Bloodhound LSR Thread As Requested...

Bloodhound LSR Thread As Requested...

Author
Discussion

14

2,124 posts

163 months

Thursday 9th November 2023
quotequote all
Jenson Button would be a good driver, and could bring in a significant amount of sponsorship money.

CallMeLegend

Original Poster:

8,787 posts

212 months

Thursday 9th November 2023
quotequote all
14 said:
Jenson Button would be a good driver, and could bring in a significant amount of sponsorship money.


I suspect he's very happy is it is and has no appetite for it.

loudlashadjuster

5,206 posts

186 months

Sunday 19th November 2023
quotequote all
Harry Metcalfe’s video this week is on Bloodhound. Haven’t watched it yet, wonder if it’s a promotion thing?



Edited by loudlashadjuster on Sunday 19th November 19:37

slartibartfast

4,014 posts

203 months

Sunday 19th November 2023
quotequote all
loudlashadjuster said:
Harry Metcalfe’s video this week is on Bloodhound. Heavenly watched it yet, wonder if it’s a promotion thing?

yes but quite interesting.
he seemed to skip what they are going to use instead of the Jag V8 to pump rocket fuel.
£12m and it runs.

eliot

11,494 posts

256 months

Sunday 19th November 2023
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At least they finally got it in front of some eyes rather than dragging round London or an empty silverstone,

CraigyMc

16,500 posts

238 months

Sunday 19th November 2023
quotequote all
slartibartfast said:
he seemed to skip what they are going to use instead of the Jag V8 to pump rocket fuel.
£12m and it runs.
Fairly straightforward to do it with an electric motor.

Gareth79

7,730 posts

248 months

Sunday 19th November 2023
quotequote all
CraigyMc said:
slartibartfast said:
he seemed to skip what they are going to use instead of the Jag V8 to pump rocket fuel.
£12m and it runs.
Fairly straightforward to do it with an electric motor.
I remember that was discussed way back, possibly I heard it at an event, but the issue was always keeping the total weight down. Modern battery density and motors might be up to it now though?

Krikkit

26,621 posts

183 months

Sunday 19th November 2023
quotequote all
Gareth79 said:
CraigyMc said:
slartibartfast said:
he seemed to skip what they are going to use instead of the Jag V8 to pump rocket fuel.
£12m and it runs.
Fairly straightforward to do it with an electric motor.
I remember that was discussed way back, possibly I heard it at an event, but the issue was always keeping the total weight down. Modern battery density and motors might be up to it now though?
I thought it was pretty much just cost that kept them from finishing that? They were saying originally how awkward the engine was for packaging, and how the airflow management was a compromise, where a battery pack can be water cooled and distributed where needed.

loudlashadjuster

5,206 posts

186 months

Sunday 19th November 2023
quotequote all
I recall they’d already swapped the Jag V8 for another, more modest engine before the planned switch to electric?

Jaguar were an initial sponsor, but that didn’t last until the SA shakedown so I think it had been replaced by then.

PGN

213 posts

216 months

Monday 20th November 2023
quotequote all
I'm sure they originally planned to use an F1 engine. That got changed to a Jaguar V8 (maybe the F1 thing was just to generate publicity) and now it's an electric pump.

Olivergt

1,358 posts

83 months

Monday 20th November 2023
quotequote all
What does/did the jet use to supply fuel to the engine? Surely the requirements are the same, why not use the same?

ChocolateFrog

25,831 posts

175 months

Monday 20th November 2023
quotequote all
loudlashadjuster said:
I recall they’d already swapped the Jag V8 for another, more modest engine before the planned switch to electric?

Jaguar were an initial sponsor, but that didn’t last until the SA shakedown so I think it had been replaced by then.
Other way round IIRC.

The Jag engine replaced something else, possibly a Cosworth F1 engine.

robinessex

11,088 posts

183 months

Monday 20th November 2023
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Where is IN51GHT when you need him?

lufbramatt

5,362 posts

136 months

Monday 20th November 2023
quotequote all
robinessex said:
Where is IN51GHT when you need him?
Think he changed his username to "I am Legend" or something similar

ETA- "callmelegend"

Edited by lufbramatt on Monday 20th November 12:16

robinessex

11,088 posts

183 months

Monday 20th November 2023
quotequote all
lufbramatt said:
robinessex said:
Where is IN51GHT when you need him?
Think he changed his username to "I am Legend" or something similar
Oops, just found that out!!

