
Not that there's much actually true in the article beyond the basic premise (functional necessity due to the politics of funding/sponsorship)
When we were bolting them to existing craft (i.e. somebody else's that we'd have to give back), we were pretty limited in terms of fitment design (time pressures didn't help either). Now, we can design the body/canopy together from the outset to allow a range of escape options.Jobbo wrote: Mon Dec 10, 2018 9:26 amYou mention enclosed canopies; I thought that was a no-no due to the risk of the craft simply sinking and being unable to get out. Do you now have time to make survival cells?
Explosive bolts, fighter jet style!Nefarious wrote: Mon Dec 10, 2018 9:51 amWhen we were bolting them to existing craft (i.e. somebody else's that we'd have to give back), we were pretty limited in terms of fitment design (time pressures didn't help either). Now, we can design the body/canopy together from the outset to allow a range of escape options.Jobbo wrote: Mon Dec 10, 2018 9:26 amYou mention enclosed canopies; I thought that was a no-no due to the risk of the craft simply sinking and being unable to get out. Do you now have time to make survival cells?
Favoured option at the moment is kind of t-bar design with double side panels attached with o-rings on posts. That way, in an emergency, all the o-rings can be quickly cut leaving an escape route either side.
I was thinking similar - although more the type of mechanism that inflates Life Jackets on contact with Water...
What, this one you mean?scotta wrote: Mon Dec 10, 2018 4:12 pm Ill not tell you the engine ebay link he sent to me yesterday
Suffice to say horsepower was plenty on it.
To power a Hovercraft ?
If it’s going on the back of a hovercraft does it really need shaft drive rather than it’s own thrust?