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18 votes
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The mind-blowing machines that stamp millions of metal parts
20 votes -
NASA’s trio of mini rovers will autonomously team up to explore the Moon
15 votes -
Where does grounded electricity actually go?
12 votes -
Lens rotation (United States Lighthouse Society)
12 votes -
Butterfly flight inspired researchers to explore new ways to create force and electricity
10 votes -
How a World War II submarine works
6 votes -
Bioengineers at Arizona State University leveraging a Lego robotics kit created an affordable yet powerful gradient mixer to purify self-assembling nanostructures
12 votes -
Camp Century - The Hidden City Beneath the Ice
9 votes -
Canada’s $30bn gamble to become an energy superpower
11 votes -
The Glass Age, Part 1: Flexible, Bendable Glass
9 votes -
The danger of popcorn polymer: Incident at the TPC Group chemical plant
13 votes -
A look back at some robotic inventions that didn't quite get there
12 votes -
Philadelphia I-95 bridge collapse explained
11 votes -
The inventor of glitter, Henry Ruschmann, also helped develop the atomic bomb
14 votes -
When you show the engineer and it works
We have all done it and seen it happen but I don't know its name Someone has tried and proven that something just doesn't work, it is broken. And so you call the engineer and the first time you...
We have all done it and seen it happen but I don't know its name
Someone has tried and proven that something just doesn't work, it is broken. And so you call the engineer and the first time you try to demonstrate it, it works and then works afterwards every time.
It isn't Murphys Law and it isn't Sods Law but what is it?
I call it Engineer Syndrome but that cant be right
34 votes -
Why did nuclear flop in Britain?
14 votes -
Interview: Jerry Tate (62), possibly the oldest watchmaking school graduate ever (SAWTA, CW21 certification)
5 votes -
I thought this rotating house was impossible
36 votes -
Watching paint dry: The chemical engineering of car paint
16 votes -
The ground is deforming, and buildings aren't ready. First study to quantify effects of subsurface climate change on civil infrastructure
23 votes -
Process of making beautiful Korean-style house
18 votes -
The questionable engineering of the Oceangate Titan submersible
51 votes -
The US's flirtation with nuclear powered jet aircraft
If everything had worked perfectly, it still would have been a bum airplane." - Charles Wilson, Secretary of Defense Back in the 1950s and 1960s, the United States attempted to design nuclear...
If everything had worked perfectly, it still would have been a bum airplane." - Charles Wilson, Secretary of Defense
Back in the 1950s and 1960s, the United States attempted to design nuclear powered aircraft. This was part of a larger "nuclear craze" in the era where everything and anything was proposed to have nuclear technology applied to it. This led to all kinds of things like the Chrysler TV-8 and "peaceful" earthmoving construction projects. The only place where nuclear power or propulsion really took off was for large ocean going ships both for military navies as well as civilian tankers, cargo ships and icebreakers. Spacecraft technology was the only other "success story."
Nuclear powered aircraft, while more realistic than say nuclear cars, never quite caught on except for a few experimental engines and just one actual working aircraft. The most extensive efforts towards this during the Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion (ANP) program were the HTRE-2 and HTRE-3 experimental nuclear reactors with heat transfer assemblies designed for nuclear powered aircraft at the Idaho National Laboratory. Rather than burning fuel, the jet turbine would use the heat from the nuclear reaction to heat air sent through a compressor which would then be expelled as exhaust for thrust.
On of the more fascinating tests were the test flights of the NB-36H which while conventionally powered, flew while carrying a working nuclear reactor to test the protective shielding of the crew. It carried an air-cooled 1 megawatt reactor. The engineers and crew worked within a specially shielded nose cabin with 12-inch-thick lead-glass windows.
The project was canceled by the Kennedy administration a few months after taking office in 1961 citing high costs, poor management, and little progress towards a flight ready reactor saying:
At the time of termination, the Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Program was still in the research and development stage, with primary emphasis on high performance reactors. Although a number of research and development achievements can be credited to this program, at the time of termination an airplane had never been flown on nuclear power nor had a prototype airplane been built. - Joseph Campbell, Comptroller General
and
Nearly 15 years and about $1 billion have been devoted to the attempted development of a nuclear-powered aircraft; but the possibility of achieving a militarily useful aircraft in the foreseeable future is still very remote. - John F. Kennedy, POTUS
Footnote: This post is a rework of a reddit post I made here a couple years back. It's not really meant to be a coherent or lengthy article but has some links and thoughts which I found interesting.
20 votes -
Anyone excited for OpenSauce next weekend?
7 votes -
How Chicago solves its overheating problem
11 votes -
Why is desalination so difficult? An overview of seawater desalination: Removing salt to make drinkable water from the ocean.
15 votes -
One person was killed and several injured in a roller coaster accident at the Gröna Lund amusement park in Stockholm
22 votes -
At the University of California San Diego, there's the Shake Table; an earthquake simulator with the heaviest payload capacity in the world
8 votes -
Building a cathedral without science or mathematics: The engineering method explained
4 votes -
The insane engineering of MRI machines
3 votes -
The world’s longest suspension bridge is history in the making. After 2,000 years of political and technical hitches, Italy says it’s finally ready to connect Sicily to the mainland.
8 votes -
Explaining concrete while getting buried in it
4 votes -
Inside the lab that tests elevator free-falls – we sent Fred down the world's deepest elevator test shaft in Tytyri, Finland
2 votes -
The origins of precision
6 votes -
Engineering the world’s most complex office building, in Antwerp, Belgium
5 votes -
Why river channels shift and meander, and what tools engineers use to manage the process (Part 1)
2 votes -
LockPickingLawyer (literally) slaps open a MojoBox digital lockbox
22 votes -
Why some roadways are made of styrofoam
3 votes -
The insane engineering of the F-35B
5 votes -
China’s global mega-projects are falling apart
8 votes -
The insane scale of Europe's new mega-tunnel – Denmark is building a record-breaking tunnel to Germany
3 votes -
How do seatbelts work?
2 votes -
Team of Swedish engineers has finally developed the first crash test dummy designed on the body of the average woman
15 votes -
Denmark and Germany now building the world's longest immersed tunnel
8 votes -
Wooden bridge over a river in southern Norway collapsed early Monday – a similar nearby bridge, also made of glued laminated timber, collapsed in 2016
8 votes -
The nuts and bolts of siting and building power lines
6 votes -
Inside the first undersea roundabout – one of the world's most remote construction projects can be found on the Faroe Islands
7 votes -
How Disney's Tower of Terror works
8 votes -
Going nuclear to desalinate seawater
5 votes