Friday, July 31, 2015

Cool Chinese Prototype Makers images

A few nice chinese prototype makers images I found:


That Was the Year That Was – 1978
chinese prototype makers

Image by brizzle born and bred

1978 Following on from the oil crisis Japanese car Imports account for half the US import market. The first first ever Cellular Mobile Phone History of Mobile Phones is introduced in Illinois and Space Invaders appears in arcades Launching a Craze for Computer Video Games.


Sweden is the first country in the world to recognize the effect of aerosol sprays on the Ozone Layer and bans the sale. The Serial killer David Berkowitz, "Son of Sam," is convicted of murder after terrorizing New York for 12 months. 1978 is also a great year for movies with Grease summer opening on June 16th, Saturday Night Fever and Close Encounters of the Third Kind all showing in Movie Theatres around the world.


‘Britain was the Sick Man of Europe’. The unions and inflation were out of control. Our inefficient nationalised industries were an expensive disaster. The Labour governments of 1974-79 were complete flops.


The winter of discontent began in private industry before spreading to the public sector. The strikes seriously disrupted everyday life, causing problems including food shortages and widespread and frequent power cuts.


Prices


Average house price: £13,820


Milk (1 pint): 11p


Bread (800g loaf): 28p


Cigarettes (20): 58p


1978 – the year of over abundance of polyester flares and bouffant hair, Grease and Superman at the cinema and the invention of the Sony Walkman. Worldwide unemployment rises after several decades of near full employment.


The US Dollar plunges to record low against many European currencies. The US stops production of the Neutron Bomb. India faces it’s longest and worst monsoon season in modern times leaving two million homeless. Due to poor Cold War Relations United States bans sale of latest computer technology to Soviet Union.


The first online forum goes online forum – the CBBS – goes online in Chicago. One user at a time can post a message.


Argentina captain Daniel Passarella raises the World Cup Trophy as he is carried shoulder high by fans after Argentina had beaten Holland 3-1 in the 1978 World Cup Final. The Vatican has three popes: Pope Paul VI dies at age of 80, Pope John Paul I becomes Pope from August 26th and dies just 33 days later on September 28. Cardinal Karol Wojtyla then became Pope John Paul I shortly after.


Sweden became the first nation to ban aerosol sprays that are thought to damage earth’s protective ozone layer. Sony built its first prototype Walkman. Grease became the biggest grossing film and ‘You’re the One that I Want’ was number one for nine weeks. The Garfield cartoon strip was published for the first time.


In a year with more than its share of notable deaths there was also one very notable birth. A little before midnight on 25 July, Louise Brown, the world’s first IVF baby, was born.


The 5lb 12oz (2.61 kg) girl ushered in a fertility revolution that continues to this day.


The former Italian prime minister Aldo Moro was kidnapped and murdered by the Red Brigades; Pope John Paul, head of the Roman Catholic church for just over a month died, and Carl Bridgewater, a 13-year-old paper boy, was shot dead after disturbing a burglary in Staffordshire.


Georgi Markov, a Bulgarian dissident, was murdered in London with an umbrella that carried a poison pellet. In Jones town, Guyana, 918 people died in a mass suicide.


The musical world said goodbye to Keith Moon, Jacques Brel, and – most notoriously of all – Nancy Spungen, who was stabbed to death in the Chelsea hotel in New York by Sid Vicious of the Sex Pistols.


The Bee Gees continued to dominate the charts thanks to their soundtrack to the previous year’s Saturday Night Fever, although Boney M (Rivers of Babylon), Paul McCartney (Mull of Kintyre), and Kate Bush (Wuthering Heights) also found chart success. The Sex Pistols played their last gig together and Rod Stewart asked: Do Ya Think I’m Sexy?


Audiences headed to the cinema to watch Danny Zuko pursue Sandy Olsson in Grease, a goofy reporter from the planet Krypton pursue Lois Lane in Superman, and Turkish justice pursue an American drug smuggler in Midnight Express.


Those huddled around smaller screens saw Roman Polanksi flee to the UK and then France to escape the pursuit of US justice after admitting unlawful sexual intercourse with a 13-year-old girl. They also witnessed the TV debuts of, among other shows, Grange Hill and Dallas.


Ipswich Town beat Arsenal 1-0 to win the FA Cup.


Democratic government returned officially to Spain after a referendum approved a new constitution and the Nobel prize for literature was won by the Polish-born American writer Isaac Bashevis Singer.


Keith Moon of the Who Dies


On Sept. 7, 1978, the world lost one of its most unique children when Keith Moon left us, far too soon. Much more than simply ‘the drummer for the Who,’ Moon defiined the term “one of a kind” not only in his ability and style behind the drum kit, but in his utter irreverence and over the top way of life.


Moon was born on August 23, 1946. By the time he was in his teens, was already turning heads as a drummer. His joining the Who was nothing short of perfect. He added a much needed component to their equation, acting as the comic foil to the often very serious Pete Townshend. Moon’s drumming style seemed to border on pure chaos, but in reality he was always firmly in control behind the wheel.


And what a ride! Unlike the subtle, yet effective, approach of contemporaries like Charlie Watts or the rock solid Ringo Starr, Moon took an entirely different sensibility to the drum kit, inspiring countless future musicians along the way. Add in bassist extraordinaire John Entwistle, and the Who had themselves a rhythm section with the range of an orchestra.


Moon’s short, sweet life came to and end after a night of partying — and to be fair, a lifetime of testing his own limits. Ironically, his death was caused from an overdose of pills that were intended to combat his ongoing alcoholism. The medication was primarily a sedative, only a handful of which would have caused death. Police reports indicate that he took nearly a third of his 100 pill prescription. “It was a silly mistake,” said Pete Townshend in the 2007 documentary ‘Amazing Journey.’ “He just always took pills in handfuls, it was just a habit that he had.” Heminevrin, the prescribed drug in question, disabled his esophagus, which prevented him from vomiting, thus suffocating him. While Moon was no stranger to chemical intake, he never hit on hard drugs, prefering alcohol and pills to be his demon.


“He was never going to grow old gracefully,” said manager Bill Curbishley, “I don’t think he was destined to make old bones. I suppose he was designed in such a way to be remembered as he was.” Sadly, the band had just begun a new chapter in their career with the release of the ‘Who Are You’ album just weeks prior to Moon’s death. At the time, fans cryptically noted that on the cover, Moon is sitting on a chair that has the words ‘Not To Be Taken Away’ stenciled on it. A madman behind, and away from the drum kit, he didn’t earn the nickname ‘Moon The Loon’ for nothing. The tales of his crazed behavior is the stuff of legend, but 32 is far too young for him to have checked out.


