A bit from The Times for FM and all those who cannot see the benefit of such projects:
Rather than relying on the traditional drawing board and wind-tunnel testing, almost every aspect of the £15 million project will have been simulated in advance using an array of powerful supercomputers, right down to the thickness of the car’s paint. At 1,000mph an extra layer on one side of the car would be enough to alter its direction and could send it into a tailspin. The Bloodhound project recently surpassed the Met Office in terms of computing power.
Despite the incredible speed the risk of anything going wrong is low, according to Wing Commander Green. In the 111 years of land speed record attempts he points out that there have been fewer fatalities than in an average decade of Formula One. “I’m not saying that this is entirely risk-free, but neither is crossing the road,” he said.
Lord Drayson, the Science Minister, proposed the project in 2006 after struggling to recruit enough engineers while in a ministerial post at the Ministry of Defence. He challenged Richard Noble, Bloodhound’s director, and Wing Commander Green to pursue the landmark project as a way of inspiring the next generation of engineers.
About 25,000 schools in Britain are signed up to the Bloodhound education programme, which uses aspects of the project to explain and demonstrate mathematics, science and engineering. The project also has a growing internet following and a live video from the cockpit will be streamed during the time trial.
“If it gets kids from around the world motivated and we only get to 950mph then it’ll be worth it. If we get to 1,000mph and nobody cares we’ll have failed,” Wing Commander Green said.
So it is developing computer modelling and helping to recruit more much needed engineers without whom we will not be able to make future andvances (perhaps in green energy).
But will FM admit to being wrong and in having a bit of a closed mind on this one?