRider Stores

Homage to David Bowie at men's fashion week in London

The first of this new year’s fashion weeks got off to a subdued start as the world learnt of the death of David Bowie.


“I guess the thing is for us is that we get to have his music forever. He influenced already three generations of musicians to whom he’s a hero. So I guess that is the one positive thing,” said recording artist Mark Ronson.


“He was himself. I think that has a lot to do with London as well, and just trying to experiment, you know, to experiment, that is what it is to be an artist, you have to experiment. You can’t be comfortable and safe. Sometimes the things you love you have to kill and he did it, time and time again,” said film director Steve McQueen (Twelve Years A Slave).


London Collection Men features the latest menswear collections from more than 60 designers including Moschino, Paul Smith and Burberry, which opened the show on Monday.


To a sorrowful live set by Franco-British poet and musician Benjamin Clementine, models took to the catwalk in an array of coats from military to duffle and re-issued trench coats. Jackets were overlayed with casual polo shirts and track suits, which came in both matte and sequined versions. The classic Burberry geometry made a discreet appearance on scarves and outerwear, in autumn-winter colours of grey, navy, ochre and black.


The Alexander McQueen label released its latest collection of menswear to a packed house. Models showcased elegantly tailored suits and blazers. Bold fossil prints on silk reflected the collection’s Darwinian theme combined with floral designs and paisley on flowing fabrics. Black and white shades were prominent, with the occasional splash of vibrant red or gold to emphasize the collection’s gothic theme.


Luxury British fashion label Belstaff unveiled its latest Autumn/Winter menswear collection inside a dilapidated red-brick Victorian building. The bleak setting provided the perfect backdrop for the collection – entitled ‘Heading North’ – inspired by the rugged explorer seeking adventure and freedom.


Models posed in bomber jackets and long winter coats, in a variety of monochromatic tones and materials including leather and fur.


And the Topman collection offered an eclectic mix of looks. Models walked the runway in everything from ’90s inspired double denim to luxurious fabrics like velvet, silk, cashmere and tweed. The color palette mainly consisted of autumnal shades of red, brown and orange, with some blues and greys thrown in.


Although womenswear remains the cornerstone of the fashion industry, menswear is growing faster, and is now worth some 400 billion euros



Homage to David Bowie at men"s fashion week in London

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In California tests, self-driving cars still need human help



LOS ANGELES (AP) — Futuristic self-driving cars traveling along California roads have needed plenty of old-fashioned human intervention to stay safe.


California’s Department of Motor Vehicles on Tuesday released reports filed by seven companies the agency gave permission to test prototype vehicles in public. The documents summarized instances in which a human driver had to take over due to technology problems or other safety concerns.


The reports show wildly different levels of success since on-road testing started in September 2014.


Experts in the technology said Google, whose cars drove the most by far, performed relatively well, though they also cautioned that the testing typically happened during good weather. Other companies reported frequent instances in which the person who is required to be in the front seat — just in case — had to grab the wheel.


Nissan, for example, tested just 1,485 miles in public, but reported 106 cases where the driver had to take control. The automaker has said it plans to have “commercially viable autonomous drive vehicles” by 2020. A spokeswoman did not return a request for comment.


Google said its cars needed human help 341 times over 424,000 miles. That would be the equivalent of about 10 times per year, given the 12,000 miles the average U.S. vehicle travels annually.


In 11 of the 341 instances, Google said its cars would have gotten in a crash.


The head of the company’s self-driving car project said that while the results are encouraging, they also show the technology has yet to reach his goal of not needing someone behind the wheel.


“There’s none where it was like, ‘Holy cow, we just avoided a big wreck,"” said Chris Urmson, Google’s self-driving car project leader.


“We’re seeing lots of improvement. But it’s not quite ready yet,” Urmson said. “That’s exactly why we test our vehicles with a steering wheel and pedals.”


The California Department of Motor Vehicles, which is writing new regulations for the technology, said it was still reviewing in the reports.


Google reported 272 cases in which the cars’ software or onboard sensors failed. Though Google did not release detailed scenarios, the problems included issues with the self-driving cars seeing traffic lights, yielding to pedestrians or committing traffic violations. There were also cases where intervention was needed because other drivers were reckless, and several dozen instances of an “unwanted maneuver” by Google’s car.


