Now, Tarangers would be approved world record: – There will be more cascade



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A month and a half after 39-year-old Bjorn Tore Taranger traveled 264.52 kilometers a day, Guinness World Records confirms world record approval.


On Thursday, October 11th, Fana's ultrasoneur released the session, which would make him the next day the person in the world who ran at most 24 hours. On the treadmill, he traveled the whole day the next day 264.52 kilometers, three kilometers more than the old record.

Taranger never doubted that the record would be approved, but it was not until Wednesday afternoon that he received his thumb of Guinness World Records. NRK referred the approval first.

"We were assured that we should be approved because we followed all the rules to the letter and we sent them more evidence than necessary," Taranger told BT.

The reason for the confirmation to wait depends very much on Guinness's strict requirements for world records. Taranger and his assistants had to submit 24 hours of video describing the entire record attempt.

– What does it make to have a world record?

– Yes, no, what should you say? It's amazing, 39-year-old answers.

Hope for gold in World Cup

He justifies this feeling by a simple calculation. There is hardly anyone who has world records, while a world record title is for example distributed every year. Therefore, he thinks it's more important to have world records than to be world champion.

That said, he would like to be there too. And most preferably, it will already be there in October 2019. Taranger considers his chances of gold as good.


"The results I got at the factory can be valid for gold at the World Cup.If you travel more than 260 kilometers, you're almost sure to win a medal, did you?" -he declares.

Lovers of new discoveries

Milslukeren and the Fana musician say that after the world record attempt, where he almost traveled a distance corresponding to Bergen – Hemsedal, he felt light and pleasant in his body. He had never had to go to the basement until the clock of the flour mill and actually had the power to speed up the end. That's why it was not too heavy, he thinks.

Already Sunday, two days after the test, he hit the race again. But then just for a short restitution.

Taranger promises that this year's world record will not be the last thing that he brings. It has not yet planned what will be next, but it must be guaranteed.

"I still have to make a waterfall, but I have not added anything yet, but there will be more waterfall," he says.

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