6 hrs.
A submarine pedal-powered by a pilot decked out in SCUBA gear has set a new world speed record at a submarine race in Europe.?
The sub, Omer 8, traveled at 7.03 knots (8.09 miles) per hour over a 43-foot section of the course at QinetiQ, a former Royal Navy testing facility in Gosport, England.
The record breaker was built by students at ?cole de Technologie Sup?rieure in Montr?al, Qu?bec, Canada. It was one of six teams competing in the inaugural European International Submarine Races (eISR) June 25-29.
Similar to a bicycle and the record-breaking human-powered helicopter, these subs are powered by pedals, though the pedaling experience is different.
"You have to strap your feet into the pedals," Jennifer Blowers, a mechanical engineering student on the University of Bath's team, told Discovery News. "On a bike you have gravity and momentum, but on the boat you don't get any of that."
For those itching to try hands-on human-powered submarine racing, the International Submarine Races in the U.S. will be held in June 2013.
--via Discovery News
John Roach is a contributing writer for msnbc.com. To learn more about him, check out his website and follow him on Twitter. For more of our Future of Technology series, watch the featured video below.
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