Amazing And Creative Eye Art

Cat 1 Uber-Amazing Bike

Cat 1 Uber-bike by Byron Hemmes


Cat 1 Uber-bike

" This Limited Edition (of one) cat 1Uber-bike by artist Byron Hemmes. It is a 1200cc Motorcycle. A big cat Motocycle. Powered by 1200cc Buell 97 S3 Thunderbolt engine, body made from high-grade stainless steel. It price at £320,000 (about $567,000)." See from bookofjoe.com.
I searched more info and high definition photos about this project. This bike named the Jaguar Concept Motorcycle from Massow Concept Cycles.
"Massow Concept Cycles - When first given the opportunity to view Barend Massow Hemmes' concept chopper folio nothing could prepare you for the impact of his collection. Using high end car trade marks and logos, Hemmes has developed these pioneering concept motorcyles making use of cutting edge engineering and materials technology. The jaguar 'leaper' cat logo became the first from his limited range to be built into a real machine. Engineered in high-grade stainless steel the bike flaunts a jaguar cat fairing on which the rider sits. This has been finished with ultra high gloss ebony lacquer. Hemmes is currently in talks with Jaguar to determine how they intend using it as radical new brand-awareness tool."

• Length: 2.3 meters
• Wheel center to center: 1.7 meters
• 1200cc Buell 97 S3 Thunderbolt engine
• Body made from high-grade stainless steel
• Air intakes and exhaust system custom-engineered to suit cat profile
• Cat fairing: Fiberglass finished in ultra-high-gloss ebony polyurethane lacquer
• Handlebar width: 1 meter
• Weight: 360 kg
• Seat: Stingray







Seatbelt fine of RM300!!!

Rear seatbelt

From the new year onwards, all passengers in a car whether sitting in the front or back have to buckle up or face a RM300 fine. This only applies if the passenger is over 17 years old, but if you are younger, the driver of the car is the one who will be punished as according to Road Transport Director-General Datuk Solah Mat Hassan, it is the responsibility of the driver to ensure the safety of the minors that they are driving.

This new seatbelt ruling includes the rear seatbelts, but excludes the following:

  • Cars registered before 1st of January 1995
  • Cars registered after the 1st of January 1995 but not equipped with rear seatbelt anchorage points
  • Commercial vehicles such as taxis and rental cars
  • Vehicles with more than 9 seats including the driver's
  • Transport vehicles with capacity above 3.5 tonnes

Wait, that's not all. The RM300 fine will be in effect only within a "grace period" of between the 1st of January 2009 to the end of June 2009. From the 1st of July 2009 onwards, this fine will be upped to RM2,000 and you could even go to jail for up to 1 year. Yes, it may seem harsh… but if you buckle up, you won't have to worry. It's for your own safety anyway

Lockheed Martin's F-35 Achieves First Vertical Landing-PHOTOS



Shortly after 1 p.m. on March 18, F-35B BF-1 performed the first 
STOVL landing at the Pax River hover pad.

"Today's vertical landing onto a 95-foot square pad showed that we have the 
thrust and the control to maneuver accurately both in free air and in the descent 
through ground effect," said   F-35 Lead STOVL Pilot Graham Tomlinson. 
Tomlinson performed an 80-knot (93 miles per hour) short takeoff from Naval 
Air Station Patuxent River, Md., at 1:09 p.m. EDT. About 13 minutes into the 
flight, he positioned the aircraft 150 feet above the airfield, where he commanded
the F-35 to hover for approximately one minute then descend to the runway.  
"The low workload in the cockpit contrasted sharply with legacy short 
takeoff/vertical landing (STOVL) platforms," said Tomlinson, a retired Royal 
Air Force fighter pilot and a BAE Systems employee since 1986. "Together with 
the work already completed for slow-speed handling and landings, this provides 
a robust platform to expand the fleet's STOVL capabilities." 
Today's vertical landing confirmed the aircraft's required ability to land in 
confined areas both ashore and afloat. 

"Having the F-35B perform its first vertical landing underscores the reality 
of the Marine Corps achieving its goal of an all STOVL force," said LtGen
George J. Trautman III, Deputy Commandant for Aviation.  "Being able to 
operate and land virtually anywhere, the STOVL JSF is a unique fixed wing
aircraft that can deploy, co-locate, train and fight with Marine ground forces 
while operating from a wider range of bases ashore and afloat than any other
TacAir platform." 
On April 2, Marine Fighter/Attack Training Squadron - 501 (VMFAT-501)
will officially stand up as part of the Joint Integrated Training Center located 
at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida.  The work being done at Patuxent River will 
enable the Marine Corps to start training Marine pilots and maintainers during 
the fall of 2010.  
The Marine Corps anticipates reaching JSF F-35B initial operational capability 
in December 2012.  IOC assets will include the first F-35B training squadron 
of 15 aircraft in VMFAT-501 at Eglin AFB, an operational test and evaluation
detachment of 4 aircraft at Edwards AFB, and VMFA-332, the Corps' first 
operational squadron of 10 aircraft at MCAS Yuma.  The VMFA-332 aircraft 
will be equipped, manned and trained to execute Marine missions and deploy 
ashore or afloat. 
The STOVL F-35B Lightning II is scheduled to replace three different variants 
of USMC combat aircraft (F/A-18, AV-8B and EA-6B).  This 5th generation 
multi-role fighter has significant advantages over the Marine Corps' current
tactical fixed-wing squadrons and will dramatically amplify strategic agility, vastly 
enhance operational flexibility and capabilities, provide tactical adaptability for 
basing options ashore and afloat, and reduce aviation training and maintenance 
costs across the Corps. 
The STOVL JSF is expected to carry more ordnance with greater range than the 
F/A-18 Hornet, operate from austere expeditionary environments like the AV-8B 
Harrier, and ultimately possess electronic warfare technology similar to the EA-6B
Prowler. 
BF-1 is one of three F-35B STOVL jets currently undergoing flight trials at the 
Patuxent 
River test site.