back to article Whopping supersonic-car rocket rattles idyllic Cornwall

The Bloodhound SuperSonic Car team yesterday pushed the big red button on the "biggest rocket fired in the UK for over 20 years"*. The Falcon Hybrid Rocket - a 45cm (18in) diameter by 3.6m (12ft) long unit burning hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene solid fuel and high-test peroxide (HTP) oxidiser - roared to life for 10 seconds …

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  1. Vladimir Plouzhnikov

    Makes me sad

    To harness all this power and use it to scratch a pair of ruts in the ground and blow some dust up in the air...

    UK is still the only nation on Earth that developed an indigenous space launch capability and then gave it up :-(

    1. ridley

      Re: Makes me sad

      Be fair and give credit where credit is due. The HTP technology that we used to launch our only satellite was a development of the technology we picked up from the Germans after WWII. So it wasnt entirely our own efforts.

      Ridley

      1. John Smith 19 Gold badge
        Happy

        Re: Makes me sad

        "The HTP technology that we used to launch our only satellite was a development of the technology we picked up from the Germans after WWII."

        It's debatable. the original German HTP was fairly poor by many accounts.

        BTW the HTP pump is (amazingly) an *upgraded* Black Arrow pump from the UK's only orbital launch vehicle.

        The Cosworth engine is however *fully* British.

    2. ContentsMayVary

      Re: Makes me sad

      >>UK is still the only nation on Earth that developed an indigenous space launch capability and then gave it up

      Surely the U.S. just did that too?

      1. Vladimir Plouzhnikov

        Re: Makes me sad

        "Surely the U.S. just did that too?"

        They can still launch unmanned stuff...

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Makes me sad

          They can still launch unmanned stuff...

          So will this be. I have no idea what acceleration this is, but I fear the vehicle may migrate from "manned" to "oozing bloody pulp" in seconds. Thrust is one thing (she said, cough), but too much in one go isn't going to help the driver inside..

          In addition, I hope they have enough space, or it will end up a rerun of Gary Larson's cartoon "when jellyfish travel at speed".

          On a positive note, if they manage I'll be very impressed. They could come up with new tech for those space flights..

          1. Vic

            Re: Makes me sad

            > I fear the vehicle may migrate from "manned" to "oozing bloody pulp" in seconds.

            You think they haven't calculated the peak acceleration?

            Richard Noble does a lot of fast car stuff. Andy Green is a jet pilot. They have many boffins around them who also have experience in this area.

            Vic.

        2. Euripides Pants

          Re: Makes me sad

          "They can still launch unmanned stuff..."

          Like ICBMs...

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Makes me sad

      And the satellite Prospero is still up there and still kind of functional as far as I know, although the tape drive threw in the towel pretty early, no-one to clean the heads and rollers maybe? ;) ...

  2. tony2heads
    Mushroom

    Good thing it is not at Vernuekpan

    It is good that they did not plan it for nearby Verneukpan

    Quote: from http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/verneuken

    Etymology

    From ver- +‎ neuken.

    [edit]Verb

    verneuken (weak in -t)

    (vulgar) to deceive

    (vulgar) to fuck up, to screw

  3. Dr. Mouse

    Elephants

    Just ran the numbers.

    I estimate that the flow rate was approximately 3.48 millielephants per second.

    Working: 1 elephant = c. 4.598m^3

    1 bath = c. 80l = 0.08m^3

    1 bath in 5s = 0.016 m^3/s

    =0.00384 elephants/s

    1. Badvok

      Re: Elephants

      Have an up-vote for doing that but I think you were a bit stingy on the water in the bath - obviously on an economy drive.

      1. David Pollard
        Boffin

        Re: Elephants

        Stingy on the water? With an elephant in the bath there isn't that much room for it.

        1. This post has been deleted by its author

      2. NogginTheNog
        Coat

        Re: Elephants

        Don't be daft - everyone knows elephants take showers with their trunks!

        1. Gr0nk

          Re: Elephants

          I think everyone here is ignoring the hippopotamus in the room!

        2. Martin Budden Silver badge
          Coat

          Re: Elephants @ NogginTheNog

          Don't be daft - everyone knows elephants take showers in the nude!

