![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjWRdT0TCLe2LuCpuczDvsXHKc-6uhJ1KNrfC6eX-czjWTClmzUVPYNikuCU04sF8VlwYIKNwXMrl-MQ-ELWyaTU7r1uGrZ5StFes8Dsp9G8Si1KiRn_pIxvHeITWlK38649yhnk5JIldM/s400/tumblr_l9qe1p9W6Q1qzpsi6o1_500.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjRfdhawrVelpWBLLM0lgKqb5d8809z8WO93c8fgF4th_Huli4mBkmOQcQKQfr9HKFEcI2b0U12qjV_cSONMamWcRMW3b2ihFuSXs4yo4v8qkN7xZK-eQP4YTUTi0KHAeDGyfSv9swbYobx/s400/JADE_Warrior_rear_engine.jpg)
Skip the first 30 seconds
Learned about it from http://zelastchancegaragedu78.blogspot.com/ information from http://www.dragzine.com/news/the-jade-warrior-a-truly-insane-and-one-of-a-kind-ride/
The creation of British motorcycle racer Angus MacPhail, who built it himself in his garage, it's called the “Jade Warrior,” did the quarter mile in under 8 seconds a quarter century ago without the use of nitromethane. That's riding on the tip of a bullet.
It was powered by an inline 4-cylinder that blended MacPhail’s own engineering with that of a Ford Cosworth and sported a Roots supercharger producing somewhere between 400 and 500 horsepower.
The frame was, obviously, a completely one-off piece that was built monocoque-style – with a main center section made of alloy and put together with Araldite adhesive and Monel rivets. A well-designed body with ground effects incorporated helped keep it stable and hooked up at close to 200 MPH. Angus claimed it was actually very easy to navigate down the track.