Las Vegas Review-Journal

Land speed record chaser Shadle dies at age 77

Team to keep pursuing mark in Nevada desert

- By Henry Brean Las Vegas Review-journal

If a bunch of hot-rodders still hope to break the world land speed record on a Nevada dry lake bed, they will have to do it without their leader.

Edward Joseph Shadle, owner and lead driver for the North American Eagle team, died Sept. 7 after battling cancer. He was 77.

Shadle made headlines in December, when the Bureau of Land Management granted his Parkland, Washington, team a permit to set up a temporary 16-mile-long test track on Diamond Valley Playa, a dry lake bed in Eureka County, about 350 miles north of Las Vegas.

That’s where the group hoped to convene this fall to race past the current land speed record of 763 mph — breaking the sound barrier in the process — in a jet-powered car built from the bones of an F-104 Starfighte­r once flown by Air Force test pilots.

“We’ll actually go supersonic,” Shadle told the Las Vegas Review-journal late last year.

North American Eagle announced Shadle’s death on its website. “In his final days, he was surrounded by family and friends,” the notice said.

Keith Zanghi, Shadle’s business partner and best friend for 22 years, said their quest for the record would continue.

The team spent the week after Shadle’s death in the Alvord Desert of southeaste­rn Oregon, where driver Jessi Combs powered the North American Eagle up to 483 mph during a shakedown run.

Zanghi said they are done testing the car for the year, but next year Diamond Valley Playa will be their first choice as they resume their pursuit.

The dry lake bed about 25 miles north of the town of Eureka proved “too soft” to race on this year, Zanghi said.

The land speed record was set in 1997 by a British team in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert, site of the annual Burning Man festival.

The North American Eagle team zeroed in on Diamond Valley Playa because of its smooth surface and remote location, which makes it easier to secure for long test runs.

“Hopefully that’s where we’ll be setting records,” Shadle said last year.

The retired IBM systems analyst who grew up around race cars had hoped to be at the controls of the North American Eagle vehicle as it powered toward worldwide fame.

When asked about the risks involved in driving a car faster than the speed of sound, the then-76year-old just shrugged. “Getting old is dangerous too,” Shadle said.

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Ed Shadle

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