CallMeLegend

Original Poster:

8,787 posts

212 months

Monday 20th November 2023
quotequote all
CraigyMc said:
slartibartfast said:
he seemed to skip what they are going to use instead of the Jag V8 to pump rocket fuel.
£12m and it runs.
Fairly straightforward to do it with an electric motor.
I argued this years ago in exec engineering meetings, along with the head of structures. The pair of us had talked about it for a couple of months prior to suggesting it. The powers that be said it was non starter, despite the fact we'd done some preliminary calcs, they simply said "it won't work". Obviously it would work, especially now given the increase in cell energy density.


Edited by CallMeLegend on Monday 20th November 15:08

CallMeLegend

Original Poster:

8,787 posts

212 months

Monday 20th November 2023
quotequote all
ChocolateFrog said:
loudlashadjuster said:
I recall they’d already swapped the Jag V8 for another, more modest engine before the planned switch to electric?

Jaguar were an initial sponsor, but that didn’t last until the SA shakedown so I think it had been replaced by then.
Other way round IIRC.

The Jag engine replaced something else, possibly a Cosworth F1 engine.
The CA2010 Cosworth lump was replaced by the AJ133 V8 Jag engine, neither of which were particularly well suited to the task, but when you are being offered them for free, you take what you can get.

Fundamentally any ICE unit is unsuitable, you have to get supersonic air in, slow it to manageable speeds, which heats it up, so you also have to cool it before the ICE gets to use it. Then you have the issues of dealing with exhaust gasses, so you are looking for the lowest pressure area in the under floor so perforate to have a suitable exhaust exit. Problem is these low pressure areas can move through the speed range.


Edited by CallMeLegend on Monday 20th November 15:27

CraigyMc

16,500 posts

238 months

Monday 20th November 2023
quotequote all
CallMeLegend said:
CraigyMc said:
slartibartfast said:
he seemed to skip what they are going to use instead of the Jag V8 to pump rocket fuel.
£12m and it runs.
Fairly straightforward to do it with an electric motor.
I argued this years ago in exec engineering meetings, along with the head of structures. The pair of us had talked about it for a couple of months prior to suggesting it. The powers that be said it was non starter, despite the fact we'd done some preliminary calcs, they simply said "it won't work". Obviously it would work, especially now given the increase in cell energy density.


Edited by CallMeLegend on Monday 20th November 15:08
Didn't you move on to the RR electric plane?

Seems a transferrable skill smile

CallMeLegend

Original Poster:

8,787 posts

212 months

Monday 20th November 2023
quotequote all
CraigyMc said:
CallMeLegend said:
CraigyMc said:
slartibartfast said:
he seemed to skip what they are going to use instead of the Jag V8 to pump rocket fuel.
£12m and it runs.
Fairly straightforward to do it with an electric motor.
I argued this years ago in exec engineering meetings, along with the head of structures. The pair of us had talked about it for a couple of months prior to suggesting it. The powers that be said it was non starter, despite the fact we'd done some preliminary calcs, they simply said "it won't work". Obviously it would work, especially now given the increase in cell energy density.


Edited by CallMeLegend on Monday 20th November 15:08
Didn't you move on to the RR electric plane?

Seems a transferrable skill smile
Yep, took several speed records, now hanging from the ceiling of the Science Museum, London

CraigyMc

16,500 posts

238 months

Monday 20th November 2023
quotequote all
Olivergt said:
What does/did the jet use to supply fuel to the engine? Surely the requirements are the same, why not use the same?
Have just seen this post.

The EJ200 has an AMAD (basically a jet-engine powered alternator) but it's sized for the fighter the engine came from; the rocket motor pump power requirement is quite a bit bigger; I recall this being discussed years ago; it's in the hundreds of kW (~400 to 500).

This is historical info but:
  • The oxidiser pump needs to dump 800 litres of HTP into the rocket in a total of about 17s.
  • HTP's a bit denser than water, that 800 litres equates to about 1000kg.
Anyone who has used a pump will know that to move a tonne of liquid in 17s is a powerful pump.

If you're looking to visualise the output of the pump, it's roughly equivalent to 15 UK-spec firefighting hoses running in parallel, in terms of flow rate.

If you were to dump the HTP out through a tube (unburnt) rather than as the oxidiser for a PBAN rocket, it'd still give you about 400lb of thrust. This is simply because of the reaction mass of the HTP going out the back of the car.

That's why the jet can't power the pump. Too squirty.

Edited by CraigyMc on Monday 20th November 20:14