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Elephants

      According to Google a medium sized bath has a capacity of 150 litres. If filled in 5 seconds that is 30 litres / second or 0.03 metres³ / second.

      So I make that 0.0065 Elephants / Second, 1.2244 x10 ⁻⁷ Albert Halls / Second or 1.793 x10 ⁻¹⁵ P████ ████on's cavernous vaginas per second*.

      * I may have made that last one up.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Elephants

        'cavernous vaginas'

        Ah they were a fantastic band.

        1. kiwimuso
          Happy

          Re: Elephants @Mike Richards

          A bit too much reverberation and echo for my taste!

      2. Dr. Mouse

        Re: Elephants

        "According to Google a medium sized bath has a capacity of 150 litres."

        I'm sad enough to do the calculations, not to do the research properly first.

        Searched google for "how much water in a bath", first result was http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_much_water_does_a_bath_use

        First answer was "According to the BBC Website, a bath can hold 80 litres of water."

        So I used that.

        I don't really care how much water there is in the bath, so long as it's warm, has lots of bubbles, covers me and it all stays in the bath!

    3. Graham Bartlett

      Re: Elephants

      If we're talking units, can we have a new one here? If a "jub" is a unit of volume, can we have a "Jubb" as a unit of distance, measured by the tip-to-tip distance for that tash?

    4. Big-nosed Pengie

      Re: Elephants

      Yes, yes - but what is it in football fields?

  4. Parax
    Boffin

    "unique star-shaped rubber fuel grain"

    How unique is it? I was under the impression that all compound hybrid rockets had this star shaped chamber in the grain material. Specifically including the hybrid rocket on Burt Rutans Space ship one.

    It's designed this way so that as the material burns away the star shape morphs to an enlarged circle but the surface area remains constant throughout the burn, providing nice constant pressure for the nozzle, and hence nice steady thrust.

    1. Rob Crawford

      Re: "unique star-shaped rubber fuel grain"

      I thought Apple owned the right to that

      .....waits for court case

      ....... Apple are slow today

      /me runs away

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Coolness check-list

    F1 engine - check

    Jet engine - check

    Big rocket motor - check

    Handlebar moustache - check

    The only way this record attempt could be any cooler would be if the driver wore a tweed flat-cap and a pair of motorbike goggles.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Coolness check-list

      Let's just PRAY it doesn't get featured on Top "Wankers" Gear then.

    2. Michael H.F. Wilkinson Silver badge

      Re: Coolness check-list

      good list, but shouldn't the motorbike goggles be peering through a tiny little windscreen at the fron of an open cockpit?

    3. ISYS
      Happy

      Proud to be British

      I say chaps - l've swung it with the Wing Commander to 'borrow' one of the engines from his kite. Why don't we strap it to tricycle and fit an extra rocket for a bit more oomph and see how fast we can make it go?

      Brilliant - I can just see them all stood there as he taps his pipe out on the side of the cockpit before getting in, drinking a livener from a silver flask and setting off on this Jolly whiz.

      There will be somewhere a black labrador waiting patiently for his master to return.

      1. MJI Silver badge

        Wing Commander.

        You do realise that is the current rank of the driver don't you?

        1. ISYS

          Re: Wing Commander.

          Yes he is a Wing Commander

          ?

    4. PhilipN Silver badge

      Re: Coolness check-list

      Yup - good list.

      Maybe also a white scarf. You need to wrap it round your face to keep the castor oil out of your gob.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Coolness check-list

        And so you can turn your head quickly without letting lots of cold air into your neck region.

    5. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Coolness check-list

      They do seem to be missing a shed.

      Although 'hardened bunker' might just qualify if they put some flowerpots outside.

      1. Graham Bartlett

        Re: Coolness check-list

        If he's got an aircraft hangar as his shed, I'm afraid that beats yours.

    6. gzuckier

      Re: Coolness check-list

      uhoh... Lucas electrics....

  6. FartingHippo

    And a shirt, tie, and blazer. Brogues optional. Pipe not optional.

  7. Elmer Phud
    Coat

    Elephant in the room

    and there was me thinking that for measurement elephants come in buckets

    1. Martin Budden Silver badge

      Re: Elephant in the room

      I went to the zoo once, and from what I saw there elephants come in elephants.

