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Transportation Television Entertainment

Jessi Combs, the 'Fastest Woman On Four Wheels,' Killed In Land-Speed Record Crash (yahoo.com) 152

McGruber shares a report from Popular Mechanics: Jessi Combs -- vehicle builder, racer, fabricator, TV personality, and all-around automotive legend -- was killed on Tuesday in a crash while attempting to break her own land-speed record in southeast Oregon. She was 36. The crash occurred as Combs was piloting her jet-powered land-speed car on the Alvord Desert, a dry lake bed where several land-speed records have been set. According to local reports, the crash happened shortly after 4pm local time.

Combs held the title of "fastest woman on four wheels" after setting a record of 398 mph in her jet-powered North American Eagle Supersonic Speed Challenger in 2013. More recently, she had piloted that same car to 483.227 mph in a single shakedown run in October 2018, though that run ended prematurely with mechanical troubles. (Governing bodies require two back-to-back runs in opposite directions to set an official speed record.) Combs was also a host, builder, and technical expert on shows like Xtreme 4x4, Overhaulin', Truck U, and Two Guys Garage. She brought about Velocity channel's All Girls Garage, and was a host and builder on a season of Discovery Channel's Mythbusters.

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Jessi Combs, the 'Fastest Woman On Four Wheels,' Killed In Land-Speed Record Crash

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  • Good for her (Score:5, Interesting)

    by DontBeAMoran ( 4843879 ) on Wednesday August 28, 2019 @04:26PM (#59134688)

    She died doing something she loved at the prime of her life, instead of growing old, ending up in a retirement home and posting stupid comments on websites.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by mattyj ( 18900 )

      You don't have to be old and retired to do that.

      This is a huge bummer, but I share the sentiment. It's a uniquely American thing, for the most part, to do something crazy just for the sake of doing it, and I salute her for that. As well as all the work she's done to promote building, making, teaching, etc. to girls and other women.

      • It's a uniquely American thing

        That Icarus guy was such a copycat.

      • This is a huge bummer, but I share the sentiment. It's a uniquely American thing, for the most part, to do something crazy just for the sake of doing it, and I salute her for that.

        What is uniquely american is the urge to make this into something uniquely american. It's only an expensive type of extreme sports. And safely on 4 wheels too instead of 2!

      • It's a uniquely American thing, for the most part, to do something crazy just for the sake of doing it

        LOL!

        Only a fully-inbred American could possibly think that.

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Jon Peterson ( 1443 )

        Yes, it really is almost uniquely American. That's why there are essentially no mountaineers from other countries, because pretty much only Americans would try to reach the top of a mountain just "because it's there".

        Same thing for arctic and antarctic exploration - the only country with a base in Antarctica - The USA. Literally no-one from other countries had ever even bothered to go to the poles (or at least, not until Americans did it first).

        Same thing with sports. Running a 4 minute mile just for the he

    • And on the plus side, a wreck at 400mph probably doesn't hurt much.

      • It probably hurts A LOT, but for a much shorter time than a regular car crash.
        Who knows, maybe the pain signals never even had the time to reach her brain.

    • She died doing something she loved

      Yes, hurtling through the air screaming and being mangled was here _fave_ I bet.

      • being mangled going from mach 0.52 tp zero in less than a second doesn't hurt. She might have seen something wrong beforehand and screamed "aw fuck"

        • by Cederic ( 9623 )

          I suspect she was too busy to scream. People like that tend to retain focus right up until loss of consciousness.

          Unless they've tried everything and have just become a passenger. At which point a zen like calm sets in. What will happen will happen.

          Screaming? Nah. That's for drama queens.

          • Screaming? Nah. That's for drama queens.

            Shitting yourself though, ask bikers who've experienced a highsider.

    • 36 is still too young. And in a few short years, some other lady will break her record, and she'll be forgotten. Really not worth it, IMO. I don't if she left any children or a spouse behind, definitely not worth it for them.

  • Mythbusters (Score:5, Informative)

    by McGruber ( 1417641 ) on Wednesday August 28, 2019 @04:31PM (#59134706)
    Jessi Combs filled-in for Kari Byron on Mythbusters while Kari was on maternity leave.
    • She also came in with Kari, Tori and Grant but suddenly disappeared from the show a handful of episodes after
    • I haven't seen it on here yet, but she was also a co-host on Extreme 4x4, a show that focused on creating or improving off-road vehicles. I can't quite recall the name of the guy host but it was fantastic. If anyone is sick of the manufactured drama that infects practically every car show (I'm looking at you Gas Monkey Garage), you would do well to check out PowernationTV and their stable of TV shows.

      They focus only on the engineering, building, fixing with none of the fake drama and squabbles. I real
  • Is there something about women's physiology that makes piloting jet cars more difficult for women than men?

    She achieved great things, and driving that jet car takes a lot of guts, courage and determination, but she wasn't the fastest person on four wheels.

