You know what , you got me thinking. it was 2001 when I spent the day with the 
man. I was wrong, he had his legs and was missing part of an arm. Ive came 
across so many different injuries I get them confused sometimes. Hes a nice 
guy, was trying to get his wife pregnant at the time with some new procedure. 
He had an accessible RV he let me in, quite the setup.

Ron   


On Friday, August 8, 2014 2:16 PM, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
wrote:
  


Kewl Ron.  In this case you were most fortunate.  Darryl Gywnn's 
accident was known for its camera quality crash scene.  Back then, 
Americans were in the UK to demonstrate the art of drag racing as it is done in 
the USA.  Cameras were set up all over the drag strip that day.  This 
included front, back and sides.  The first 100 ft and 1/8 mile, in addition 
to the 1/4 mile and the run off lane. They were able to capture the accident in 
very, slow motion. 
I knew that in addition to being a Quad, his left arm was amputated at the 
elbow.  He was using his right arm to operate the joystick on his 
chair.  At what point did he become a double amputee?  We also support 
Sam Schmidt and his Foundations. 

Best Wishes 

In a message dated 8/8/2014 2:08:00 P.M. Central Daylight Time, 
[email protected] writes: 
Somebody saw me wheeling my manual wheelchair a few yrs back and I  got a call 
from the Gywnn- Steinbreinner Yankees drag race team. Darryl Gywnn  got 
paralyzed in a big tire drag race and became a c5 quad as well as a dual  
amputee. He was giving away about a dozen special edition quickie p222  
wheelchairs and asked if I could use one built for me. I was invited to the  
race track to receive the chair and meet the whole team as well as Darryl  
Gwynn. It was special colors with yankee graphics and was the se model. I  
think it does like 8 miles an hour or a lil more. Not the fastest out there  
but the thing will climb about anything you tackle. 
>
> 
>Ron 
>
>
> 
>On Friday, August 8, 2014 1:44 PM, Danny  Hearn <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
>All my chairs have been 7.5 mph, but I read that there were 10mph chairs,  
>can't remember the brand...ask Ron about the paralyzed race car driver that  
>made a few hopped up race chairs, lol--I think Ron won one in a raffle years  
>back.  
>
>
> 
>On Friday, August 8, 2014 1:26 PM, greg  <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> 
>My chair is in the shop again. Tires, tighten up where a few bolts  have 
>fallen off, new lateral supports, etc. I asked about motors and motor  breaks, 
>my chair rolls pretty easy when in off/stopped position. but he  mentioned 
>that's a lot of money for a chair that old. So I put that off for  now. My 
>chair is like 11 years old now. 
>
>I know Medicare and insurance's don't cover the fast chairs, but  anyone know 
>of some faster ones that are covered? 
>7.5 is about as fast as I've found. 
>
>Thanks, Greg
>
>
>
>

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