Bryant Walker Smith, a professor at the University of South Carolina who closely follows self-driving car developments, said Google’s rate of potential collisions was “not terribly high, but certainly not trivial.” He said it remains difficult to gauge how self-driving cars compare to accident rates among human drivers, since even the best data underreport minor collisions that are never reported to authorities.


While Google’s problem rate is “impressively low,” a trained safety driver should remain in the front seat, said Raj Rajkumar, an engineering professor at Carnegie Mellon University who specializes in self-driving cars.


According to data in Google’s report, a driver typically took control within one second of the car asking for help.


Drivers at other companies often reacted quickly as well, according to their reports, though Volkswagen Group of America reported that, in one case, it was more than 12 minutes before the person took control of one of its test Audis. Audi of America spokesman Brad Stertz said he was gathering details on the incident, but believed it was a software glitch that did not affect public safety, and possibly was a false reading.


John Simpson, a frequent critic of Google who focuses on privacy issues for the nonprofit group Consumer Watchdog, said the company’s report “underscores the need for a driver behind the steering wheel capable of taking control of the robot car.”


Google has argued to California regulators that once the company concludes the cars are ready for the public to use, they should not need a steering wheel or pedals because human intervention would actually make them less safe.


Google released its report Tuesday before the agency posted reports from other companies in what Google described as an effort to be transparent about its safety record. The company had lobbied against having to report disengagements in the first place, saying the data could be misinterpreted.


The other companies testing self-driving cars on California streets are Tesla Motors, Mercedes-Benz, and parts suppliers Bosch and Delphi.


Google’s testing mostly involves driving around the company’s Silicon Valley headquarters or the streets of Austin, Texas. The company’s rate of human intervention has improved in recent months, according to its data, but Urmson cautioned that the rate might again rise as Google subjects the cars to more challenging environments and weather conditions.


Google said its cars would have been responsible in eight of the 11 avoided accidents, according to computer modeling the company performed later. In two other cases, its cars would have hit a traffic cone.


Google cars have been involved in nine collisions since September 2014. In each case, the other car was responsible, according to an analysis by researchers at Virginia Tech University.


___


Contact Justin Pritchard at http://twitter.com/lalanewsman .


___


Online:


Read the reports: http://tinyurl.com/jcvjwg4



© 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




In California tests, self-driving cars still need human help

Dienstag, 12. Januar 2016

Why Won't More Chicks Buy Harleys?

Why Won


Imagine the predicament of the Harley-Davidson Corporation: every paunchy middle-aged biker dude already owns your product. Where to find sales growth? Ladies? Hello?


No big mystery to the business marketing sales achievement dynamics here, folks. Harley has completely saturated the “Actual Biker Gang Members” market, along with the “Retired Dentist” market. If this company wants to grow it needs to find some buyers who are young, and it needs to find some buyers who are of the female gender but who are not being paid to splay across a Harley in a skimpy bikini for a calendar shoot. That’s Economics 101, right there.


Now, I’m not motorcycle marketing expert, but it seems that today’s Wall Street Journal article on Harley’s attempts to broaden their appeal may hold some clues about why they can’t get those young female buyers in the doors.





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The Doobie Brothers, a band whose heyday was in the 1970s, performed at the grand opening of a giant dealership in Scottsdale, Ariz., in November. Prime floor space often goes to big and loud chrome bikes rather than sleek and modern models. At periodic “bikini bike washes,” Harley dealers hire women in skimpy swimwear to sponge down motorcycles.


That sounds like something “for old dirty pervs,” said [Kawasaki Ninja owner Nicole] Villagran.



Hmmm. Not sure this chick is settling comfortably into the brand halo. Perhaps the dealers out there in the field have more creative solutions?



Some dealers don’t see a burning need for change. Bob Parsons, the 65-year-old founder of GoDaddy.com and owner of the Scottsdale Harley dealership, said: “Everybody likes to look a little bit badass, and nothing says that better than a Harley shirt with a skull on it.”



Maybe make some of them GoDaddy.com-type ads but the hot chicks are wearing cutoff Harley shirts? I dunno. Women are weird.


[Photo: Flickr]



Why Won"t More Chicks Buy Harleys?

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Montag, 11. Januar 2016

Murder charge dismissed against suspect in Tulsa man's 2008 disappearance



Related story: Murder charge filed in presumed death of Tulsa businessman missing since 2008






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Murder charge dismissed against suspect in Tulsa man"s 2008 disappearance

Sonntag, 10. Januar 2016

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Motorcycle auction draws 10000 during three-day run

Tanya Doyle fawned over a 1974 Norton 850 Commando Hi-Rider on Saturday morning at South Point hotel-casino.