Botham sets all-rounder record


Ian Botham’s test cricketing career was sprinkled with many records, some of which still stand: he five times bagged five wickets in an innings and scored a century in the same match (the next best is twice); he was the first test player ever to score a century and take 10 wickets in a match; and he is still the leading English test wicket taker, his total of 383 likely to have been far higher had his speed not been hampered in the latter part of his career with a back injury that eventually forced his retirement.


Ian Botham came to the game as a life force, his verve in stark contrast to many of those who batted with him – Boycott , Tavaré and Brearley for example. Having burst on the test scene aged 21, taking a more than creditable 5 – 74, and scoring 25 in his one knock, he was soon a fixture in the side.


In his second international season Botham showed himself as a true all rounder, in the Trent Bridge Test against Pakistan setting a record still not bettered in world cricket : he scored a dashing 108 (though it should be remembered that while immensely powerful Botham was also a very ‘correct’ batsman), and then devastated the visiting side with swing bowling that most found totally unplayable, taking 8 – 34.


Mike Brearley, his captain, called him a colossus; Wasim Bari the opposition captain described him as a magnificent cricketer, and so he certainly was.


Cambridge Sink In Boat Race


It began in 1829 (when on June 10 the Oxford boat won), and became an annual thing in 1856. Since then the varsity boat race has been part of our sporting calendar, though given (as has frequently been pointed out) the same two teams always get to the final, and that results that go against form are infrequent, it rarely offers fingernail biting tension.


But on six occasions in its history the boat race has managed to spring the surprise of a sinking, the first time in 1859, and the most recent in 1984. In 1912 both boats sank, forcing a re-rowing on the following Monday. For some reason the sinking that most stays in the memory was that in 1978. Choppy waters from a more than brisk sou’wester made life difficult for both crews. Past Chiswick Steps Oxford had a lead, but at about a boat length it was nowhere near as much as experts had expected, giving the Cambridge crew hope of a comeback over the last stages. But it was not to be.


Through Barnes Bridge and to observers the end for the Cambridge boat was all but inevitable. Their stroke realised first, or at least allowed himself to believe what he was seeing. He waved his arms above his head to signal the bitter end. For some reason while Oxford had sensibly fitted splash-boards to their boat, Cambridge had gambled that they could do without them.


They were wrong. Water from the rough surface of the Thames splashed over their boat and filled it.


TV crews had a field day. For the first time since 1951 we were being treated to the sight not just of muscular and brilliant young men – Hugh Laurie one of them in 1980 for example, and the ill-fated mountaineer Sandy Irvine in 1922 and 1923 – in a test of character, endurance and skill, but of those same chaps ignominiously sinking. Let’s face it, this was at least half the result most of us wanted.


Was it unsporting of Oxford to refuse a re-match? Not really, they were leading even with the extra weight of the splash-boards. And the Thames that March weekend was a pretty blustery spot. There were no drownings by the way.


First Episode of Grange Hill


In 1975 Phil Redmond failed to persuade ITV that his idea had legs; but the BBC was less short-sighted, and in early 1978 the first episode of a commissioned nine was broadcast. In the end the series ran for 30 years.


Kids’ TV at this time was rather cosy – nothing wrong with Blue Peter of course, but variety is the spice etc. Grange Hill was something that senior school pupils could identify with far better than variations on The Famous Five.


The programme eased its way in at first, but eventually storylines included rape, bullying including some of a very heavy face-slashing sort, and famously heroin addiction. The tough stuff was often balanced by comedic elements, though not always perhaps intentional – Rowland – that provided real dramatic contrast.


The show was a proving ground for acting and production talent over the years, with Todd Carty and Susan Tully both graduating to Eastenders and beyond; Anthony Minghella working as a script editor on it early in his career; even TV presenter and DJ Reggie Yates acting in it. Most significantly it launched the career of Redmond, who later developed Brookside and Hollyoaks, and helped rescue Emmerdale from oblivion with a controversial storyline, a technique not unknown in Grange Hill.


First Test Tube Baby Born


IVF – in vitro fertilisation – is now regarded as almost commonplace, though with many ethical issues still hotly debated. But when Louise Joy Brown was born, a healthy baby weighing 5lb 12oz, it was world news. She was the first so-called ‘test tube baby’.


Patrick Steptoe, a consultant gynaecologist, and Robert Edwards, a research physiologist, had been developing their techniques in the field of in vitro (in glass) fertilisation since the mid-1960s. They had found a successful way of fertilising eggs outside the womb, but once the egg had been returned to the mother the pregnancy would last a matter of weeks at best.


The medical team in this specific case decided to return the egg to the mother’s womb much earlier than previously, after two and a half days rather than twice that time, as they had done previously.


Lesley Brown, the 29-year-old mother-to-be, had been unable to conceive because her fallopian tubes were blocked. She and husband John, 10 years her senior, had agreed to the experimental procedure, desperate to have a child. The egg successfully embedded on Lesley’s uterus wall, as many had in other women undergoing the procedure before. But this time the egg stayed in place, grew, and the pregnancy continued with little or no concern until nine days before the expected due date, when Lesley Brown developed high blood pressure and it was decided to deliver the baby by caesarean section.


So at 11.47pm on July 15 1978 Louise Joy Brown came into the world, a gift for headline writers at the time, and a greater gift for her parents, who later had a second child, Natalie, by the same method.


Hitch Hikers Guide First Broadcast


In a 1970s radio comedy world of gentle topical sketch shows and long established panel games The Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams was finally something new: different, witty and very quirky indeed. This was perhaps surprising as like so many of those employed by the BBC then and now main actors Simon Jones (Arthur); Geoffrey McGivern (Ford), and Mark Wing-Davy (Zaphod); producers Simon Brett and Geoffrey Perkins; and of course writer Adams all had the seemingly obligatory Oxbridge background. This dominance was leavened in Hitch Hiker’s Guide by the calm suavity of the great Peter Jones as The Book and RSC actor Stephen Moore as Marvin the Paranoid Android.


The creators fought the BBC to allow their series to be different: dubbing it drama to get permission to record in stereo; and lobbying to avoid the usual BBC radio comedy studio audience requirement. The first episode was broadcast on March 8 1978, less than a week after the production was finally completed.


The logical lunacy of the plot was compellingly unreal; and some of the lines like “Time is an illusion; lunchtime doubly so,” (as in the olden days pubs used to close after lunch) became instant classics. Word of mouth quickly saw to it that the programme gained a big following, and eventually cult status.


Murder of Carl Bridgewater


It was a case that shocked the nation. On September 19 1978 13-year-old Carl Bridgewater was nearing the end of his afternoon paper round when he delivered a newspaper at Yew Tree Farm near Stourbridge in Staffordshire. As the occupants were disabled he, as previously, opened the back door to drop the paper on the kitchen table. On this occasion the elderly couple who lived in the farmhouse were absent. It appears he disturbed a burglary. Dragged to the sitting room he was murdered, shot in the head at point-blank range.


