Bloodhound LSR


Bloodhound LSR, formerly Bloodhound SSC, is a British land vehicle designed to travel at supersonic speeds with the intention of setting a new world land speed record. The arrow-shaped car, under development since 2008, is powered by a jet engine and will be fitted with an additional rocket engine. The initial focus is to exceed the current speed record of in 2020 or 2021, with the vehicle believed to be able to achieve speeds up to.
Driver Andy Green will attempt to break his own record set in 1997. The previous business behind Project Bloodhound went into administration in late 2018. Entrepreneur Ian Warhurst bought the car to keep the project alive. A new company called Grafton LSR Ltd was formed to manage the project, which was renamed Bloodhound LSR and moved to SGS Berkeley Green University Technical College.
The venue for high speed testing and future world land speed record attempts is the Hakskeen Pan in the Mier area of the Northern Cape, South Africa. An area long and wide was identified as suitable, with hand-clearance of rocks by local volunteers before track markings could be applied, with the first runs in October 2019. Further runs in November 2019 achieved a top speed of, the eighth vehicle to attain a land speed of over.

Timeline

Inception

The Bloodhound project was announced on 23 October 2008 at the London Science Museum by Lord Drayson – then Minister of Science in the UK's Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills – who first suggested the project in 2006 to land speed record holders Richard Noble and Andy Green, a pilot and Wing Commander serving in the RAF. The two men, between them, have held the land speed record since 1983.
In 1983, Noble, a self-described engineer and adventurer reached 633 mph driving a turbojet-powered car named Thrust2 across the Nevada desert. In 1997, he headed the project to build ThrustSSC, which was driven by Green at, thereby breaking the sound barrier, a first for a land vehicle. Green is also Bloodhound LSR's driver.
The Bloodhound project was named for the Bristol Bloodhound surface-to-air missile, a project that Bloodhound Chief Aerodynamicist Ron Ayers had previously worked on.
The project was at first based in the former Maritime Heritage Centre on the Bristol harbourside, next to Brunel's. In 2013 the project relocated to a larger site in Avonmouth. The head offices of the project moved to Didcot, Oxfordshire in late 2015.

2017 tests

Runway testing of up to took place on 26, 28 and 30 October 2017 at Newquay Airport, Cornwall.

2018 change of ownership

In May 2018, the team announced plans for high speed testing at in May 2019, and then a run in 2020. However, the company backing the project, Bloodhound Programme Ltd, went into administration in late 2018 leaving a funding gap of £25 million, which put the venture's future into question.
The project was "axed" in December 2018, with plans to sell off the remaining assets. Later that month, Yorkshire entrepreneur Ian Warhurst stepped in to rescue the project by buying the assets and intellectual property, including the car, for an undisclosed sum.

2019 tests

In March 2019, it was announced that Warhurst had formed a new company called Grafton LSR Ltd. to manage the project, which became the car's legal owner. The company said in a statement that Warhurst was trying to save the project with new sponsors and partners.
The name of the new team became 'Bloodhound LSR'. The car and the project's headquarters moved to SGS Berkeley Green University Technical College in Berkeley, Gloucestershire near Gloucester.
High speed testing of the car took place at the Hakskeen Pan in October and November 2019. Test runs driven by Green began on 25 October, using only a Rolls-Royce Eurojet EJ200 engine, with an expectation of reaching. The car achieved on 6 November 2019, and a final top speed of on 16 November, making it the eighth vehicle to attain a land speed of over 600 mph.

Design

Car

The car was designed by Bloodhound's Chief Aerodynamicist Ron Ayers and Chief Engineer Mark Chapman, along with aerodynamicists from Swansea University.
Bloodhound LSR is designed to accelerate from 0 to in 38 seconds and decelerate using airbrakes at around 800 mph, a parachute at a maximum deployment speed of around and disc brakes below. The force on the driver during acceleration would be -2.5 g and up to 3 g during deceleration.

