RE: Bloodhound SSC - "we're winning!"

RE: Bloodhound SSC - "we're winning!"

Friday 20th July 2012

Bloodhound SSC - "we're winning!"

Richard Noble talks to PH about where the Bloodhound team is in its mission to hit 1,000mph



The design and aerodynamic tailoring of Bloodhound SSC is now complete, project director Richard Noble has confirmed, and the first batch of commissioned parts are due to arrive back at the Bristol HQ from next month when initial assembly of the 1,000mph world land speed record hopefully can begin.

Noble boasts things are coming together
Noble boasts things are coming together
Speaking to a delegation of Guild of Motoring Writers members this week, Noble said, right now, "we're winning". The biggest problems are lack of sleep and lack of money but the design of the car itself is on track. The current plan is to finish the rolling chassis by December, hopefully run it in South Africa in August 2013 for a few months ("we could go supersonic in 2013") before returning to the UK for a re-work and review.

"In 2014, we'll go back to South Africa and finish it. Well, that's the plan..."

Bloodhound SSC is a project that's already well known and some are wondering why it's taking so long. Noble is clear here; the project is more complex than building a modern fighter jet. "We are pushing boundaries, running five activities in parallel to save time. If we did everything in sequence, it would take 30 years. We simply can't do that."

Rallying public support is a priority
Rallying public support is a priority
Part of the complexity comes from Bloodhound's goal of inspiring schoolchildren. Referencing the huge spike in engineering PhDs seen in the US when the Apollo space programme first ran in the 1960s, Noble explains this is key to the team getting its supply of Eurojet engines. "Lord Drayson told us the MoD has a problem - it can't recruit engineers. He wanted an iconic project to enliven children. I knew we could do this."

And how. Bloodhound is now studied in thousands of schools across the country. Recently Northamptonshire committed EVERY school to the Bloodhound project - that's 100 schools and 12,000 children. Not hard to see why - the team has even developed Key Stage-compliant lesson plans for teachers. These, like everything in the project, is open source. When the car runs, up to 500 live data channels will be streamed on the internet for everyone, including schools, to access and monitor.

That's some pump you got there...
That's some pump you got there...
Bloodhound SSC is powered by the Eurofighter Typhoon EJ200 jet engine plus a hybrid rocket - the combination gives best power and control as, while fast, rockets are not known for their manageability. Famously, the rocket pump is driven by a 2.4-litre Cosworth V8 F1 engine, which exhausts the 1,000-litre rocket fuel tank in just 20 seconds. To put that into context, 0-1,000mph is estimated to take 42 seconds.

"The biggest problem is not getting up to speed," says Noble, "it's stopping it again." Remember, land speed record rules require two timed runs to be conducted within an hour, with the average of the two forming the overall speed. If you can't get the thing stopped in place and turned around on time, you're done for.

Real power via the rocket and jet motors
Real power via the rocket and jet motors
Preparing the area itself has been the subject of another huge project. The speed runs will take place in Hakskeen Pan, a 12-mile strip of South African desert. Which, until recently, was covered in rocks. Until, that is, Bloodhound recruited 300 locals to, literally, clean the area. "That's 24m square metres of stone, removed by hand," says Noble, who recently visited to personally thank the entire team.

So how can you help out? Well, money is always welcome, says Noble. As the rear fin has now more than doubled in size, paying £10 to have your name on it is a start. You can join the Bloodhound Club for £20 and, if you pay £75 for Gold membership, you get to see the car during its first UK test run, scheduled for later this year.

Hand cleared desert prepped for record runs
Hand cleared desert prepped for record runs
So far, the project has spent £7.5m to date, 42 per cent of the total £18m budget. A bargain if the car does achieve its goal of Mach 1.4, or 1,000mph (Noble wanted Mach 1.5, "horse-trading with the engineers saw us settle on Mach 1.4.") Surely it's now time we all got behind it?

 

 

 



For more on Bloodhound by the man due to drive it keep it PH for Chris Harris's story on meeting Andy Green - coming soon!

Author
Discussion

burwoodman

Original Poster:

18,709 posts

246 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
Is the Cosworth V8 F1 engine, which must produce 700 odd hp, the fuel pump?

Dan Trent

1,866 posts

168 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
Yep!

timbob

2,101 posts

252 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
burwoodman said:
Is the Cosworth V8 F1 engine, which must produce 700 odd hp, the fuel pump?
Yep!

r1ch

2,871 posts

196 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
0-1000 in 42 seconds. Not bad smile

Dare2Fail

3,808 posts

208 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
burwoodman said:
Is the Cosworth V8 F1 engine, which must produce 700 odd hp, the fuel pump?
Yes.

arkenphel

484 posts

205 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
Riiiight, clearing millions of square feet of rock doesn't quite sound environmentally friendly. I'm no greenie, but just for the sake of setting a LSR it sounds rather pointlessly destructive.