The cold-blooded nature of the execution-style killing horrified all who heard about it. The police were under great public and political pressure to find the killer or killers. But that pressure led to wrongdoing by at least one police officer involved in the investigation, and a gross miscarriage of justice.


Following another similar burglary in the area Staffordshire Police rounded up four men, and after lengthy and allegedly violent interrogation one of them, petty crook Patrick Molloy, having been shown a confession by another of the gang, confessed himself, though he retracted his confession as soon as he was given access to a solicitor; nevertheless it was central to the conviction of Molloy and his three associates.


Scientific investigation of that first confession years later showed conclusively it had been fabricated, something one officer involved in the interrogations, the late DC John Perkins, was found in his subsequent career to have done on at least three other occasions. After various failed appeals, the surviving three members of the so-called Bridgewater Four were released in February 1997 pending a further appeal, their convictions quashed in July of that year.


Who really killed Carl Bridgewater is not yet known. Incredibly and tragically fingerprint evidence pointing to the presence of someone other than the Bridgewater Four at the crime scene – prints found on Carl’s bike which was hidden out of sight at the farm – was ignored at the time.


Naomi James Globe Circling First


The 1970s was a decade when women in Britain not only secured greater rights, but also demonstrated by example the idiocy of sex discrimination. Most notably of course Margaret Thatcher became Prime Minister in 1979 ; but the year before Naomi James set a sporting record that made it harder for chauvinists to play the weaker sex card.


James, New Zealander by birth but a resident of Devon when she set her record, was in her mid-twenties when she learned to sail, but before she was 30 she had become the first woman to circumnavigate the globe solo (discounting the effort of a Pole who used the Panama Canal and sailed to and from the Canaries contrary to the accepted rules for the feat). She used a yacht borrowed from Chay Blyth , originally The Spirit of Cutty Sark but because of the sponsorship and support she received from The Daily Express renamed Express Crusader.


When she reached Dartmouth harbour just after 9am on June 8 1978 Mrs James – soon made Dame Naomi for her achievement – shaved two days off the record set by Sir Francis Chichester. Following the so-called clipper route she had been at sea for 272 days; had capsized; rounded Cape Horn; and lost her kitten overboard.


As a footnote, the techniques and technology of sailing changed rapidly over the next three decades: on February 7 2005 Ellen Macarthur took the record after a voyage of 71.5 days.


Sid Vicious Arrested for Murder


Sid Vicious epitomised the extreme wing of punk music. The Sex Pistols bass player who couldn’t play bass but became famous anyway for his antagonistic attitude; his self-harm; his nihilism; and most destructively of all his drug addiction.


By the autumn of 1978 Vicious had left the Sex Pistols . He and his girlfriend of well over a year Nancy Spungen, who some say introduced him to heroin, were living in New York, staying at the bohemian Chelsea Hotel. On the morning of October 12 1978 Vicious found his girlfriend in the bathroom; she had one stab wound to her abdomen, and had bled to death. Both had taken heroin the previous night; the knife that killed her was one bought by Sid.


The police who came to the hotel arrested the punk rock star. At various points he supposedly admitted knifing Nancy, but not having intended to kill her; and that somewhat improbably she had fallen on the blade. Others have put forward theories that a drug dealer delivering supplies had tried to rob the couple with Vicious out cold, and been disturbed by Nancy; or that another addict killed her.


In February 1979 Vicious died of a heroin overdose while on bail awaiting trial for the murder.


Accident, suicide, or even according to some murder, as his mother allegedly later confessed to the deliberate administration of the fatal dose? As with the murder of Nancy Spungen, his death remains a mystery, a sordid yet still tragic mystery. Nancy was 20 when she died; Vicious 21.


The Umbrella Murder


Georgi Markov was a man with many achievements to his name: he had been a successful novelist and short-story writer in his homeland of Bulgaria; after his defection in the 1970s several of his plays were staged in Britain; and he became a broadcaster with the BBC and Radio Free Europe among others. But it is for his mysterious death that he is best remembered.


On September 7 1978 Markov was waiting at a bus stop near Waterloo Bridge, en route to his job at the BBC, when he felt something sting his right thigh. Behind him a man was picking up an umbrella, apologising to Markov who thought little of the incident. The stranger hurried across the road to a taxi which whisked him away.


Later in the day Markov told a colleague or colleagues at the BBC what had happened. The pain in his leg had not gone away, and that evening a fever gripped him to such an extent that he was immediately hospitalised. Four days later he died.


An autopsy revealed a tiny – 1.5mm diameter – platinum and iridium sphere in his leg. The hollow object pierced by two holes had contained ricin, a poison with no known antidote. The ricin was kept in place by a coating over the holes, that coating designed to melt at body temperature. Markov had been assassinated, and in a very sophisticated manner.


It was probably no coincidence that September 7, the day of the attack on the writer, was the birthday of Bulgarian leader Todor Zhivkov. Markov in his broadcasts had attacked Zhivkov’s nepotistic activities and inauguration of a system of privileges for his cronies and supporters, the living example of Orwell’s Animal Farm phrase ‘All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.’ Tyrants and dictators are not good with criticism.


The crime now referred to as ‘the umbrella murder’ had not been solved at the time of writing, or at least nobody had been brought to justice for it: The Times among others has identified a claimed perpetrator. It is not even clear that an umbrella gun was used – in a subsequent attack on another defector in Paris no umbrella was carried by the putative assassin.


But until the full facts are known, Georgi Markov’s death will always be associated in the public consciousness with a deadly umbrella.


1978 The Yorkshire Ripper Murders


31 January – 18-year-old prostitute Helen Rytka is murdered in Huddersfield; she is believed to be the eighth victim of the Yorkshire Ripper.


It didn’t take a police dog very long to locate Helen Rytka’s body after Rita finally confessed to working as a prostitute and relayed the events of the night to the police. Ten minutes after the search of the timber yard in Great Northern Street began at 3:00 pm on Friday, February 3rd, her body had been located in a narrow space behind a pile of timber and a disused garage. She had been covered with a sheet of asbestos. Her clothes had been scattered over a wide area, one of her shoes was found twenty yards away. Her bra and black polo-neck jumper had been pushed up above her breasts, but other than her socks, all other clothing had been removed. There were three stab wounds to the chest, including indications of multiple stabs through the same wounds, and scratch marks on her chest.


26 March – The body of 21-year-old prostitute and mother-of-two Yvonne Pearson, who was last seen alive on 21 January, is found in Leeds. The Yorkshire Ripper is believed to have been responsible.