Aerodynamics

The aerodynamics of Bloodhound have been carefully calculated to make sure the car is safe and stable, particularly because it will encounter a shockwave when it reaches the speed of sound.
The College of Engineering at Swansea University has been heavily involved in the aerodynamic shape of the vehicle from the start. Dr Ben Evans and his team used Computational Fluid Dynamics technology designed by Professor Oubay Hassan and Professor Ken Morgan to provide an understanding of the aerodynamic characteristics of the proposed shape, at all speeds, including predicting the likely vertical, lateral and drag forces on the vehicle and its pitch and yaw stability. This technology, originally developed for the aerospace industry, was validated for a land-going vehicle during the design of ThrustSSC.

Propulsion

Three prototype Eurojet EJ200 jet engines developed for the Eurofighter and bound for a museum were loaned to the project. The car will use one EJ200 to provide around half the thrust and power the car to. A custom monopropellant rocket designed by Nammo will be used to add extra thrust for the world land speed record runs. For the runs, the monopropellant rocket will be replaced with a hybrid rocket from Nammo. A third engine, a Jaguar supercharged V-8 is used as an auxiliary power unit to drive the oxidiser pump for the rocket, although this will be replaced by an electric motor.
Initially Bloodhound SSC was going to use a custom hybrid rocket motor being designed by Daniel Jubb. The rocket was successfully tested at Newquay Airport in 2012. However, constraints on cost, time and test facilities led to a decision to instead use a rocket designed by Norwegian company Nammo.
At first the plan was that the car would use a Nammo hybrid rocket or cluster of rockets, to be fuelled by solid hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene and liquid high-test peroxide oxidiser. This plan was revised in 2017 and the car will use a monopropellant rocket for the land speed record runs.
For the car to achieve, the monopropellant rocket would need to produce around 40 kN of thrust and the EJ200 jet engine 90 kN in reheat.

Wheels

For low-speed testing at Cornwall Airport Newquay in 2017, the car was fitted with four runway wheels based on those of an English Electric Lightning fighter jet with refurbished original tyres. These were replaced for the high-speed test runs in the desert in South Africa in 2019 by four diameter wheels weighing, forged from an aircraft-grade aluminium zinc alloy. These were designed to spin at up to 10,200 rpm and resist centrifugal forces of up to at the rim.

Construction

The car was built at sites in Bristol and Avonmouth. A full-scale model was unveiled at the 2010 Farnborough International Airshow, when it was announced that Hampson Industries would begin to build the rear chassis section of the car in the first quarter of 2011 and that a deal for the manufacture of the front of the car was due. The car was largely completed by October 2017 when full reheat static testing was undertaken with the jet engine at Cornwall Airport Newquay followed by low speed test runs.
Further construction was carried out before the project went into administration and the car was then completed at Berkeley before high speed testing.

Testing locations

Early in the project, Swansea University's School of the Environment and Society was enlisted to help determine a new test site for the record runs because the test site for the ThrustSSC record attempt had become unsuitable. The venue chosen for high speed testing and for the land speed record runs was Hakskeen Pan in the Mier area of the Northern Cape, South Africa, on a track measuring long. The local community cleared 16,500 tonnes of stones by hand from an area measuring 22 million square metres to create space for 20 tracks each 10 metres wide as the car cannot run twice on the same strip of desert.
Low speed runway testing of over occurred on 26, 28 and 30 October 2017 at Cornwall Airport Newquay.
High speed testing at Hakskeen Pan began in October 2019. The car achieved on its final run on 16 November 2019.

Education and STEM outreach

The Bloodhound Project had an education component designed to inspire future generations to take up careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics by showcasing these subjects and interacting with young people and students. Bloodhound-related education activities are provided by Bloodhound Education Ltd, a standalone registered charity. The charity's Bloodhound Education Centre has also moved to SGS Berkeley Green UTC.