Good for the local economy, I suppose, but I thought the bloodhound team were short of money...

Captain Muppet

8,540 posts

265 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
arkenphel said:
Riiiight, clearing millions of square feet of rock doesn't quite sound environmentally friendly. I'm no greenie, but just for the sake of setting a LSR it sounds rather pointlessly destructive.

Good for the local economy, I suppose, but I thought the bloodhound team were short of money...
FFS. They moved some rocks in a desert along a 12 mile strip. How distructive do you think that was for some lizards and insects?

tuffer

8,849 posts

267 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
arkenphel said:
Riiiight, clearing millions of square feet of rock doesn't quite sound environmentally friendly. I'm no greenie, but just for the sake of setting a LSR it sounds rather pointlessly destructive.

Good for the local economy, I suppose, but I thought the bloodhound team were short of money...
WTF? They moved some loose stones from a dried up lake bed.

mylesmcd

2,532 posts

219 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
arkenphel said:
Riiiight, clearing millions of square feet of rock doesn't quite sound environmentally friendly. I'm no greenie, but just for the sake of setting a LSR it sounds rather pointlessly destructive.

Good for the local economy, I suppose, but I thought the bloodhound team were short of money...
Yea, its up there with Chernobyl or The Exxon Valdez.



rolleyes

ptn

1,697 posts

144 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
arkenphel said:
Riiiight, clearing millions of square feet of rock doesn't quite sound environmentally friendly. I'm no greenie, but just for the sake of setting a LSR it sounds rather pointlessly destructive.

Good for the local economy, I suppose, but I thought the bloodhound team were short of money...
I thought this was Pistonheads...?

r1ch

2,871 posts

196 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
arkenphel said:
Riiiight, clearing millions of square feet of rock doesn't quite sound environmentally friendly. I'm no greenie, but just for the sake of setting a LSR it sounds rather pointlessly destructive.

Good for the local economy, I suppose, but I thought the bloodhound team were short of money...
Are you not excited about a car that does 1000mph?

loudlashadjuster

5,107 posts

184 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
arkenphel said:
Riiiight, clearing millions of square feet of rock doesn't quite sound environmentally friendly. I'm no greenie, but just for the sake of setting a LSR it sounds rather pointlessly destructive.
What? Moving some small pebbles and rocks a hundred metres away by hand? In the scale of 'environmental impact' that probably rates a 0.1.

Everything except eating and procreation is pointless if you reduce on those terms.

If things like this don't inspire you then perhaps you're on the wrong site.

V88Dicky

7,305 posts

183 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
arkenphel said:
I'm no greenie.
'course not.

Schnellmann

1,893 posts

204 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
Beware the trolls....

Anyway, back to the topic: I hope they succeed. Would be a great demonstration of British engineering skill. Such a pity that engineers are not really afforded the same status in the UK as they are in many countries (think Germany).

TonyHetherington

32,091 posts

250 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
What a brilliant project - and it's goals alongside of bringing engineering to the fore really does make it even more fantastic.

Great to hear (and see) more about it.

Morningside

24,110 posts

229 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
Really looking forward to see the testing runs. It look like real jaw dropping stuff. Even reading about the 'fuel pump' is out just so off the scale of thinking.

BTW: Does it have a Pistonheads sticker?

still not as fast as an Astra Van

Edited by Morningside on Friday 20th July 10:44

chazwozza

729 posts

186 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
£75.00 to watch it's first runs- bargain, i'm in! Awesome piece of engineering, still have the newspaper cutting of the supersonic LSR. Where do they go after 1000mph though? and don't say 1001!

robinessex

11,050 posts

181 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
Don't get me wound up about the status (lack off ) engineers in this country !!

Captain Muppet

8,540 posts

265 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
chazwozza said:
£75.00 to watch it's first runs- bargain, i'm in! Awesome piece of engineering, still have the newspaper cutting of the supersonic LSR. Where do they go after 1000mph though? and don't say 1001!
Mach 2?

Might need to find a bigger desert though.

P9UNK

120 posts

158 months

Friday 20th July 2012
quotequote all
anonymous said:
[redacted]
You're on the wrong website too, the point he is making is that it is pushing boundaries not touched before unlike aviation... Please keep your wet blanket to yourself and just celebrate what should be food and drink to piston heads.