The police were left with several puzzles. To begin with, they found it inconceivable that her body would not have been discovered earlier by someone with her arm sticking out so obviously, unless it had been moved by a dog. As well a copy of the Daily Mirror, dated February 21st, exactly one month after the murder, was found under one of her arms, looking, apparently, deliberately placed. Peter Sutcliffe would later deny that he had returned to the body, continuing the mystery.


The second, and more important puzzle, was whether or not it was a Yorkshire Ripper killing. There were the massive head wounds, but Professor David Gee’s examination led him to believe they had been caused by a boulder, and not a hammer. There weren’t any stab wounds, but her clothing had been arranged in typical Ripper fashion, her bra and sweater above the breast, her other clothing dragged down. At first, the police discounted it as a Ripper killing, but later it was included in his catalogue of murders and attacks.


16 May – 40-year-old prostitute Vera Millward is found stabbed to death in the grounds of the Manchester Royal Infirmary Hospital; she is believed to have been the tenth woman to die at the hands of the Yorkshire Ripper. Both of the victims killed outside Yorkshire have been killed in Manchester.


The tire tracks, with their common denominators of India Autoway cross-ply tires with a track width of 4′ 2", were consistent with those found at the Richardson murder scene and at the Moore attack scene. This, coupled with the injuries the victim received, was convincing evidence that the Yorkshire Ripper had crossed the Pennines again and killed in Manchester for the second time.


Vera Millward was the last known attack of Peter Sutcliffe’s in 1978 and was also the last murder or attack on a prostitute. The known attacks would not resume until April 1979. When they did, they took on an even more sinister pattern (and similar to his earliest attacks). Other than in Sutcliffe’s mind, the victims would not be prostitutes, or even women who were in or near red-light areas. He would not try to pick them up in his car, nor, other than the first in the new series, would he engage them in conversation. No woman, no matter where in West Yorkshire, was safe from his trawling for a victim.


1978 Timeline


11 January – A North Sea storm surge ruins four piers in the UK: Herne Bay, Margate, Hunstanton and Skegness.


16 January – The firefighters strike ends after three months when fire crews accept an offer of a 10% pay rise and reduced working hours.


18 January – The European Court of Human Rights finds the United Kingdom government guilty of mistreating prisoners in Northern Ireland, but not guilty of torture.


30 January – Opposition leader Margaret Thatcher says that many Britons fear being "swamped by people with a different culture".


31 January – 18-year-old prostitute Helen Rytka is murdered in Huddersfield; she is believed to be the eighth victim of the Yorkshire Ripper.


9 February – Gordon McQueen, 25-year-old Scotland central defender, becomes Britain’s first £500,000 footballer in a transfer from Leeds United to Manchester United.


13 February – Anna Ford becomes the first female newsreader on ITN.


17 February – Inflation has fallen to 9.9% – the first time since 1973 that it has been in single figures.


18 February – Twenty suspects arrested in connection with the Provisional Irish Republican Army La Mon restaurant bombing in County Down which had killed 12 people and injured 30.


20 February – Severe blizzards hit the south west of England.


8 March – The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy first broadcast by BBC Radio 4.


26 March – The body of 21-year-old prostitute and mother-of-two Yvonne Pearson, who was last seen alive on 21 January, is found in Leeds. The Yorkshire Ripper is believed to have been responsible.


30 March – Conservative Party recruit advertising agency Saatchi & Saatchi to revamp their image.


April – First official naturist beach opens at Fairlight Glen in Covehurst Bay near Hastings.


3 April – Permanent radio broadcasts of proceedings in the House of Commons begin.


6 April – State Earnings-Related Pension Scheme introduced.


23 April – Nottingham Forest win the Football League First Division title for the first time in their history. Their manager Brian Clough, who guided their East Midlands rivals Derby County to the title six years ago, is only the second manager in history to lead two different clubs to top division title glory; the other was the late Herbert Chapman with Huddersfield Town and Arsenal during the interwar years.


1 May – May Day becomes a bank holiday for the first time.


6 May – Ipswich Town win the FA Cup for the first time by beating Arsenal 1–0 in the Wembley final.


10 May – Liverpool F.C. retain the European Cup with a 1–0 win over Club Brugge K.V., the Belgian champions, at Wembley Stadium.


16 May – 40-year-old prostitute Vera Millward is found stabbed to death in the grounds of the Manchester Royal Infirmary Hospital; she is believed to have been the tenth woman to die at the hands of the Yorkshire Ripper. Both of the victims killed outside Yorkshire have been killed in Manchester.


25 May – Liberal Party leader David Steel announces that the Lib-Lab pact will be dissolved at the end of the current Parliamentary session by mutual consent, leaving Britain with a minority Labour government.


31 May – Labour wins the Hamilton by-election, retaining it in the face of a strong challenge from the Scottish National Party in that seat.


1 June – William Stern is declared bankrupt with debts of £118 million, the largest bankruptcy in British history at the time.


3 June – Freddie Laker is knighted.


8 June – Naomi James becomes the first woman to sail around the world single-handedly.


17 June – Media reports suggest that a general election will be held this autumn as the minority government led by James Callaghan and Labour appears to be nearing the end of its duration. Callaghan’s chances of an election win are now looking brighter than they were four months ago, as the 11-point Conservative lead has evaporated.


19 June – Cricketer Ian Botham becomes the first man in the history of the game to score a century and take eight wickets in one innings of a Test match.


21 June – An outbreak of shooting between Provisional IRA members and the British Army leaves one civilian and three IRA men dead.


The Andrew Lloyd Webber musical Evita opens at the Prince Edward Theatre in London.


6 July – Taunton train fire: eleven people killed in worst rail accident since Hither Green rail crash in 1967.


7 July – The Solomon Islands become independent from the United Kingdom.


25 July – Louise Brown becomes the world’s first human born from in vitro fertilisation, in Oldham.


Motability, a charity which provides cars to disabled people, founded.


20 August – Gunmen open fire on an Israeli El Al airline bus in London.


25 August – U.S. Army Sergeant Walter Robinson "walks" across the English Channel in 11 hours 30 minutes, using home-made water shoes.


7 September – Prime Minister James Callaghan announces that he will not call a general election for this autumn, and faces accusations from Tory leader Margaret Thatcher and Liberal leader David Steel of "running scared", in spite of many opinion polls showing that Labour (currently a minority government) could win an election now with a majority. Callaghan also announces that the Lib-Lab pact, formed 18 months ago when the government lost its majority, has reached its end.


Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov is stabbed with a poison-tipped umbrella as he walks across Waterloo Bridge, London, probably on orders of Bulgarian intelligence; he dies 4 days later.


15 September – German terrorist Astrid Proll arrested in London.


19 September – British Police launch a massive murder hunt, following the discovery of the dead body of newspaper boy Carl Bridgewater (13) at a farmhouse near Kingswinford in the West Midlands. Carl is believed to have been shot dead after disturbing a burglary at the property.


