JCB chase hydrogen land speed record with digger engines and world's fastest man
RAF WITTERING, England - Andy Green broke the speed of sound in the mighty jet-engined Thrust SSC in 1997 but the fastest man on earth's latest record bid is in a car powered by two JCB digger engines and running on hydrogen.
The 63-year-old former Royal Air Force (RAF) fighter pilot, whose land speed world record of 763.035 mph (1,227.985 kph) still stands, is chasing a somewhat slower hydrogen first in what he calls the "coolest zero-carbon racecar ever created".
When fully unleashed in August in Bonneville, Utah, the 32-foot (9.7-metre) long JCB Hydromax will try to beat the diesel record of 350.092 mph set 20 years ago on the same salt flats by the British engineering giant's JCB Dieselmax predecessor, also driven by Green.
"This is about showcasing the next generation of technology, the future of the internal combustion engine," the Briton said after test runs down the 2.7-km runway at the RAF Wittering airbase in central England.
"That, for me, is really exciting. And 360 (mph) will look quite fast from where I'm sitting as well."
The test programme will continue next week, making the most of hot and dry weather, before the car is packed away and shipped to America.
GOING TO HAVE TO WORK HARDER THAN DIRTIER DIESEL SISTER
JCB, whose fastest tractor can do 135 mph and who partner the Aston Martin Formula One team, started the project in June 2025 and announced it last month with Prodrive, Ricardo and Xtrac.
In testing this week, the Hydromax reached 177 mph, close to the limit over the distance available, in third gear.
The runway at Bonneville extends between nine and 10 miles, a distance that has shrunk from 11 miles in 2006 due to salt mining and environmental conditions.
Coming to a stop, with the use of a rear parachute although the car can also do so on brakes alone, will take just over two miles.
"The track will be shorter. Just to do what Dieselmax did, this car's going to have to work harder and outperform its uglier, dirtier sister," said Green, who said the record attempt was trying to do in 10 days what might normally take 10 years.
The attempt, sanctioned by motorsport's world governing body, the FIA, comes before JCB opens a new $500 million factory in San Antonio, Texas, that will employ 1,500 people to make machines for the U.S. market.
The company has invested £100 million ($132 million) to develop hydrogen-powered internal combustion engines and is using the Hydromax project to promote the green-engined diggers rolling off production lines.
JCB sees hydrogen as the zero emissions alternative to diesel in locations where machines, in constant use, need a highly mobile drop-in fuel and electric is not available or viable.
The car features two production-based 74 bhp hydrogen engines tuned to produce a combined 1,600 bhp and with immense amounts of torque. There is more than 1km of wiring in the car.
On a record run, JCB Hydromax will pump a bathtub of air every half-second through a titanium turbo compressor spinning at more than 150,000 rpm at nearly 300 C. The car will consume just over 2 kg of hydrogen and produce 18 litres of water.
The engines, one at each end with two Xtrac gearboxes, are laid sideways for reduced height.
"To give you some idea of how challenging the cooling is on an 800 horsepower hydrogen engine, the engine pumps around a litre of oil per second through the engine. It's got seven litres of oil and all seven litres go around the engine every seven seconds," said Green.
"Half of that oil is there just to stop the pistons melting."
($1 = 0.7566 pounds)
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin; Editing by Alexander Smith)
Copyright Reuters or USA Today Network via Reuters Connect
This story was originally published June 19, 2026 at 7:12 AM.