  8. Joseph Lord

    1.6Mega metres per hour!

    Or 0.44Km/s in SI units - 440m/s.

  9. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    re 'Idyllic Cornwall'....

    An aircraft hanger in Newquay?

    - you lot are easily satisfied

  10. detritus
    Thumb Down

    Not really a ‘car’, is it?

    Am I the only demiGeek out there who thinks this is a pointless waste of effort? I appreciate the endeavour isn't quite as simple as ‘strapping a rocket engine onto wheels and letting rip’ but the functional end result is as good-as.

    A ‘car’ entering a land speed record should have directly-powered wheels, at least.

    I guess, by that measure, tiny rockets affixed to trims a la Catherine Wheels would count. A lot prettier too.

    1. cliveski
      Thumb Up

      Re: Not really a ‘car’, is it?

      "Am I the only demiGeek out there who thinks this is a pointless waste of effort?"

      Yes :-)

      Seriously though, their education program and the number of children they are inspiring to study STEM subjects is not insignificant and makes the whole endeavour significantly more worthwhile than it might otherwise be.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Not really a ‘car’, is it?

        My brother reminds me of the memo that went around BAe at the time of the original project to the effect that Richard Noble was to be given no support whatsoever as he might bring them into disrepute. As it is, Noble and Green are ambassadors for British engineering and BAe is in the toilet and, I think, trying to merge with EADS.

        It doesn't do any harm to remind the rest of the world that the UK is still a world leader in land vehicle engineering.

        1. Ralph B

          @ribosome re: "BAe is in the toilet"?

          Would this be the BAe that made £1.256 billion profit last year?

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: @ribosome re: "BAe is in the toilet"?

            Yes. So why are they trying to merge with EADS? Because BAe has failed to become larg enough to weather the chill economic winds.

            The US DOD is about to cut about $55 billion from its budget, is one reason.

        2. Yet Another Anonymous coward Silver badge

          Re: Not really a ‘car’, is it?

          >As it is, Noble and Green are ambassadors for British engineering

          So following on from strapping a scrap jet engine from a 1950s fighter into a car, they are now strapping a scrap rocket engine from a 1960s SAM into a car.

          And this is supposed to how there is a future in engineer? Or just that we have a lot of scrap lying around from we actually did engineering?

      2. Ian Johnston Silver badge
        WTF?

        Re: Not really a ‘car’, is it?

        Got any evidence to back up that claim about STEM subjects?

        1. Robert Harrison
          Thumb Up

          Re: Not really a ‘car’, is it?

          http://www.bloodhoundssc.com/

          Suggest that you go look at the website and read up on the schools that are seriously following this project. No you're probably not going to put a 1,000mph car into general production itself, but you will gain insight into any new electromechanical designs, chemistry and material science breakthroughs as a result. And possibly convince a few kids that they don't want to be Wayne Rooney.

        2. cliveski
          Thumb Up

          Re: Not really a ‘car’, is it?

          "Got any evidence to back up that claim about STEM subjects?"

          http://www.bloodhoundssc.com/education

          http://www.bloodhoundssc.com/education/education-news

          http://www.bloodhoundssc.com/education/topics-use-lessons

          http://www.bloodhoundssc.com/education/suggested-projects-students

          http://www.bloodhoundssc.com/education/opportunities-engage

          http://www.bloodhoundssc.com/education/primary-bloodhound-ssc

          http://www.bloodhoundssc.com/education/bloodhoundfe

          http://www.bloodhoundssc.com/education/bloodhounduniversity

          http://www.bloodhoundssc.com/education/education-ambassador-programme

          "Nearly 4,000 schools have registered in the first 18 months of the project"

          1. MJI Silver badge

            Education

            I know (sort of - related to my wife) one of the education team.

            She is always busy, they are at exhibitions.

            Got a photo somewhere of my sons next to a Bloodhound exhibition model.

            Yes it is inspiring the young, lots of these type of projects did, remember the interest Beagle 2 raise even though it broke?

            1. Mike Flugennock
              Thumb Up

              Re: Education (the "Whoa, Cool!" Factor)

              This may not be entirely relevant to the subject of the British land speed record vehicle, but...