26 September – 23 Ford car plants are closed across Britain due to strikes.


17 October – A cull of Grey seals in the Orkney and Western Islands reduced after a public outcry.


23 October – The government announces plans for a new single exam to replace O Levels and CSEs.


25 October – A ceremony marks the completion of Liverpool Cathedral, for which the foundation stone was laid in 1904.


27 October – Four people die and four others are wounded in a shooting spree which began in a residential street in West Bromwich and ends at a petrol station some 20 miles away in

Nuneaton.


28 October – Barry Williams, aged 36, is arrested in Derbyshire and charged with yesterday’s shootings following a high-speed police chase.


3 November – Dominica gains its independence from the United Kingdom.


4 November – Many British bakeries impose bread rationing after a baker’s strike led to panic buying of bread.


5 November – Rioters sack the British Embassy in Tehran.


10 November – Panic buying of bread stops as most bakers go back to work.


18 November – The British leg of the 1978 Kangaroo tour concludes with Australia winning the Ashes series by defeating Great Britain in the third and deciding Test match in Leeds.


20 November – Buckingham Palace announces that The Prince Andrew is to join the Royal Navy.


23 November – Pollyanna’s nightclub in Birmingham is forced to lift its ban on black and Chinese revellers, after a one-year investigation by the Commission for Racial Equality concludes that the nightclub’s entry policy was racist.


29 November – Viv Anderson, the 22-year-old Nottingham Forest defender, becomes England’s first black international footballer when he appears in 1–0 friendly win over Czechoslovakia at Wembley Stadium – six months after he became the first black player to feature in an English league championship winning team and was also on the winning side in the final of the Football League Cup.


30 November – An industrial dispute closes down The Times newspaper (until 12 November 1979).


10 December – Peter D. Mitchell wins the Nobel Prize in Chemistry "for his contribution to the understanding of biological energy transfer through the formulation of the chemiosmotic theory".


14 December – The Labour minority government survives a vote of confidence. Inflation reaches a six-year low of 8.3%, although unemployment is at a postwar high of 1,500,000.


West Midlands motorcycle manufacturer Norton Villiers Triumph is liquidated.


Concrete Cows first erected in Milton Keynes.


Financially troubled car-maker Chrysler sells its European operations, including the former Rootes Group factories in Britain, to French carmaker Peugeot.


Anna Ford became the first female newsreader on ITN.


First official UK naturist beach opened at Fairlight Glen in Covehurst Bay near Hastings.


1978 in British music


14 January – The Sex Pistols play their final show (until a reunion in 1996).


24 January – Wings’ "Mull of Kintyre" makes No.1 for its ninth (and final) week – becoming the biggest-selling single in UK history to this point.


25 January – Electric Light Orchestra kick off their Out of the Blue world tour in Honolulu, Hawaii.


11 March – Kate Bush becomes the first female solo artist to reach number one in the UK charts with a self-written song ("Wuthering Heights").


25 May – The Who play their last show with Keith Moon.


30 July – Thin Lizzy officially announces that Gary Moore has replaced Brian Robertson on guitar.


18 August – The Who release their eighth studio Who Are You. It is The Who’s last album with Keith Moon as the drummer; Moon died twenty days after the release of this album.


27 November – Def Leppard’s permanent drummer Rick Allen joins the band at the age of 15.


The Bee Gees’ Saturday Night Fever becomes the biggest-selling album of all time (until overtaken in 1983).


Operatic contralto Helen Watts is awarded the CBE.


Multitone Records is founded by Pranil Gohil and specializing in bhangra style music.


Number one singles


"Mull of Kintyre" / "Girls’ School" – Wings

"Uptown Top Ranking" – Althea & Donna

"Figaro" – Brotherhood of Man

"Take a Chance on Me" – ABBA

"Wuthering Heights" – Kate Bush

"Matchstalk Men and Matchstalk Cats and Dogs" – Brian and Michael

"Night Fever" – Bee Gees

"Rivers of Babylon" – Boney M

"You’re the One That I Want" – John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John

"Three Times a Lady" – The Commodores

"Dreadlock Holiday" – 10cc

"Summer Nights" – John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John

"Rat Trap" – The Boomtown Rats

"Da Ya Think I’m Sexy?" – Rod Stewart

"Mary’s Boy Child – Oh My Lord" – Boney M


Television and Film


Anna Ford became the first female newsreader on ITN.


The Good Life, The Sweeny and Opportunity Knocks come to an end.


Grange Hill, Dallas and Battlestar Galactica begin.


20 January – The first of ITV’s occasional An Audience With programmes is aired. The first presenter is Jasper Carrott.


27 January – In an interview for Granada Television’s World in Action programme, Leader of the Opposition Margaret Thatcher remarks, "people are really rather afraid that this country might be rather swamped by people with a different culture". Critics regard the comment as a veiled reference to people of colour, thus pandering to xenophobia and reactionary sentiment.


However, Thatcher receives 10,000 letters thanking her for raising the subject and the Conservatives gain a lead against Labour in the opinion polls.


22 February – The Police appear in a television commercial for Wrigley’s chewing gum.


24 February – 7 April – The BBC airs Going Straight. The sitcom is a direct spin-off from Porridge, starring Ronnie Barker as Norman Stanley Fletcher, newly released from the fictional Slade Prison where Porridge had been set. The programme airs for one series.


7 March – 11 April – Dennis Potter’s ground-breaking drama serial Pennies From Heaven airs on BBC1.


24 May – The iconic skateboarding duck item first airs on BBC TV’s Nationwide.


13 July – The original series of Top Gear begins airing on BBC2 having started as a locally produced programme at BBC Pebble Mill the previous year.


10 September – Return of the Saint. The Saint returns with a new voice actor named Ian Ogilvy and introducing the Jaguar XJ-S to take over the Volvo P1800 from the Saint 1962 TV series. The first episode is The Judas Game.


17 October – James Burke’s history of science series Connections first airs on BBC.


6 November – ITV airs the first episode of Edward & Mrs.Simpson, a seven-part British television series that dramatises the events leading to the 1936 abdication of King Edward VIII of the United Kingdom, who gave up his throne to marry the twice-divorced American Wallis Simpson.


