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The jet car that almost claimed the life of the Top Gear presenter Richard Hammond has been put up for sale on an online auction site.
Hammond spent five weeks in hospital after the jet-powered dragster Vampire crashed at 288mph last year at the Elvington airfield, near York. He was flown to hospital and treated for swelling to the brain.
Although the rocket car was wrecked in the crash, it is now being marketed on eBay with a starting price of £2,500. By last night the top bid was £7,149.
The listing states: “Vampire is now a little the worse for wear after its much-publicised excursion into the weeds. It is being sold as scrap without any warranty or guarantees.
“The chassis is bent, the historic afterburning Rolls-Royce Orpheus turbojet engine might run again (there is a comprehensive spare parts inventory to go with the car, including a new jetpipe), and just about every component on the car is damaged in some way. The roll cage was removed by someone postcrash and has not been returned to us. But this is the only key component which is absent.” The Vampire weighs 2,200lb, accelerates from 0 to 272mph in six seconds and consumes up to 10 gallons of fuel per mile. Its co-owner Colin Fallows set the official Outright British Land Speed Record in it with an average speed of 300.3mph.
The eBay posting adds: “The winning bidder will acquire a genuine piece of UK automotive history whose demise has been well publicised.”
In its final public appearance before the crash, the car was driven at 331mph at RAF Fairford in Gloucester-shire. Its sister car, Split Second, reached 362mph at the same event.
Mr Fallows, a 56-year-old engineer, jointly owns the car through Primetime Land Speed Engineering with his co-principal Mark Newby, and said that they had already rebuffed a number of souvenir hunters making large bids for parts of the car.
“Everybody who’s approached us so far has wanted pieces of it, and we’ve been offered huge sums of money for the steering wheel,” he said.
“We didn’t want to sell it in bits because of the inconvenience of taking it apart. If we sell the whole thing, then it’s out of our way. I’m not particularly fussed where it goes, but it would be nice to keep it complete. The Vampire is badly scarred. There are no wheels and the chassis is bent. I’ll be happy with £10,000.”
Mr Fallows, from Northampton, denied that it was “macabre” to sell the car after the near-fatal smash. He said: “I’ve not told the BBC or Richard [Hammond] about my plans and I don’t really care how they react.”
A report into the crash by the BBC criticised the producers of Top Gear for failing to spot a damaged tyre on the jet car.
The report, published in September, put the accident down to the “catastrophic disintegration” of a front tyre at high speed, probably caused by an object such as a nail. The 88-page document also revealed that Hammond’s fellow presenter on the show, James May, had been the first choice to take part in the stunt but was unavailable on the day of filming. It concluded that the accident should have been prevented.
Criticism centred on Primetime Landspeed Engineering as well as Top Gear for failing to have independent third-party checks made.
The report said: “Prior to, and on the day of the shoot, Primetime Landspeed Engineering had not provided information in any significant detail, which emphasised what particular routine safety checks they followed to ensure that the car was in a safe state prior to each run.”
Before the crash, Hammond had reached a top speed of 314mph and was staging a seventh run so that the show’s producers could get better shots of the car’s afterburner.
The dragster veered off the track at 288mph, flipped over several times and crashed on to grass.
Hammond, 38, made a complete recovery after the accident but has said that he has no memory of the two weeks after the crash.
Fans of Top Gear donated more than £250,000 towards the cost of a new helicopter for Yorkshire’s Air Ambulance service. Hammond recently invited the doctors, nurses and air ambulance staff who saved his life to a £20,000 private party as a thank-you.
Last night the car had attracted 30 bids. Potential buyers have until 7am on December 30 to stake their claim. A spokeswoman for the BBC said that “as Mr Fallows owns the car he can do what he likes with it”.
Richard from Ivybridge. Put away your copy of the Guardian and sandals and get a life.
Chris, Banbury,
If only Mr Richard Hammond could be bothered to help market a car that did 288 mpg instead of one that did 288mph.
Richard, Ivybridge, England
not a racing driver! Sorry, I meant not a racing driver.
Sarah Howson, Chester, UK
I think Mr Fallows has every right to sell the car and do whatever he wants with the money. He has probably put a lot of time, money and effort into making this car only to see it destroyed on national tv. It's only right he should be able to get something back from it.
Can we also not forget that Richard Hammond is a racing driver, he's a tv presenter and surely should have been aware of the risks of getting into a car that is built to break land-speed records. Not that I would have wished him to crash, but he had a greater risk of losing control than someone who had been trained to drive at that speed.
Sarah Howson, Chester, UK
Perhaps "aaron" should take some English lessons.
Just a thought.
Mike, Reading,
There is absolutely no problem with them selling the car; its their car to sell, they paid for it. The accident was just that "an accident". If Top Gear didn't properly consider the risks involved then that is their fault. I bet they had to sign a disclaimer anyway.
Jimmy, Rugby, UK
Item number: 150197264730
T Dehnel, Saxby, Leics
James Lawson : It would be a lot of fun if it was lego!!
Besides tis was a joke....
Shakirah Kasuji, Batley, UK
As the owners are partly to blame for the accident and cost the health service a lot of money for there piece of fun, the least they could do was donate all the money towards the cost of the Yorkshire helicopter service to make ammends.
Dean, Bedford, UK
Does anyone know the item number please because I can't find it.?
Roger T, Nottingham, UK
Mr. Fallows is lucky not to be selling the car to pay his legal bills.
Perhaps next time they can use tyres rated for extreme speed rather than something so rock hard damage could not be spotted.
I hope he can live with his conscious.
Full_of_pity, UK,
so if u crashed a car but it werent ur fault are u tryna tell me ud pay for it?
thought not MATE
aaron, luton, uk
since Hammond wrecked it, he should really pay for it......
john, London, UK
S Kasuji it's not lego mate.
james lawson, nottingham,
Coulldn't they recycle the parts and make a helicopter out of it and donate it to the LGI ?????!!!!???!!
S Kasuji, Batley, UK