Posts tagged engineering
Experiments in speed

[vimeo https://vimeo.com/70921986 w=700&h=395] A Ford Zephyr with home made spoilers, a home made bike, a two-mile runway and a set of big brass balls. Thomas Donhou might not have had salt flats or enormous support teams, but he has a good imagination and a team of wily tinkerers on-side. Clearly sketchy in places, but exactly what we should all be doing on the weekends.

He says: "Inspired by those great men of the salt flats, those men that in the 60s pushed the Land Speed Record from the 300s up towards the 600mph mark in jet-propelled cars built in their sheds. We decided to do what we do: build a bicycle, but this time, in the spirit of those pioneers of speed, build it to see how fast we could go…"

This is a lovely piece of film making. It was on the Red Bull site, but it doesn't feel like your common or garden Red Bull video. Sort of gently extreme. Also nice to hear someone using technical terms such as "we reached the 'fuck it' point and decided to just go for it".

donhoubicycles.com spindleproductions.co.uk

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E X T R A B O N U S F I L M

Three mates rent a Boris bike and try to take it up to the top of Ventoux and back within 24 hours. Ventoux is one of (if not the) toughest stages in the Tour de France. Eddie Mercx needed oxygen at the top, and Lance Armstrong got crushed by it. But can Mayor of London tech get them through?

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUWCeAzkc2Q&w=700]

M.C. Escher in Lego

Escher was a Dutch graphic artist known for mathematically-inspired woodcuts, lithographs, and mezzotints. These were often impossible constructions, explorations of infinity, architecture, and tessellations.

The great thing about them is that they're impossible constructions. Or at least, they were until Andrew Lipson and Daniel Shiu built them out of Lego. I like that in the top one, the lamp is resting on a Linux book. Rather heartening.

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