23 November – 15th anniversary of the first episode of science fiction series Doctor Who.


BBC1


2 January – Blake’s 7 (1978–1981)

8 January – All Creatures Great and Small (1978–1990)

8 February – Grange Hill (1978–2008)

10 April – Cheggers Plays Pop (1978–1986)


BBC2


11 March – Something Else (1978–1982)

10 November – Butterflies (1978–1983, 2000)


ITV


14 January – The South Bank Show (1978–2010, 2012-present)

5 June – Strangers (1978–1982)

8 July – Saturday Banana (1978)

29 July – 3-2-1 (1978–1988)

10 September – Return of the Saint (1978–1979)



(Source from China rapid prototype company blog)

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

HLH Prototypes Offering CNC Precision Machining Tools At Affordable Prices

HLH Prototypes Offering CNC Precision Machining Tools At Affordable Costs

Whether hunting for precision CNC machining and turning, vacuum casting or reaction injection molding, SLA and SLS 3D printing, and hand sculpture plus fast and production tooling or sheet metal function, HLH Prototypes has the encounter and expertise to …
Read far more on Machine Tools On the internet (press release)


Avnet Electronics Marketing Leverages Open Supply Prototyping Platform in New

By Liz McMillan. The speed of application modifications in expanding and huge scale speedy-paced DevOps environments presents a challenge for continuous testing. … In his session at DevOps Summit, Marc Hornbeek, Sr. Solutions Architect of DevOps continuous test …
Read a lot more on SYS-CON Media (press release)


Alpha Software program Supports the Mobile Enterprise Workforce with New Tablet

“Alpha Computer software is usually looking ahead to the subsequent big disruptor that will transform enterprise – whether or not supporting offline mobile capability, prototyping for new devices like the Apple Watch, or, most lately, the enterprise push to use tablets in …
Read more on SYS-CON Media (press release)



(Source from China rapid prototype company blog)

Sunday, July 26, 2015

Lastest Cnc Machining Prototype China News

Course Gives Hands-On Learning for Speedy-Prototyping Strategies

Discussion and lab perform covers topics including 3D printing, laser cutting of polymers, waterjet cutting and CNC milling for metals and polymers, and thermoforming. Attendees will also learn about foam cutting, silicone molding, and using a CNC router …
Read far more on Machine Design


Require a prototype component? Send an e mail to the 3-D printer

The device &quotsprays&quot plastic powder in layers to create a three-D part. Every single layer is hardened by lasers. The components can be machined and tested below pressure. The old way of producing prototype parts, such as intake and exhaust manifolds — usually by hand …
Read much more on Automotive News



(Source from China rapid prototype company blog)

Friday, July 24, 2015

Cool Prototype Maker In China photos

Some cool prototype maker in china images:


IMG_1880
prototype maker in china

Image by rose_symotiuk


IMG_1832
prototype maker in china

Image by rose_symotiuk



(Source from China rapid prototype company blog)

Sony requires flight with drone joint venture - CNET

Sony takes flight with drone joint venture – CNET

As component of its push into new companies, Sony&#39s mobile division teams up with robotics business ZMP to kind a new business that will offer you drone-based services to organization consumers. by Don Reisinger &middot @donreisinger … Aerosense will use drones — like …
Read more on CNET


A Journalist and an Architect Investigate China&#39s Sway More than Africa

At the Storefront for Art and Architecture, a picture series accompanied by a projected quick documentary make up a certain picture of alarmingly fast urbanization and development in Facing East: Chinese Urbanism in Africa. Curated and pieced collectively by …
Study a lot more on Hyperallergic


HLH Prototypes Offering High quality Injection Molding Machining Solutions At Cost

Typically employed for fast prototyping and utilized for low volume production runs, a single of the leading prototyping businesses in China, HLH Prototypes supplies injection molded parts in less than two weeks. Hence, the clients are relieved from waiting for …
Read much more on Virtual-Approach Magazine (press release) (registration) (weblog)



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Thursday, July 23, 2015

Lastest Prototyping Quote News

download this gun
prototyping quote

Image by Electric-Eye
thepiratebay.sx/torrent/8449468/Liberator_-_1st_3D_Prin…


wiki weapons, DEFCAD, Defense Distributed


Apparently a minimally functional firearm can now be printed on a 3D printer.

The file is just more than two MB. The format is STL, a typical file utilised in 3D Printing.


The Liberator, as this has been named, could not be considerably correct now. But if we anticipate the pace of technologies for auto-fabrication to come close to the pace of technological improvement for connected technologies, then I feel we need to have to conclude that the gun handle debate is now virtually moot.


This is an image of 3D shape files that had been released into the public domain. This image is also in the public domain. I wish this had been an selection for labeling uploads to Flickr, alternatively of possessing to choose which creative commons license best fit.


as posted by DakotaSmith on The Pirate Bay:

The Defense Distributed &quotLiberator&quot .380 single shot pistol is a totally 3D-printable firearm.


In abject violation of the Second Amendment, American lawmakers have for decades willfully, intentionally, and traitorously violated their Oaths of Workplace. In particular, they have destroyed the Second Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which reads:


&quotA effectively regulated Militia, getting essential to the security of a cost-free State, the correct of the individuals to hold and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.&quot


The Militia is not the National Guard. As is clear from any information of history, the Militia is any capable-bodied citizen.


The intent of the Second Amendment is not to shield hunting nor self-defense. It is to empower the governed to overthrow the government should it turn out to be tyrannical.


There is no question as to this intent, and any argument to the contrary betrays only a shocking ignorance on the component of the individual creating the argument.


Over the course of the 20th Century, successive generations of would-be tyrants masquerading as Congressmen, Senators, Presidents, and Judges have sought to pull the teeth of the Second Amendment. Nowadays, in abject violation of it, the United States has more than 20,000 victim disarmament laws.


We can no longer defend ourselves: neither from tyrants in government, nor terrorists, nor street thugs.


This is about to modify.


The Liberator is the first 3D-printable gun. You may possibly freely download these plans and print your personal. You will have obtainable to you a gun capable of firing a .380 caliber bullet.


And no 1 — not your next door neighbor, nor your mayor, nor your Congressman — will know that you have it.


This is the first in what will grow to be an avalanche of undetectable, untraceable, easy-to-manufacture weapons that will turn the tables on evil-doers the globe over.


Share and enjoy.


finish quote.


I should in addition note for clarity that the very best examination of the language of the Second Amendment I am conscious of was written by J. Neil Schulman who sought the best expert on grammar and English usage he could find to parse the text of ammendment 2.

Here’s a link to that:


www.constitution.org/2ll/schol/2amd_grammar.htm


Moreover, the meaning is elucidated by equivalent amendments to state constitutions with varying, but related wording, several have been written at a point in history quite close to the drafting of the Ammendments to the US constitution.


But all that is moot now. Getting proper did not ever neccisarily count for considerably. All words on paper diminish in importance when they compete for focus with what you can in fact do, I guess.


