Saturday, 22 November 2008
Wednesday, 23 May 2007
Sport Racing
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Racing
Form of motor racing involving cars built to combine aspects of racing and touring cars. Although there are many conflicting definitions of sports cars, it is usually conceded that in normal production form they do not resemble Grand Prix (Formula One) racing machines. Whereas the latter is a single-seat design carrying spartan cockpit furnishings and utterly functional equipment throughout, the sport car is usually a two-seater, sometimes a four-seater, characterized by its nimble abilities (if not speed and power) together with general suitability for high-speed touring on ordinary roads. Unlike a Grand Prix car, it is usually series-produced, seldom handmade. Some manufacturers of Grand Prix machines, such as Ferrari and Lotus, also make sports cars. Other makes include MG, Jaguar, Aston Martin, Austin-Healey, Triumph, Porsche, Lancia, Morgan, and Chevrolet Corvette. Although not usually designed exclusively for racing, sports cars are, nevertheless, able racing machines and are often entered in competitions with others of their class. Most of the world’s sports-car racing is conducted for amateur drivers by local and regional organizations.
Tuesday, 22 May 2007
Tuesday, 15 May 2007
Roller Skating
We are: roller, rollers, rollerz, alco roller, alcorollers, mad-roller, downhill rollers.
Roller Skatig - recreational and competitive sport in which the participants use special shoes fitted with small wheels to move about on rinks or paved surfaces. The invention of roller skates has been traditionally credited to the Belgian Joseph Merlin in the 1760s, but the first practical four-wheel skate was designed in 1863 by James Plimpton of Medford, Mass., U.S., and thereafter the first great recreational roller-skating craze swept the United States and western Europe, where many rinks were built.
By the late 20th century, the wooden or metal wheels traditionally used in skates had given way to lightweight polyurethane plastic wheels that grip the riding surface better. Another innovation was in-line (Rollerblade) skates, in which a single row of wheels is used in place of the standard four-wheeled rectangular configuration.
Roller sport,Roller sport skating. Rollers.
As a sport, roller-skating speed events began in the 1890s and were popular through the first quarter of the 20th century. Later, professional speed-skating teams performing in “roller derbies” on banked tracks became a spectator sport in the United States, although these events were as much prearranged spectacle as sport. Major speed roller-skating events for men, women, and relay teams involve racing counterclockwise around an oval track or on the open road. The rules and techniques for these competitions are much like those established for ice skating.
Figure dancing and figure skating on roller skates, introduced in 1910 and 1923, respectively, correspond in most ways to the parallel ice-skating events; similar systems for judging competitions and for proficiency tests are employed. International competition in artistic, hockey, and speed roller-skating is governed by the International Roller Skating Federation, founded in 1924. The first world championships were held in 1937.
roller coaster,roller coasters,bay city rollers,roller skates,roller skating,roller derby,roller blades,hawaiian roller coaster ride,roller coaster tycoon,hair rollers,roller,roller shoes,roller coaster tycoon, roller chain,rollers.
Roller Skatig - recreational and competitive sport in which the participants use special shoes fitted with small wheels to move about on rinks or paved surfaces. The invention of roller skates has been traditionally credited to the Belgian Joseph Merlin in the 1760s, but the first practical four-wheel skate was designed in 1863 by James Plimpton of Medford, Mass., U.S., and thereafter the first great recreational roller-skating craze swept the United States and western Europe, where many rinks were built.
By the late 20th century, the wooden or metal wheels traditionally used in skates had given way to lightweight polyurethane plastic wheels that grip the riding surface better. Another innovation was in-line (Rollerblade) skates, in which a single row of wheels is used in place of the standard four-wheeled rectangular configuration.
Roller sport,Roller sport skating. Rollers.
As a sport, roller-skating speed events began in the 1890s and were popular through the first quarter of the 20th century. Later, professional speed-skating teams performing in “roller derbies” on banked tracks became a spectator sport in the United States, although these events were as much prearranged spectacle as sport. Major speed roller-skating events for men, women, and relay teams involve racing counterclockwise around an oval track or on the open road. The rules and techniques for these competitions are much like those established for ice skating.
Figure dancing and figure skating on roller skates, introduced in 1910 and 1923, respectively, correspond in most ways to the parallel ice-skating events; similar systems for judging competitions and for proficiency tests are employed. International competition in artistic, hockey, and speed roller-skating is governed by the International Roller Skating Federation, founded in 1924. The first world championships were held in 1937.
roller coaster,roller coasters,bay city rollers,roller skates,roller skating,roller derby,roller blades,hawaiian roller coaster ride,roller coaster tycoon,hair rollers,roller,roller shoes,roller coaster tycoon, roller chain,rollers.
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