World’s fastest car
arrives in Ivybridge
1,000 MPH SUPERSONIC CAR INSPIRES STUDENTS FROM ALL OVER
DEVON TO ‘CONFRONT AND OVERCOME THE IMPOSSIBLE USING SCIENCE’
Students from all over Devon travelled to Ivybridge Community
College today to see and be inspired by the world’s fastest car – the
supersonic, 1,000-mile-per-hour Bloodhound SSC.
The life-size show car (the only one of its kind in the UK) is being hosted by the College for five
days, giving 600 students from more than 20 schools the chance to explore the
pencil-shaped vehicle and learn how science, technology, engineering and
mathematics can be used to overcome the seemingly impossible.
The car was unveiled as the star element of an interactive
learning zone at Ivybridge Community College, where the Bloodhound SSC team
showed off the car, its components, and the technology behind the vehicle to
the media and 120 lucky students. The
car was housed in a marquee behind the College that was purposely erected for
the occasion. Following the showcase,
the Bloodhound education team ran four detailed sessions for chosen students
from a variety of local schools, to be followed by four more days of inspiring
workshops.
“It is so exciting to see Bloodhound up close
and find out about the technology behind it,” said 12-year-old Ivybridge
Community College student Tom Hughes. “I’ve never seen a car like it - my mum
has a Ford Fiesta, which would look tiny and boring if it was parked next to
Bloodhound!
“I want to be either a musician or an
engineer when I grow up, added Tom, “so learning about Bloodhound – especially
the aerodynamics – has inspired me to find out more about engineering. My favorite subject at school is technology
and my dream job would be to design and build rollercoasters.”
The visit was made possible by South West Teaching School
Alliance, which helped fund the visit, alongside Ivybridge Community College,
which is hosting the car and providing the extensive security needed to keep it
safe. Over the coming days, students
from more than 20 schools will get the chance to learn more about and be inspired
by the car and its team, while countless more will hear about its amazing story
in group assemblies.
During the workshops that will be held through the week, students
will learn about aerodynamics, forces, engineering problem-solving, the
importance of teamwork, building rocket cars, 3D printing, computational fluid
dynamics, and a whole host of other interesting topics.
“This is an exceptional experience for students in Devon,”
said Simon Underdown, Assistant Principal at Ivybridge Community College. “Bloodhound is renowned throughout the world
for the groundbreaking technology that it uses, so we’re privileged that our
students can not only see it up close, but also get hands-on experience of how
it actually works. I’m confident that this
experience will inspire the students that were lucky enough to attend the
workshops and leave a lasting legacy to motivate our future generation of
engineers and scientists.”
In addition to the workshops and the chance to examine the
car, students got the chance to try a simulated 1,000 mph drive; investigate a
modular version of the car that broke into cross-sections; and experience
touch-screen panels and x-rays of the inside of the car.
Ivybridge Community College student Peter Bull, aged 13, is
determined to be a fighter pilot in the RAF when he leaves school, so the day
was a welcome introduction for him. He said:
“It was so interesting to learn about the aerodynamics and balancing of the
car, and it’s confirmed that I want to be a fighter pilot. The engineering behind Bloodhound has to be
so precise, as the slightest miscalculation can end in disaster, so it shows
how important it is to get the mathematics exactly right.”
Josh Woollard, aged 13, from Kingsbridge
Community College, said: “I think it’s amazing that the car is powered by more
than one engine – and that it will reach 1,000 miles per hour thanks to a jet
from a fighter plane. I love making
things and I’m interested in being an electrician or a carpenter when I leave
school, so the rocket-building workshop was the most interesting for me. I hope to take engineering at GCSE and being
here today has made me even more determined to do that.”
Following the first day’s activities, Ivybridge Community
College held an evening presentation of the car for its governors and for
neighbours of the College. The week was
also supported by Rodgers Hyundai, which provided three display cars for the
week and will host quarterly tours for Ivybridge Community College students who
are interested in a career in the automotive industry.
Over the next two weeks, the Bloodhound education team will
continue their tour of South West Teaching Alliance schools, spending one week
in Exeter and a further week in Plymouth.
PHOTOS
1.
Megan Tucker-Barrett, Noah Davies and Tom Hughes with Nick
Naylor from the Bloodhound team
2.
Peter Bull from Ivybridge Community College learning about
the technology behind Bloodhound SSC’s 1,000 mph capability
3.
(From left) Megan Tucker-Barrett, Noah Davies and Tom Hughes
with Nick Naylor from the Bloodhound team
4.
Students from Ivybridge Community College in front of the Bloodhound
SSC show car with Nick Naylor from the Bloodhound team
-Ends-
Notes to editors
About Bloodhound SSC
Bloodhound SSC is a SuperSonic Car. It is supersonic because it is designed to go
faster than the speed of sound. It is a
car because it has four wheels and is under full control of its driver.
Bloodhound SSC is a jet and rocket-powered car designed to go
at 1,000 mph (just over 1,600 kph). It has a slender body of approximately 14m
length with two front wheels within the body and two rear wheels mounted
externally within wheel fairings. It weighs over 7 tonnes and the engines
produce more than 135,000 horsepower - more than 6 times the power of all the
Formula 1 cars on a starting grid put together.
The Car is a mix of car and aircraft technology, with the
front half being a carbon-fibre monocoque, like a racing car, and the back half
being a metallic framework and panels like an aircraft.
About Bloodhound SSC Education
project
The Bloodhound SSC Education Programme aims to inspire the
next generation of scientists and engineers. It is unique when compared to
other ground breaking engineering ventures in that all the information about
the research, design, build and testing of the car is available to teachers, students,
and anyone that wishes to visit the project’s website.
In the UK, and many of the developed countries worldwide,
there is a shortage of scientists, engineers and mathematicians, so the
Bloodhound Project seek to motivate students to enjoy and study science,
technology, engineering and maths (STEM) subjects at school and then at university.
The Bloodhound Project is endeavouring to be the catalyst through which young
people will acquire the skills and develop innovative talents that will enable
them to overcome the challenges we face on a global scale.
About Ivybridge Community College
Ivybridge Community College is a success-orientated
establishment, which has always prided itself on supporting students to achieve
to their highest potential.
It has an OFSTED rating of Outstanding for the last twenty
years.
The College's goal is to motivate and challenge its students.
Talented and dedicated staff, disciplined students, supportive parents and an
enthusiastic Governing Body, all work for a common purpose – allowing students
to flourish.
Press contact
For further information, photos, or to interview Rob Haring
contact Gill Taylor, Deputy Principal, on
01752 691000, icc@ivybridge.devon.sch.uk.