A most-wanted craftsman

On a pleasant spring day at a studio in west London that is crammed with leather curiosities, Leather International catches up with Bill Amberg ahead of he leaves for his other studio in Somerset, to talk about his brand&#39s exclusive leather goods and big …
Read much more on Leather International


STEM talent: The future of the UK manufacturing sector

Product designers and engineers can now upload 3D CAD models of their custom prototypes or low-volume production parts and get an automated quote with true-time pricing and design for manufacturability evaluation inside hours. As soon as authorized, they&nbsp…
Read far more on ITProPortal


Have an Invention? Here&#39s How to Make It Into an Actual Item. (Infographic)

Turning an notion into a reality can call for a substantial upfront investment – figuring out how to patent an invention, make a prototype and then find a manufacturer to truly bring that prototype to market typically doesn&#39t come cheap. That&#39s why it …
Study far more on Entrepreneur



(Source from China rapid prototype company blog)

Monday, July 20, 2015

A Chinese Monetary Implosion May possibly Spur Possibilities - Here Are 4 Stocks to ...

A Chinese Economic Implosion May possibly Spur Opportunities – Right here Are four Stocks to

Jul 14, 2015 (ACCESSWIRE via COMTEX) — WINDSOR, ON / ACCESSWIRE / July 14, 2015 / The Wealthy Biotech Trader, an Investment Newsletter focused on showing each day Investors new opportunities in swiftly expanding, tiny-recognized, Biotech stocks producing news …
Read far more on MarketWatch


&#39Maker Movement&#39 promises to aid U.S. declare independence from Chinese goods

“Just 5 years ago, fast prototyping was a technology reserved for only the very best-funded engineering departments of corporate America. Bringing speedy prototyping to early education is the missing link in our education program in order to recapture our&nbsp…
Read much more on Washington Instances



(Source from China rapid prototype company blog)

Saturday, July 18, 2015

This is the Youxia A single, a new Electric Supercar from China - CarNewsChina.com

This is the Youxia A single, a new Electric Supercar from China – CarNewsChina.com

The firm claims its key staff consists of ex-employees from all sorts of auto and high-tech organizations, which includes GM, SAIC (Shanghai Auto), Geely, Faurecia, Cisco, Baidu, and OPPO (a flash disk maker). Youxia also says they can hold charges low by utilizing …
Read far more on CarNewsChina


Narayana Murthy&#39s MIT-fantasy is a no-brainer. India&#39s innovation capacity

India&#39s share to the $ 1.six trillion international gross expenditure on R&ampD (GERD) in PPP terms is only 3 %, which is five times decrease than that of China, that also after a purported annual development of 20 per cent. In comparison, according to OECD estimates …
Study a lot more on Firstpost



(Source from China rapid prototype company blog)

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Lastest Prototype Made In China News

iPhone 6S release date rumours &amp new characteristics: New leaked iPhone 6S photos

The pictures allegedly came from a supply from a Chinese provide chain, and appear to reveal that the new smartphone will be .2mm thicker. That lines up with numerous other rumours about the introduction of a …. Apple has detailed a way to use a new …
Study a lot more on Macworld UK


Pre-Market Stocks Roundup: EQT (NYSE:EQT), HD Provide Holdings (NASDAQ

Initial operate is predictable to involve Technologies Solutions supplied by Ballard to help in the design and integration of a fuel cell power module into TRC tram gear, with the aim of powering a GTV prototype in 2016. TRC was established in 1881 as …
Read far more on wsnewspublishers


Excellent Morning!

Very good morning, it&#39s Wednesday, July 15, the 196th day of 2015. There are 169 days left in the year. We&#39ll start off the day in the mid-70s, and we&#39re expecting afternoon highs in the mid-90s under a sunny sky. Lows overnight ought to be in the mid-70s.
Read far more on KWTX



(Source from China rapid prototype company blog)

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Lastest Prototype Created In China News

Right now in History – Elkhart Truth

On July 15, 1971, President Richard Nixon delivered a televised address in which he announced that he had accepted an invitation to go to the Folks&#39s Republic of China. On this date: In 1799, French soldiers in Egypt discovered the Rosetta Stone …
Read much more on The Elkhart Truth


Intel delays 10 nanometer, adjusts solution cycles – Portland Business Journal

As Intel performs to continue to shrink its technologies although also boosting capabilities — the main tenants of Moore&#39s Law— the organization is acknowledging that the time amongst items is longer than previously anticipated. CEO Brian Krzanich told …
Read much more on Portland Company Journal (weblog)


Newest Chinese high-speed train enters service | International Railway Journal

… for the Chinese industry. David Briginshaw appears at the best-of-the-range 350km/h train now below delivery, a 250km/h EMU which is becoming tested, and a prototype sleeping-auto train. … Bombardier China The fleet was initially intended to be …
Read far more on International Railway Journal


Pak-China relations: the danger zone – Day-to-day Occasions

Europe is the prototype for this idea of collaboration. If there is … “The magnanimity of China in vetoing India&#39s move to hold Pakistan accountable for the release of Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi (commander of the banned organisation, Lashkar-e-Tayyaba …
Study far more on Daily Instances



(Source from China rapid prototype company blog)

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Spin Casting And Speedy Prototype Technologies


Spin Casting And Speedy Prototype Technology

Spin Casting has brought rapid prototype technologies to a totally distinct level of production efficiency. With the capability of creating prototypes in diverse metals spin casting has offered businesses options by no means before seasoned in rapid prototype methods. Now with spin casting technology fragile, functional metal parts can be manufactured with rapid prototype models.


Spin casting can reduce production occasions by a considerable percentage and have prototypes accessible for testing the very same day as production. The spin casting technologies also eliminates the want for considerable post production tooling and refinishing. Spin casting technologies is also effortless to use with all the custom attributes needed to generate even complicated design specifications.


Spin Casting Fabrication Metals


Spin casting technologies can accommodate a quantity of metals to make fine quality prototypes that are fully functional and developed according to design and style specifications. Making use of rubber molds a variety of metals can be used with spin casting technology to create a assortment of completed items. Spin casting can generate prototypes consisting of zinc alloys which are a favorite casting metal, as these metals can accept a variety of surface finishing compounds. These alloys are generally utilised in spin casting to replace aluminum, copper and low-grade steel. Spin casting prototypes are appropriate for electroplating to produce the appearance of brass, silver or gold.


Spin casting can also make prototypes in numerous other varieties of materials as nicely. Making use of polyurethane, polyester, epoxy or wax spin casting can generate a number of goods in a selection of components. Comparing the production cost of spin casting and standard tooling has spin casting as the most cost successful strategy of production. Spin casting can generate the exact same merchandise as traditional tooling and molds but for a fraction of the cost. With spin casting an additional function is be in a position to handle the quantity of things manufactured. With traditional manufacturing, single or modest item orders are normally far more pricey with costs decreasing as unit numbers improve. But spin casting charges remain stable all through the production method regardless of the number of things made making it very cost efficient.