“I’m restraining myself from sitting on it and driving it right out of here,” she said.


Doyle, owner of BFE Vintage Motorcycles in Luther, Iowa, bought the motorcycle along with three others during the 25th Mecum MidAmerica Motorcycle Auction, which was attended by more than 10,000 people from Thursday through Saturday.


According to Doyle, she only has eyes for what she calls “survivor bikes,” motorcycles that haven’t been restored.


“I’m looking for bikes that have been historically preserved,” she said. “Many people have the skills set to restore bikes and we do restorations in our shop, but the ones that are in their original condition are the ones I’m interested in.”


Doyle, who stuck out among the mostly male crowd, said she gravitates toward motorcycles from her childhood.


“I’m looking for ones that my eyes saw and ones my neighbors had because they represent my history,” she said. “I’m an unusual biker chick.”


Though her passion for motorcycles began at an early age, it didn’t come from within her own family.


“My dad wasn’t into motorcycles, but my neighbors were,” she said. “I became part of their family so I could ride their bikes until I had enough money to buy my own.”


Auction sales were expected to surpass last year’s sales of $7.3 million, according to David Morton, Mecum Auctions manager of communications and event marketing.


The top-selling motorcycle was a 1912 Henderson Four, which sold for $165,000, followed by a 1955 Vincent Black Prince for $120,000.


Dale Keesecker roamed the auction floor on Saturday morning looking at the 700 antique motorcycles.


“I began riding in the early 1950s,” he said. “My dad told me about his generation in the 1930s and how he and his friends would ride bikes because they didn’t have the money for a car.”


Keesecker now owns 150 motorcycles and keeps them in a temperature controlled facility near his home in the Midwest.


His favorites from his collection are a 1950s Laverda and 1970s MV Augusta.


According to Keesecker, motorcycles have come a long way over the years as the technology, handling, styling and engine efficiency have changed.


“The biggest thing is reliability,” he said. “When I was a kid they weren’t all that reliable, and today it’s not as big of an issue.”


Keesecker attended the first Mecum MidAmerica Motorcycle Auction 25 years ago.


“For me, it’s an obsession,” he said cracking a smile. “Now there are a lot more dollars involved, a lot more people and a larger quantity of bikes. It’s almost overwhelming; there’s so much stuff here.”


Ron Christenson, president of Mecum MidAmerica Motorcycle division, said the first auction offered nearly 200 motorcycles for sale.


“Now, I have to cut it off at 700 because we’re limited to only three days,” he said. “For many, this is a social event and our customers love Las Vegas so that’s why this auction works.”


Phoenix resident Wayne Hamilton has bought 10 and sold six motorcycles over the past 12 years at the auction.


“The thrill of the find is the fun of this whole thing,” he said. “I also have friends who I meet here every year, and I always learn something significant.”


After retiring from Microsoft Corp. in 1999, he traveled and played golf for five years until he yearned for something more “mentally stimulating.”


Hamilton began building his collection of 60 Triumph motorcycles and opened a private museum in 2010 to share his passion with others.


“It’s more of a history lesson than it is about the motorcycles,” he said. “You can tell a lot about what was going on during the time period when a bike was made.”


Hamilton said he hopes younger generations will become interested in vintage motorcycles.


“When I’m gone, my collection most likely won’t be sold in a group so I hope that my bikes will still be around in the future,” he said. “I want to get younger people involved, but you won’t get rich doing this and that’s part of the problem. Also, the knowledge you need to do this is incredible.”


Johnny Saris, 22, of Lake George, N.Y. said he’s up for the challenge.


He said he’s drawn to vintage motorcycles like the 1971 Triumph he owns.


“These old bikes are so quirky, and they increase your mechanical ability when you ride them,” he said. “They have character that new bikes don’t have and there’s something special about them.”


Saturday’s auction was Saris’ first one, and he was in awe at the selection.


“I’ve never seen anything like this in my life,” he said looking around at the rows of motorcycles on the showroom floor. “I’m going to have to get more bikes.”


Contact reporter Ann Friedman at afriedman@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4588. Find @AnnFriedmanRJ on Twitter.



Motorcycle auction draws 10000 during three-day run