              ...I spent most of my boyhood and early adolescence in the '60s and early '70s watching Gemini and Apollo/Skylab missions on TV and, along with about 99% of young American boys at the time, thinking "whoooaaa, cool!"... and, in between Gemini/Apollo missions, got my thrills watching the latest land speed record attempts by Breedlove and Gabelich at Bonneville Flats. Many of those boys of my generation were inspired to take up careers in science and/or engineering; many of them ended up working at places like NASA/Goddard and JPL -- and many of those ended up becoming astronauts themselves.

              While I, myself, ended up choosing a career in art and graphic design, I still maintained my interest in science -- especially spaceflight and astronomy -- because of all those boyhood days I spent watching Saturn Vs leaving for the Moon and thinking, "whoooaaa, cool!" Even today, I'll regularly drop everything to watch a Shuttle launch (at least up until the end of the program), or a Soyuz launch to ISS, or an ISS EVA, and thought nothing of sitting up until 4am watching Curiosity land and waiting for it to transmit its first fotos back from Mars.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Thumb Up

      Re: Not really a ‘car’, is it?

      It's been the best part of 60 years since wheel-driven land speed records were relevant, Craig Breedlove broke 500 and 600mph using a jet car in the 50s and 60s, ThrustSSC pushed the record supersonic 15 years ago. You just can't generate enough power for speeds much above 400mph and feed it through the driving wheels because you are limited by the friction coefficient between the wheels and the crumbly lake-bed playa surface. At high speeds the wheels are solid metal or have kevlar bands around them, this does not provide a very high friction coefficient.

      BloodhoundSSC is a project designed to enthuse and motivate future engineers and scientists, the land speed record is a "because it's there" thing and in a way is incidental tot he aim of the project.

      Richard Noble and Andy Green will, if they succeed, become the holders of at least the 4 highest land speeds ever set under the official rules, they already hold the highest 3.

      I have to say that as Andy Green is also an RAF officer that he should be encouraged to grow a moustache to rival Daniel Jobb's!

    3. Ian Johnston Silver badge
      Thumb Up

      Re: Not really a ‘car’, is it?

      Nope, you're not. The whole thing is a fatuous dick-swinging waste of time. So then can build a missile and fire it along the ground. So bloody what?

      1. GBE

        Re: Not really a ‘car’, is it?

        > So then can build a missile and fire it along the ground. So bloody what?

        Well, from an engineering POV, firing a missile along the ground is a lot more difficult than firing one into the air. Engineers like to solve difficult problems like that -- even if they're rather pointless (sometimes especially _because_ they're rather pointless).

        Not much point in releasing a paper airplane from 80,000ft either, but it's still cool.

    4. Stratman

      Re: Not really a ‘car’, is it?

      No, you're not the only one who thinks it.

      I've always thought a car should have the power applied via the wheels, otherwise it's a mobile missile test bed or maybe a wingless plane. So what if current technology limits the ability of wheels to transmit the power, necessity is the mother of invention. One spinoff that immediately springs to mind is improved wheel technology for very high speed trains.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: wingless plane

        One of the clever things about this will be making sure that it doesn't take off.

    5. Get the puck outa here
      Unhappy

      Re: Not really a ‘car’, is it?

      I agree with you.

      To call it a land based vehicle, the wheels should be driven by the engine.

      This is a rocket with just enough downforce to keep it on a carriage.

      Impressive. Noisy. Fast.

      But it's not a "car".

      1. ISYS
        Boffin

        Re: Not really a ‘car’, is it?

        The word car comes from carriage - a horse drawn vehicle with wheels. The definition of car does not mean the wheels have to be driven by the engine. Just a thought.

  11. Steve Foster
    Joke

    Bah Humbug!

    Anybody would think stuff like this is rocket science!

    Oh wait, it is...

    1. Ralph B
      Boffin

      Re: Bah Humbug!

      Still, it's not exactly brain surgery, is it?

  12. LJRich

    Massive testicles

    I'm amazed Andy Green can get pants that fit.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Thumb Up

      Re: Massive testicles

      Andy's nickname on the ThrustSSC project was Dead Dog. That was the sort of level of reaction that major emergencies elicited from him, probably because he was used to flying a Tornado ADV at high speeds and could cope with the workload.

