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February 22, 2012

Live to ride?

A man in Puerto Rico was buried along with his high performance Honda Fireblade motorcycle. The 22 year old man was murdered and was embalmed by funeral directors in a sitting position on top of the motorbike at the request of his grieving family.
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February 22, 2012

Compact planer under test

BOMAG has carried out a successful series of demonstrations of its new BM500/15 compact milling machines in Berlin. The machine was tested at the Representative Offices of Rheinland-Palatinate to the Federal Government and the European Union in Berlin and for the first time the planer carried out practical tests in the grounds of the company's Berlin Branch. A total of around 100 guests watched a highly convincing demonstration. After a reception at the Representative Offices of Rheinland-Palatinate delegat
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February 22, 2012

Road row

In Germany a row between father and son resulted in the father stopping and leaving his teenage son by the roadside. The man had collected his teenage son from a summer camp but following the row, drove off leaving his son with just €5 to pay for the 300km journey home.
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February 22, 2012

Enforcing road tolls in Portugal

The Portuguese Government has confirmed that the charging of toll fees at the SCUT motorways of Algarve, Interior Norte, Beira Interior, Beira Litoral and Beira Alta will be enforced from 15 April, 2011
February 22, 2012

Norway reduces speed limits to cut fatalities

Statens Vegvesen (the Norwegian Road Administration) is planning to reduce speed limits on a number of accident-prone roads across the country in order to reduce fatalities.
February 22, 2012

Highway maintenance

Compaction equipment from Dynapac is playing a key role in maintaining an important highway link in Brazil. Brazilian contractor Egesa has a contract to maintain the highway connecting the giant Jirau hydroelectric project and the nearest town of Porto Velho in Brazil's Rondônia State. The firm is using a fleet of Dynapac compactors to maintain the 130km stretch of two-lane highway between Porto Velho and Jirau in north-western Brazil.
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February 22, 2012

Priorotising road safety worldwide

Road safety is a crucial issue worldwide and on the busy roads of the 27 EU nations, action is being taken to reduce the annual death toll. As a way forward the EU nations have agreed a new safety target to reduce road deaths by 50% by 2020. This follows on from the target set in 2001 of halving road deaths by 2010 and which saw progress being achieved in most countries.
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February 22, 2012

Thief safe

Motorcycle thieves in the UK made off with three high performance bikes, a Yamaha R1, a Honda Fireblade and a Honda CBR600, after stealing them from a dealer recently. Police were quickly alerted to the theft as they realised the thieves were not wearing motorcycle helmets, which have been required in the UK by motorbike riders since 1976. After requesting clarification from a senior officer, the traffic police were advised not to give chase on the grounds that this could potentially compromise the safety o
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February 22, 2012

Fast resurfacing work

A Wirtgen W210 milling machine has played an important role in improving a race track in the UK. Specialist contractor Jordan Road Surfacing used the machine to help finish a major refurbishment at Mallory Park race circuit on budget and a week early.
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February 22, 2012

Record fine?

n Switzerland a Swedish man has set what is thought to be a world record, for the largest speeding fine ever. In Switzerland driving penalties are set in proportion to the offender's income and the fine was over e791,000. The man was driving his high performance Mercedes SLS on the A12 highway between Berne and Lausanne when he was stopped by police for exceeding the speed limit. He was driving the e170,000 car at speeds of up to 300km/h, somewhat in excess of Switzerland's maximum 120km/h limit and the pol
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February 22, 2012

Cornering ability?

In the UK the owner of a small three wheeled car is growing extremely frustrated with the actions of local youths who keep rolling his car on its side. This follows on from a popular British motoring TV programme in which the presenter repeatedly rolled the same model of car when cornering during a driving demonstration.
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February 22, 2012

Late for school?

An American man has built a jet powered school bus capable of maximum speeds of 587km/h. Explaining that as a school child he found his daily trips in a slow moving school bus frustrating, the man used a surplus engine from a supersonic F4 Phantom jet and a secondhand school bus as the basis for his project.
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February 22, 2012

Bus stopped

Police in China have had to tackle a bizarre threat from over 100 fake monks, who had earlier attacked a toll booth and then fled on a double decker bus. Following the incident, police gave chase and managed to stop the bus using a road block. A fight ensued with the fake monks using metal bars and knives to attack the police. While 31 of the monks were arrested at the road block, the others then managed to escape the police in the bus.
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February 21, 2012

São Paulo's landmark bridge construction

To improve access from the east to São Paulo city centre, main contractor Construbase Engenharia is building a road complex comprising three viaducts and access ramps. The greatest challenge in Brazil's largest city is the showpiece Padre Adelino viaduct, a 122m long single-arch, single-span, cable-stayed concrete bridge moulded in situ with a parabola-shaped arch and a single-cell post-tensioned cantilever caisson
Padre Adelino viaduct
February 21, 2012

China's economic growth fuelling vehicle increase

China is at a turning point in many ways. The country's continuing economic growth is fuelling a massive increase in vehicle numbers, with no signs of slackening. This is most acute and most visible in major cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, where traffic jams are now a frequent occurrence
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February 21, 2012

Air freight

In Switzerland, an Opel delivery van had to be airlifted from a mountain, following a navigation error by its driver. The driver followed the directions given by his satellite navigation system, which told him to follow a narrow track that wound slowly upwards.
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