    If we want to live in a society free of sexism, we have to stop proclaiming achievements where being a woman is not a disadvantage.

    • Is there something about women's physiology that makes piloting jet cars more difficult for women than men?

      Common sense comes to mind. I've driven a car over 100mph more time than I can remember, but faster than 200mph I would use wings instead of wheels.

      • by Boronx ( 228853 )

        I don't get land speed records. What's the point of going that fast and staying on the ground? They've always reminded me of the loudest bass contests where the cars are made out of solid concrete and only have to roll a few inches to qualify. Why even pretend that you're in a car?

        • What's the point of going that fast and staying on the ground?

          That's easy - because it's a thing to do. The engineering and mechanics required to breach the 200mph barrier is significant and if you're gonna do it safely and consistently, it's not just about throwing a huge engine with a bunch of turbos strapped to it. There's a real beauty in engineering in machines designed to generate massive amounts of power in a way that doesn't grenade components. Not everyone gets it, and that's OK.

          Watching James May break a land speed record (albeit for a brief period in

        • I enjoy walking down premade trails and looking at trees and mountains. It would be hard to explain what the point was to someone that did not enjoy doing that.

    • Is there something about women's physiology that makes piloting jet cars more difficult for women than men?

              No, - as proven every weekend in the NHRA circuit, where some of the top competitors are women, with no accommodation. And it's a lot more demanding than land speed records.

              But you can't market a marginal achievement nearly as well without coming up with a "hook" .

    • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

      Is there something about women's physiology that makes piloting jet cars more difficult for women than men?

      It's a good point and a little research shows you are indeed correct. The current Land speed record [wikipedia.org] is 280 miles an hour faster than Coombs effort and was achieved by Wing Commander Andy Green [wikipedia.org] in the ThrustSSC [wikipedia.org] at a whopping 763 miles an hour - which also broke the sound barrier on land in 1997.

      She achieved great things, and driving that jet car takes a lot of guts, courage and determination, but she wasn't the fastest person on four wheels.

      Or even the fastest woman. A little digging shows that honor actually goes to Kitty O'Neil [wikipedia.org] at 512 miles per hour. The thing is that O'Neil also had to overcome deafness. So I get it that Combs was making the atte

    • Is there something about women's physiology that makes piloting jet cars more difficult for women than men?

      Nothing about women's physiology. Here's a little snippet about the last one (O'Neil) who tried:

      Restrained by her contract, O'Neil struggled with sponsors at the time and never forgot how they treated her. She was contracted to break only the women's land speed record, and was obligated to allow Hal Needham to set the overall record. According to her contract, she was not supposed to exceed 400 miles p

  • by AndyKron ( 937105 ) on Wednesday August 28, 2019 @07:12PM (#59135212)
    Live by the jet car, die by the jet car. It's in the Bible
  • It's one thing to see a crash at 600+ MPH. It's another to know the driver died. It's yet another to know it's someone you kinda sorta know (via Mythbusters, and a couple of her TV shows).

    A friend of mine was in a helicopter crash while landing yesterday. Caught it on the news last night and wondered "hmmm, what are the odds". Saw her this morning, she's pretty shook up.

    Some really cool details deleted because the NTSB will be looking into it, and I don't want to spread rumors. Or, to be honest,
    • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

      In any crash upwards of about 200 mph, you can be pretty sure the driver is dead unless you saw them eject first -- and I don't think these vehicles have ejection seats. This isn't even about the safety of the vehicle either. Decelerating a human from that kind of speed quickly takes more crumple than can be achieved in a lightweight vehicle, and it's not even worth bothering to try. All you can do is not crash. There is no backup plan.

    • by Greyfox ( 87712 ) on Thursday August 29, 2019 @03:47AM (#59136114) Homepage Journal
      As you get older, your friends start to die off at an alarming rate. Mortality kinda sucks that way -- either you watch half a dozen friends go in fairly quick succession, or you're the one that dies young-ish. Either way, not particularly fun. I imagine dying in a 600 mph car crash is probably pretty quick, at least. Not much you can do about it, except enjoy the time you have. People might complain about engaging in such risky hobbies, but you know, something's gonna get you sooner or later, and when your time comes, your time comes. You could live a perfectly bland life and still get hit by a bus out of nowhere. Maybe statistically most people don't get hit by busses, but all the odds in the world don't help if you do. Freak accident, people'd say. One in a million. Could have gone skydiving that day instead and didn't. Trying to outwit destiny and all that. May as well just have as much fun as you can while you're here.
  • The real fastest woman on earth was Kitty O'Neil, who set the record at 512 MPH more than 40 years ago. Note that they call Jessi the fastest woman on four wheels because it is important to distinguish that from three wheels or there would be no marketing hook. It is worth noting that Kitty's record could have been faster if she had been allowed to make more runs. Kitty claimed she was only using about 60% of available thrust. Kitty was stopped by her sponsors who were also sponsoring a man and if she had s

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