      Remember that ThrustSSC used rear-wheel steering and was not fully stable in yaw. Andy had to drive using a combination of fast and slow steering impulses to damp out the instability manually while doing all the other things such as monitoring speeds, engine parameters, brake parachutes, deal with overheating on-board computers and hope that the front of the vehicle didn't lift off the ground (there was an inverted ejection seat rocket motor to prevent this, fired by the on-board computer if it sensed the front wheel load drop below a certain threshold.

      I watched him talking about the rocket motor test yesterday, he's the personification of calmness and was making a pretty good job of being a physics teacher too.

      It's great to see what Britain's engineers and adventurers can achieve when put to the test. No other country has taken as many land speed records over the course of more than 120 years.

      1. Robin

        Re: Massive testicles

        "I watched him talking about the rocket motor test yesterday, he's the personification of calmness and was making a pretty good job of being a physics teacher too."

        Brian, was this an actual event in real life, or something you saw online? Sounds interesting!

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Thumb Up

          Re: Massive testicles

          Live stream from Cornwall, infrastructure provided by Cisco.

          I would have loved to have been there, but was not in the group of people invited to see it live :(

      2. Vic

        Re: Massive testicles

        > Andy's nickname on the ThrustSSC project was Dead Dog.

        There is an apocryphal story that the bookies were giving him a 75% chance of dying on ThrustSSC. He is reported to have said he'd take those odds...

        True or not, the guy's a smooth operator.

        Vic.

      3. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Massive testicles

        It's great to see what Britain's engineers and adventurers can achieve when put to the test

        This is why I find it sad the UK went towards being a service oriented nation. Some of the most inventive and clever engineering was done in the UK and this ability doesn't just need to be preserved, it needs to be stimulated. And I'm saying this from the POV of a foreigner..

        There is something about the quirkiness of the British mind that seems to spark interesting, new ideas (and humour) - please don't let that be lost.

  13. Chandy

    pandering

    How about you stop pandering the merkins and put only the SI units into such articles from now on?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Childcatcher

      Re: pandering

      Yes fuck the fucking Americans and their retarded 1680 AD measuring system/s.

      I have a chart on wire gauges - the really, really, really, fine hair thickness, instrument making gauges.....

      And fuck me.... there are about 25 fucking gauges and ONLY the METRIC size actually gives the fucking SIZE of the wire.

      "Ooooo you mean a #32 Brown and Sharp enameled copper wire is 0.000017 Troy shims thinner than the 63B Western Telephone gauge, which was derived from the French 1766 clock makers spring gauge series, which is 11/315 per degree Bernoulie larger than the Guild of French Polishers, 15th coat layer, on float glass, at 17% Rhineland Humidity - and not the 22% coastal marsh humidity?"

      "No shit?"

      "Ohhhhh so that is just 0.035mm OD? - instead of 0.033mm or 0.038mm OD?"

      Fuck I hate American measurements, especially when they do bastardised combinations - like Yard Newtons of Torque, or Feet Pound Rankin Meters etc...

      Ranting.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: pandering

        The wires are truly awful. Also there's the slug. And the tendency to divide pounds mass by pounds force and cancel them out, thus producing equations with incompatible units on each side.

      2. Miami Mike
        Go

        Re: pandering

        Oh4FS, we 'murricans didn't invent this crap, we inherited it from all around the world. Remember we've only been here a bit over 200 years. I hate it as much as you do, but old habits die really hard.

        Try watchmaking - diameter of a watch movement is expressed in "lignes" (pronounced "lines", no not that kind, they didn't have that stuff then), and is some "logical" fraction like 1/37th of a pre-revolution French inch, which was different than any other inch on the planet anyway. The symbol for lignes is ''' (three apostrophes), so you'll see things like "10.5 ''' movement".

        (Besides, anyone who hails from someplace that invented Whitworth has *very* little to complain about.)

        And there's NO WAY I'd ride in that thing, in fact, I prefer to watch from a very safe distance, probably on TV via a satellite link. Youse guys over in Blighty have something and someone(s) to be proud of in this deal - I wish them luck and continued good health (and I'll donate a couple of sets of earplugs, please provide a mailing address.)

