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Title: The 400-Mph Man


hiramyaegar - April 5, 2005 08:56 PM (GMT)
The 400-Mph Man

The 400 mph Man


user posted image
A one-tenth scale model of the American Challenge undergoing water-tank tests.

In the winter of 2005, a craft that's currently in the design phase will fire up its engines on a large reservoir in eastern Washington state and try to crack 400 mph--setting a new water speed record. The boat, the American Challenge, piloted by Russ Wicks, will be unlike any other in history. A product of computer modeling and technology borrowed from the aerospace field, the revolutionary boat will be constructed by a team using the most advanced composites and working under exacting, state-of-the-art conditions. The cost is expected to ring in at about $5 million.

Halfway around the world, at Blowering Dam in Australia, another craft, completed in 1999, is expected to take up the same challenge at about the same time. This boat, the Aussie Spirit, was designed and built by one man in his backyard shed. The cost, in comparison with the American Challenge, is chump change. This effort would seem laughable when stacked up to Wicks's if it were not for one thing. Its designer, builder and driver, Ken Warby, holds the current water speed record at 317.60 mph.

It's not an entirely friendly competition: In fact, Wicks and Warby seem to take a perverse joy in throwing verbal boat anchors at each other. "A Wile E. Coyote going for a ride on a fiberglass board," says Wicks of Warby. "He's pushed the limits of what you can do without the latest technology."

Warby isn't as kind. "Wicks is known in boat racing as the media whore," he says. "He's not going to do anything. The design that he's got will kill him--if he ever builds it."

The two speedsters clash even when it comes to the best water for going fast. Wicks will be running on 7 miles of smooth, flat water surrounded by a gentle and symmetrical shoreline. A world record requires a run in both directions within an hour's time. The last thing you want, he maintains, is to have odd-shaped wakes coming at you on the return run.

Warby, in contrast, likes a rippled surface. Ripples, he says, create air pockets on the hull so it's like riding on marbles. Smooth, flat water creates added drag, which according to Warby can add up to a 30-mph penalty at 300 mph.

No matter what the water conditions, 300 miles per hour is seriously dangerous--much more so than the same speed on land, where the current record is 763 mph. Boats running at record speeds plane on a surface area the size of a teacup saucer. And that's when they're not flying totally out of the water.

Catch too much air under the bow and you flip over backward in a paroxysm of disintegration. And while you may be able to survive a land speed crash, there's no second chance on the water.

Since Warby's boat is a known quantity, Wicks's ride is the one being watched by designers around the world. It's engineered so that the impact loads pass near the craft's center of gravity. This minimizes pitching and yawing, and makes it easier to keep his ride on course.

The American Challenge will rely on computer-controlled airfoils for stability control. Gyro inputs on Challenge's attitude will be processed at 1000 times a second. This leaves Wicks with just the throttle and rudders (water and air) to contend with. As a last resort, the computer will trigger an ejection seat to launch Wicks out of harm's way. But slamming into water at 300-plus mph is like being fired out of a cannon into a brick wall.

Powering the carbon-fiber and Kevlar composite craft will be two GE J85 jet engines each producing 5000-plus pounds of thrust (about 9000-plus horsepower) with afterburner. The cockpit will be a 1-1/2-in.-thick solid carbon-fiber tub--similar to that in a Formula One car.

DIGITAL HUMAN
The cockpit is being designed using a program called Jack that was developed by UGS PLM Solutions. Jack is a biomechanically accurate virtual human that, when programmed with Wicks's body dimensions, can be seated in a virtual cockpit and used to predict reach, vision and fit requirements. Meanwhile, Wicks is wind-tunnel and water-tank testing a one-tenth scale model of his yet-to-be-built 40-ft. craft.

And Warby? We haven't heard of him doing much wind-tunnel testing lately. If the past is any indication, the master of the old school is probably doodling any last-minute design tweaks on the back of a napkin.


user posted image
Russ Wicks has already traveled 221 mph on water.

Foss Gly - April 5, 2005 09:56 PM (GMT)
What a unique design! I'm interested how the areodynamics of an airplane are being utilized in a water-going vessel.

oswalder - April 6, 2005 01:46 AM (GMT)
I guess that's pretty cool, but does this craft have any practical purposes? US$5,000,000 seems like a lot of money just so someone can risk their life to say they've gone really really fast. <_<

tonym5 - April 6, 2005 06:20 AM (GMT)
This is for someone willing to risk their life for a big prize? Cool! Only certain types of individuals will go for this!!!! p:

Kellym - April 6, 2005 06:52 AM (GMT)
QUOTE (oswalder @ Apr 6 2005, 02:46 AM)
but does this craft have any practical purposes? US$5,000,000 seems like a lot of money just so someone can risk their life to say they've gone really really fast.

That's what I was thinking :blink:

oswalder - April 6, 2005 02:04 PM (GMT)
QUOTE (tonym5 @ Apr 6 2005, 02:20 AM)
This is for someone willing to risk their life for a big prize? Cool! Only certain types of individuals will go for this!!!! p:

I don't think there is a big prize involved, except fame and glory. The projected cost to build the craft is 5 Million, and I'm not even sure if that includes all the research and development. I just personally think that's expensive for a wee bit of glory, that's all. :unsure:

Kellym - April 6, 2005 06:05 PM (GMT)
Yep!

That $5 million could be put to good use.....oh well boys and their toys I guess j:

oswalder - April 6, 2005 10:37 PM (GMT)
QUOTE (Kellym @ Apr 6 2005, 02:05 PM)
oh well boys and their toys I guess j:

j:

I prefer a set of golf clubs and some greens fees myself. :lol:

Giordino13 - April 6, 2005 10:51 PM (GMT)
it must've bben a thrill!!
p:

rowan - April 8, 2005 03:29 AM (GMT)
Boys and their toys-some of the best automotive advancements in fuel economy and safety have come from the NASCAR and Indy race cars and test pilots are considered daredevils but are really very ptofessional people who test new ideas in the aviation field. Who knows what new engineering information will come from these boat designs. Besides it looks really neat flying across the water!

hiramyaegar - April 10, 2005 02:31 PM (GMT)
QUOTE (Kellym @ Apr 6 2005, 01:05 PM)
oh well boys and their toys I guess j:

I admit that would be fun, but I would rather spend 5 mil on books, movies, computers, and an airplane or two.,




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