You don’t mess with a Kamaz. The company is the largest truck manufacturer in Russia and has won the Dakar Rally a record 12 times, frequently in Red Bull colours. It may not be the prettiest thing that the world has ever seen, with all the aesthetic and aerodynamic properties of a house brick, but it’s also built like one too. Powering the whole show is a 17.2-litre turbocharged V8 diesel (yes, not a typo) that puts out around 730bhp via a 16-speed transmission. The driving experience is a bit like riding a rocket-propelled camel.
So who thought that putting a 900bhp engine in a truck and then driving it round a ski slope would be a sensible idea? Try any of the participants in Red Bull Frozen Rush: the world’s very first offroad truck race on snow (we’re talking quite niche motorsport here). Essentially, the vehicles are 4x4 pick-ups – except where you might expect to find a dog on a chain in the load bay, there’s an enormous great engine instead. Think of the race as a cross between downhill skiing, World Rally Championship and the NASCAR Truck Series, and you’re more or less there. Temperatures often drop below zero, so these pick-up trucks on steroids use half-inch steel studs to bite into the snowy surface.
Alarmingly, Paul Bonhomme – one of the leading names in the Red Bull Air Race, during which competitors perform high-speed aerobatics – is employed by British Airways as a Boeing 747 pilot. So let’s hope that he never confuses his days off with days at work. Not that there’s a great deal of risk of getting a jumbo jet mixed up with the Zivko Edge 540 used in the Red Bull Air Race. It’s an aircraft designed specifically for aerobatics – so there’s no toilet or business class. It’s only 6.27m long and it runs out of puff at 230 knots (425kph/265mph), but those aren’t the figures that grab your attention.
Instead, it’s a climb rate of 1,128m per minute and a roll rate of 420 degrees a second (leading to such great forces that early versions of the plane were fitted with a strut brace on the tail, to stop it snapping off). The 747, by contrast, can only manage a climb rate of about 500m per minute fully laden, while the roll rate is also considerably more restrained.
Another distinctive member of the Flying Bulls fleet is the Bell Cobra TAH 1F helicopter. Synonymous with the Vietnam War, the ‘A’ stands for 'Attack' – which is exactly what this chopper was put on earth to do. Boasting a top speed just shy of 350kph (220mph), it was the first helicopter to seat the pilot and the gunner in line with each other like a fighter plane. This gives it a distinctively slim shape; now adorned with one of the biggest Red Bull logos out there.
The biggest ever Red Bull machine isn’t, as popularly imagined, Dietrich Mateschitz’s magnificent DC6B (formerly the property of Yugoslavia’s Marshal Tito) or even Felix Baumgartner’s Stratos capsule (although that’s certainly the highest). No, the biggest Red Bull machine is the Energy Station: the name given to describe Red Bull’s ‘motorhomes’ that are seen in Formula One and the WRC, as well as various other events. They can accommodate the entire Formula One with its guests and take about two days to assemble, making them comfortably the biggest Red Bull machines out there.
Some people might think we’re stretching the definition of ‘machine’ here, because while it’s informally known as a ‘motorhome’, there’s no motor anywhere to be found. And yet – as Galileo said when he discovered the earth’s rotation – it moves. That’s because in Monaco the Energy Station is built on a floating platform in the harbour, instantly converting the ‘motorhome’ into a ‘floaterhome’.
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