      3. Stevie

        Re: pandering

        Yesyesyes metric this, SI that.

        Of course, if you need to measure real life things the important point is that you get the size right and reproducible, not that you do it in every-decreasing divisions of ten (so useful for those "divide by three" moments in life). Some people are not afraid of hard sums (the simplification of same being the Rasin Debt of SI or you'd still be working in CGS).

        Personally, I don't care whether you work in British Thermal Units or Hogshead Newton Seconds to the Minus One (You could get your knuckles rapped for saying "per" at Climategate University in 1975 so all us would-be chemists talked like idiots when doing dimensional analysis).

        The fact is, for all the non-engineering purposes this car's thrust can be expressed as "Hucking Fuge" and its speed as "Goes Like Greased Lightning". The only people who need the other sort of measurements are the people working on it and those trying to copy it.

      4. Mike Flugennock

        Re: pandering

        ...Fuck I hate American measurements, especially when they do bastardised combinations - like Yard Newtons of Torque, or Feet Pound Rankin Meters etc...

        Hey, you think you hate American measurements? Think of how I feel. I live here; I'm stuck having to use the goddamn' things every day. A "mile" = 5280 feet? 5280? What idiot came up with that? Do you realize what kind of whacked-ass number that is to have to use in calculations? Don't even get me started on measuring force in foot/pounds. I never did get the hang of that. It still makes my brain explode.

        Back when I was in high school, in the early/mid '70s, they tried a big push to convert the USA to metric units, and they were really stressing it in my school, of course. Needless to say, it was a massive Fail; it being the '70s and all, most Americans were all paranoid about a metric changeover meaning they were going to be cheated at the gas pump.

        Ironically, the only students at my school who had a decent grasp on metric measurements were the guys I bought my weed from.

        1. Gordon 11

          Re: pandering

          A "mile" = 5280 feet? 5280? What idiot came up with that?

          No-one, directly.

          They came up with a chain - which was 22 yards (== 1 cricket pitch)

          And 10 of those made a furlong (something horses use)

          And 8 of those made a mile (which, in human terms, was "a longish way over there").

          But don't ask me why....at least I can follow multiplying by 10 each time to do m -> dam -> hm -> km.

        2. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: pandering

          My wife taught math in an alternative high school and her students had no problem with mass when she covered the metric system.

        3. skirmish

          Re: pandering

          Up until the 16th century the mile was 5000 feet. That might seem more logical at first sight, until you get on your calculator and see how dividable 5280 is. It's a truly mathematical number!

        4. Vic

          Re: pandering

          > paranoid about a metric changeover meaning they were going to be cheated at the gas pump.

          It's not necessarily paranoia when it's true...

          We changed our petrol pumps from Imperial to Metric, and sure enough, fuel prices soared :-(

          Vic.

      5. Anonymous Coward
        Happy

        Re: pandering

        As a transplanted Brit, nothing makes me miss home more than shopping in an American home improvement store.

        - a '2x4' piece of wood is nowhere near 2" x 4". Not remotely close. You never get used to this.

        - their machine screws and bolts have ridiculous measurements like "#10 1 1/2". Take a deep sigh and think lovingly about how easy it is to order an M6 bolt in Blighty

        - their plumbing supplies are wacky. They love soldered joints and treat compression fittings like the redheaded stepchild. Whoever thought it was a good idea to let weekend warriors loose with a blowtorch in a confined space in wood framed houses? The mind boggles.

        On the bright side, they do have some seriously badass power tools.

      6. skirmish

        Re: pandering

        These are gauges from private companies and have nothing to do with US standard units (the only one I know is AWG). Here in the UK we have standard wire gauge which is, unless you're a complete moron, easy to use. Our none linear number and letter drill sizes come into their own for many specific jobs too. Metric and imperial is like comparing Esperanto to English. The former is so basic that it's often more difficult to use than the latter (though the latter does take longer to learn). I know which language I'd rather speak.

