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2010
> September
Anti-terror system finds cancers
09/09/2010
Tom Shelley reports on the adaptation of a technology used to find weapons to identifying breast cancer.
British bionics play a winning hand
09/09/2010
Touch Bionics has employed world beating innovation to offer hope to those who have lost hands, arms or fingers. Paul Fanning reports.
Computing aids advance rapid development
09/09/2010
Tom Shelley reports on technologies to aid brainstorming and getting products to market faster, especially in the challenging field of alternative energy.
Fast components take the heat
09/09/2010
Tom Shelley reports on high efficiency automation actuators and motors for hot places.
Hot coatings for composites
09/09/2010
Tom Shelley reports on coatings that can protect composites against intense heat and provide other beneficial properties.
Rapid prototyping 'shows its metal'
09/09/2010
Tom Shelley reports on advances in rapid prototyping, such as the manufacture of more efficient heat exchangers and hydraulic manifolds.
Systems care, entertain and protect
09/09/2010
Tom Shelley reports on what can now be done with bedside electronics without risking infection.
Taking the fear out of PLM
09/09/2010
Negative perceptions of Product Lifecycle Management and how to change them was the major theme to emerge from the recent Eureka PLM Round Table.
White light leaps forward
09/09/2010
A UK company has developed a technology that could revolutionise 3D scanning.
Selling the benefits of linear motion
07/09/2010
A need to educate consumers was the major theme to emerge from the recent Eureka Linear Motion Round Table.
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Andy Green’s Bloodhound Project diary
The thing about setting a land speed record is that speeding up is only half of the problem. Once you've gone flashing through the timing lights of the measured mile at over 1000mph you are faced with stopping a heavy, very high speed vehicle in a limited distance (about 5½ miles on our chosen track on Hakskeen Pan in South Africa). 5½ miles sounds like a long way, but if you're doing a mile every 3½ seconds, it doesn't seem that far at all!
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