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Posts archive for: 23 October, 2008
  • The Afternoon

    Good afternoon fellow bloggers, hope this finds you all well, don’t worry if not, only a short time to go now before we can knock off for the day and then of course it’s Friday tomorrow, the best day of the working week.

    I have been engrossed most of this afternoon on these inline education and learn courses, run by my new employee it was all about internet security, commercial awareness and other interesting stuff. Which all employees have to undertake to enable personnel to work on computer and deal with suppliers.

  • 1000 mph

    The British team that claimed the land speed record in 1997, taking a car through the sound barrier for the first time, is planning to go even faster. RAF pilot Andy Green made history in 1997 when he drove the Thrust SSC jet-powered vehicle at 763mph (1,228km/h). Now he intends to get behind the wheel of a car that is capable of reaching 1,000mph (1,610km/h). Known as Bloodhound, the new car will be powered by a rocket bolted to a Typhoon-Eurofighter jet engine.

    The team-members have been working on the concept for the past 18 months and expect to be ready to make their new record attempt in 2011. Bloodhound project leader Richard Noble told BBC News: "This is one of the most exciting things you can do on God's Earth; and when you've the opportunity to do it really, really well, with the latest technology, you can't resist the challenge." The initial studies have illustrated just how grand a challenge it will be.

    The 12.8m-long, 6.4-tonne Bloodhound SSC (Super Sonic Car) will be expected to travel faster than a bullet fired from a handgun. Its 900mm-diameter wheels will spin so fast they will have to be made from a high-grade titanium to prevent them from flying apart. The car will accelerate from 0-1,050mph (1,690km/h) in just 40 seconds; and at its maximum velocity, the pressure of air bearing down on its carbon fibre and titanium bodywork will exceed 12 tonnes per square metre. This is a big engineering adventure," commented Bloodhound's technical chief, John Piper.

     "We've not seen anything yet which we can't overcome given the opportunity and the time. We don't have all the answers yet, but we have quite a few of them, and I'm sure other solutions will present themselves." Wing Commander Green acknowledges there will be risks involved but says the car will be designed to maximise his safety. "Does that make it zero-risk? No. Is life with zero-risk interesting? No. "This is worth making a risk for because it's a huge challenge and a huge prize at the end, not just for the biggest record but to inspire the next generation of engineers, to share it with every schoolchild in the country," he said. Inspiration is a key driver for the project.

    The genesis of the idea came from Lord Paul Drayson, the UK's new science minister who also happens to be a racing driver. He approached Noble and Green when he held a post in the Ministry of Defence to ask them if they could do something that would grab the attention of schoolchildren and turn them to careers in science and technology. "The consequences if we don't inspire the next generation are that we will wither as a country," Lord Drayson told BBC News. "Over the centuries, we've been involved in some of the most important scientific discoveries.

    The Brits are good at science. We have got to make sure the next generation gets the vision, and has the opportunity to maintain that tradition." As a consequence, a schools programme will be built around the project that aims to involve young people at every stage in the designing and building of the car. The team's HQ in Filton, Bristol - the "home of Concorde" - will have a schools visitor centre featuring the "classroom of the future". Richard Noble added: "Our industries are starved of engineers. There are real problems on the education front; and, of course, what we've got now is the environmental challenge coming up. "There are a vast number of new products that are needed, and Britain simply isn't going to play unless we have the engineers."

  • Fourth day

    Thursday lunch time and my fourth day in my new job, its going very well apart I not able to spend as much time blogging, I suppose that the penalty you pay for being gainfully employed (unlike my last job). It great having things to do, it makes the days go much faster and it’s more enjoyable.

    It seems I will have plenty of travelling to do, is should build up the frequent flier miles, but destroy the environment.

    I did have my flu jab, last night and don’t have any side effects, well my arm aches a little but that it. In was out on bike once again last night, after putting a couple of pounds last week I have decided to up my game and do more exercise, how that will fit in with my travelling I don’t know, but I’ll find a way.

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