        Anyway, go to the DSGB site (Dozonal Society of GB) should be of interest...You'll soon be seeing those toe counting measures and our archaic counting system in a different light. Base 10 isn't the best mathematically (and just think, the French nearly gave us the 100 degree right angle!..now that would have been interesting.)

    2. skirmish

      Re: pandering

      Maybe it's because we live in Britain where most of us use imperial, just as Rolls Royce do. Notice the nice round numbers are the ones bracketed off (these are obviously the original specifications so why aren't the SI conversions bracketed instead?). If you don't like it, go live in France where they use a system that is not based on mathematics but purely on the amount of fingers humans happen to have, merkin.

      1. Steve Hosgood
        Megaphone

        Re: pandering

        Except that we live in Britain which has been an officially metric country since the mid 1990s and has in fact been all-metric for science and engineering since the 1970s or early 1980s.

        But most of all, assuming the idea is to encourage youngsters into studying STEM subjects, maybe journalists would wake up to the 21st century (or even the 20th) and write articles in the same units as those schoolchildren use - metric ones.

        I can at least congratulate El Reg for making less of a Luddite-centric, pro-imperial-units cockup of a story than the BBC just did. (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-19818009)

        And stuff France. Apart from the fact that it was their last pre-revolution king who decided that they would become the first nation actually to use the already 100 year old metric system (invented in Britain), neither the French (nor the E.U) have any claim to it.

        If you, 'skirmish' don't like it, go like in the USA where they use a system that is not based on mathematics, nor on the number of fingers humans happen to have, nor on any other rational principle.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: pandering

          Imperial units are human centric. The inch is a thumb width. The foot is an average foot length. The moment the ruler was invented, however, they were effectively obsolete. It is not terribly convenient trying to measure the height of a ceiling by walking up the wall.

          Rolls-Royce, by the way, is using metric feet (300mm) which are rather a convenient unit for practical building and carpentry (e.g. kitchen units are 600mm wide). It would be rather sensible to have a final unit name change and make the inch 25mm, the foot 300mm, the pound 500g and the pint 500ml, and abolish all the other Imperial units. After all, the old units did vary around the country until mass production got started in the 1800s.

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: pandering

            Campaign for that next election and I'll vote for you

        2. skirmish

          Re: pandering

          And who says we are officially metric? The fact remains that most of us use imperial - official or not, that is the reality (and a good reason I won't be going to the USA). Secondly, I can't see Britain (if it did invent the metric system??) placing the 10,000,000 quadrant from the equator to pole...through Paris!

          12, 36, 5280...Just some well thought out bases from the imperial system...Not mathematical, indeed...

          If you can't see twelve for instance as being rational, I suggest you get a primer book in maths.

    3. FatGerman
      Facepalm

      Re: pandering

      Oh please. The units aren't important in an article, it's getting the meaning of them across that matters. I'm British and I use pounds, miles, feet, and inches because they mean something to me. I have to convert metric to imperial so I can get a sense of what it means. Bloody SI Nazis, you'll have us all going into pubs and asking for a 0.56826125 litre of beer.

      1. Steve Hosgood
        Headmaster

        Re: pandering

        Re 'FatGerman' above: The units are *utterly* important in an article, and there should only be one set given (S.I in this country). Otherwise, people (our kids even) end up inadvertently memorising something like the melting point of steel (say), only to discover later in life that they'd accidentally memorised the value in Fahrenheit due to some dumb-arse journalist who thought that "the units didn't matter".

        And, non sequeteur though it was, no we wouldn't have ourselves or anyone else "going into pubs and asking for a 0.56826125 litre of beer". Since when (outside a university chemistry lab) would you ever expect someone to be able to measure any fluid to the nearest 10nL? What we might expect is to order a nice sensible 500mL, expecting to be served with any random value between about 490 and 510mL (i.e plus or minus a spoonfull or two).

  14. mamsey
    Coat

    Who works on this project?

    Are they the Bloodhound Gang?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Thumb Up

      Re: Who works on this project?

      You could say that.

      Ron Ayres, the aerodynamicist, who designed BloodhoundSSC's basic shape, and ThrustSSC's basic shape was one of the people working on the Bloodhound SAM in the 1950s/60s, so has a long pedigree working with supersonic devices and is a bloody smart bloke to boot.

