We are approaching the 80th anniversary of when Sir Henry Seagrave took the LSR to over 231mph on 11 March 2009 with the Golden Arrow at Daytona. Good Boy's Own hero material, with the sparring back and forth with Campbell Snr around that time.
Coming bang up to date, once again, I may have happened this evening upon the good fortune of meeting a particularly interesting and knowledgeable person by chance....Bloodhound (UK, let's go faster than 1,000mph on 4 wheels).......
http://www.bloodhoundssc.com/- will, in all likelihood, put the NA Eagle (let's go a bit faster than Thrust SSC with an F-104 fuselage) and the Aussie 1000mph contender, both of which have not moved forward in recent times, into the shade, and the Bloodhound project is coming along nicely. Design done and being refined, build starting soon, wheels due on and testing runs in about 12 months, and the actual runs scheduled for 2011. The "where to do the runs" question has thrown up a most interesting probability outside the traditional US and Australian LSR haunts, but one that is not unknown to LSR history (1929, and no it's not Pendine...).
An engine that normally powers a Typhoon, supplemented by an HTP rocket (see previous post on 1950s Black Arrow....) gives you the oooomph needed to go from 0-1000-0 mph in around 90 seconds, in less than 12 miles. Interesting combination, with a current 800bhp race-derived V12 being installed just to power the pump to deliver the power needed to shift over 1 ton of HTP to the rocket in 15-20 seconds....oh, and the pump is a repro of the 50's Blue Steel propellant pump, and the chief aerodynamicist designed, amongst other things, Thrust SSC and the 50's Bloodhound missile.
If it ain't broke, don't fix it....just thought you'd like to know....
MG Mark