  15. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Only 1 elephant

    But first you must stick a large cork up his arse then feed him a many barrels of beans and tofu. Then stand very far away to the side ... definiately not behind.

  16. ravenviz Silver badge
    Happy

    Can we have a much larger Union flag on the car please?!

  17. wiggers
    Boffin

    "equivalent to holding a large family car on the palm of your hand,"

    I recall the quote being several cars on his hand. 600psi is 42kgf/cm^2 and he said his hand was 1/100th of a sq metre, so 100cm^2 = 4.2t. Or roughly one elephant.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Mushroom

      Re: "equivalent to holding a large family car on the palm of your hand,"

      They actually ran at 16,600 rpm yesterday, and had a pump exit pressure of a bit over 800psi.

      That translates into about 4 family cars resting on his hand.

      I was delighted to see that the thermal camera and then eventually everything else too failed either during or just after the run. The estimated acoustic level inside the HAZ was 185dBA which is way beyond the fatal level for a human being and clearly shook either their cameras or wiring (or both) to bits. As Andy Green said, they need to know what stresses to design sensors to tolerate on the real car and this gave them the data they needed to start on that process.

  18. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Why the car engine?

    Silly question - why is there an F1 internal combustion engine used as a pump? Is it to provide energy / shaft for a real pump? Or is there a way it's actually used "as" a pump?

    I'm a bit confused by that part - I understand coolness, just not sure why an F1, a highly specialized expensive piece of equipment, is used fo rseemingly mundane function that may have superior solutions?

    Thx :)

    1. Chris Rowland

      Re: Why the car engine?

      It drives the pump that forces the HTP into the rocket. 30l/sec at a pressure of up to 1100 lb/ft sq ( or whatever that is in pascals) takes a lot of power. An F1 engine is a good, light, compact power source that can deliver that power, not sure what else could do that job.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Happy

        Re: Why the car engine?

        It needs to be easily controllable too. One way of supplying the oxidiser is to use some of the HTP to drive the turbo-pump via a turbine. The problem is that it isn't as easily controllable whereas the CA2010 engine is and is already developed. The Bloodhound team didn't need to design and debug an 850hp turbo-pump and its control system.

        It's also great publicity for Cosworth who don't just make racing engines these days but get involved in all sorts of precision engine/engineering work.

  19. MonsieurTM

    Ok, I suppose it has to be said...

    Surely the title to the article should have read something like "Jubb's Thruster ...". With great deference to Andy Green, the driver, one hopes something like: "Can driver handle Jubb's Thruster?"! ... fnarr fnarr

  20. Jim 59

    Go Wing Commander Green ! That should brighten up 2013 with no Olympics.

    "...when pilot Andy Green takes the controls at the Hakskeen Pan dry lake bed in South Africa next year"

  21. Rabbit80

    Biggest rocket fired in the UK for 20 years?

    I thought the Top Gear Reliant rocket would have been bigger?

  22. Vin King

    I keep coming up with .006644 Elephants Per Second

    Given average bath size of 50 gallons or .1512m^3 of water, a rough estimate of 4.7m^3 for the size of an elephant, making a bath the equivalent of .03217 elephants. Dividing by 5 for seconds gives us .006644 elephants per second.

  23. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Peenemünde: 3rd October 1942

    Another rocket is fired...

    http://www.dw.de/dw/article/0,,16276064,00.html

    1. James Hughes 1

      Re: Peenemünde: 3rd October 1942

      Was wondering why you posted that- then double checked the date - coincidence? Good find!

  24. Big-nosed Pengie

    Back in the old days...

    ...to qualify for a record, a car had to be just that. The engine, whatever it was, had to drive the wheels and the wheels drove the car. Just strapping a rocket onto a set of wheels didn't qualify. Not a bad rule IMO.

    1. James Hughes 1

      Re: Back in the old days...

      If all the people complaining about the fact this is a jet/rocket rather than wheel driven, perhaps you might like to look some shit up. The absolute land speed record for a wheeled car is what this is going for. There is also sort of a class for wheel driven vehicles, which is currently about 470 I think, but again this is split in to subcategories.

      All this stuff is on Wikipedia- it's not difficult to look up. Try it sometime.

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