Spin Casting Fabrication Actions


Spin casting needs the use of molds that are created from a silicone based material and can accommodate the original parts to form precise specifics of the models utilized in production. When ready the spin casting molds are hardened and the models are removed leaving detailed molds that will be utilized for prototype production. With spin casting temperatures reaching around 400C air vents are cut into molds to allow gases to escape throughout the production process. Spin casting uses centrifugal force to inject fabrication material into molds ensuring all details of the model are reproduced in the prototype. Spin casting makes it possible for for full adjustment of production speeds, stress controls and cycle instances. Prototypes produced by spin casting are precision items that will meet all design and style specifications and tolerances.


Spin casting cuts the time required to create rapid prototype by a considerable amount and will have prototypes accessible for the testing phase in a shorter amount of time. Spin casting technology can support post production finishing by becoming capable to use a wide range of supplies. Spin casting methods are effortless to use, price successful and a time conserving technologies for the production of fast prototypes.




We are offering professional precise fast manufacturing,prototype rapid,3d prototype, plastic prototype,3d prototyping,3d fast prototyping,plastic prototyping,rapid tooling and speedy prototype in China. We look forward to participating at the good results of your next project.



Find A lot more Speedy Prototype Rates Articles



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Friday, July 10, 2015

Good Chinese Prototype Manufacturers pictures

Check out these chinese prototype manufacturers images:


Ground effect vehicle A-90 Orlyonok. Экраноплан “Орлёнок”
chinese prototype manufacturers

Image by Peer.Gynt

A ground effect vehicle (GEV) is one that attains level flight near the surface of the Earth, made possible by a cushion of high-pressure air created by the aerodynamic interaction between the wings and the surface known as ground effect. Also known as a wing-in-ground-effect (WIG) vehicle, flarecraft, sea skimmer, ekranoplan, or wing-in-surface-effect ship (WISE), a GEV can be seen as a transition between a hovercraft and an aircraft. The International Maritime Organization (IMO) has classified the GEV as a ship.[1] A GEV differs from an aircraft in that it cannot operate without ground effect, so its operating height is limited relative to its wingspan.


In recent years a large number of different GEV types have evolved for both civilian and military use. However, these craft are not in wide use.

History

Small numbers of experimental vehicles were built in Scandinavia just before World War II. By the 1960s, the technology started to improve, in large part due to the independent contributions of Rostislav Alexeev in the Soviet Union[2] and German Alexander Lippisch, working in the United States. Alexeev worked from his background as a ship designer whereas Lippisch worked from his own background as an aeronautical engineer. The influence of Alexeev and Lippisch is still noticeable in most GEV vehicles seen today.


The Soviet Central Hydrofoil Design Bureau (CHDB), led by Alexeev, was the center of ground-effect craft development in the USSR; in Russian, the vehicle came to be known as an ekranoplan (Russian: экранопла́н, French: ecran "screen" + Russian: plan "plane", from эффект экрана effekt ekrana). The military potential for such a craft was soon recognised and Alexeev received support and financial resources from Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev.


Some manned and unmanned prototypes were built, ranging up to eight tons in displacement. This led to the development of the "Caspian Sea Monster", a 550-ton military ekranoplan.[3] Although it was designed to travel a maximum of 3 m (9.8 ft) above the sea, it was found to be most efficient at 20 m (66 ft), reaching a top speed of 300 kn (350 mph; 560 km/h) (400 kn (460 mph; 740 km/h) in research flight).


The Soviet ekranoplan program continued with the support of Minister of Defense Dmitri Ustinov. It produced the most successful ekranoplan so far, the 125-ton A-90 Orlyonok. These craft were originally developed as very high-speed military transports, and were based mostly on the shores of the Caspian Sea and Black Sea. The Soviet Navy ordered 120 Orlyonok-class ekranoplans. But this figure was later reduced to fewer than thirty vehicles, with planned deployment mainly in the Black Sea and Baltic Sea fleets.


A few Orlyonoks served with the Soviet Navy from 1979 to 1992. In 1987, the 400-ton Lun-class ekranoplan was built as a missile launcher. A second Lun, renamed Spasatel, was laid down as a rescue vessel, but was never finished.


Minister Ustinov died in 1985, and the new Minister of Defense, Marshal Sokolov, effectively stopped the funding for the program. Only three operational Orlyonok-class ekranoplans (with revised hull design) and one Lun-class ekranoplan remained at a naval base near Kaspiysk.


The two major problems that the Soviet ekranoplans faced were poor longitudinal stability and a need for reliable navigation.


Since the fall of the Soviet Union, ekranoplans have been produced by the Volga Shipyard[4] in Nizhniy Novgorod.


GEV developed since the 1980s have been primarily smaller craft designed for the recreational and civilian ferry markets. Germany, Russia, and the United States have provided most of the momentum with some development in Australia, China, Japan, and Taiwan. In these countries, small craft up to ten seats have been designed and built. Other larger designs as ferries and heavy transports have been proposed, though none have gone on to further development.


After the collapse of the Soviet Union, smaller ekranoplans for non-military use have been under development. The CHDB had already developed the eight-seat Volga-2 in 1985, and Technologies and Transport developed a smaller version by the name of Amphistar.


In Germany, Lippisch was asked to build a very fast boat for Mr. Collins from Collins Radio Company in the USA. He developed the X-112, a revolutionary design with reversed delta wing and T-tail. This design proved to be stable and efficient in ground effect and even though it was successfully tested, Collins decided to stop the project and sold the patents to a German company called Rhein Flugzeugbau (RFB) which further developed the model.


Tandem flarecraftHanno Fischer took over the works from RFB and created his own company called Fischer Flugmechanik. Their two-seat Airfisch 3 and their later model that seats 6 passengers have been a successful design. This craft, the FS-8, was to be produced by a Singapore-Australian joint venture called Flightship.[5] The company no longer exists, and the ship is out of production. An ongoing research project in collaboration with the university of Duisburg-Essen, involves the development of the Hoverwing.[6]


Günther Jörg in Germany, who had also been working on Alexeev’s first designs, and was familiar with the challenges of GEV design, developed a GEV with two wings in a tandem arrangement, the Jörg-II. It was the third, manned, tandem airfoil boat,named "Skimmerfoil", which was developed during his consultancy period in South Africa. It was a simple and low-cost design, but has not been produced to date. The consultancy of Dipl. Ing. Günther Jörg was founded with a fundamental knowledge of Wing in Ground Effect physics, as well as results of fundamental tests under different conditions and designs that began in 1960. In 1984, Günther Jörg received the "PHILIP MORRIS AWARD". In 1987, the Botec Company was founded

Current development

A number of companies have been heavily lobbying governments for development funding to pursue research and development of GEV craft exceeding 500 tonnes. The current worldwide trend in the decline in military research and development spending since the end of the Cold War era has not been conducive to funding the development of GEV craft. The perceived development risk is very high due to the untested nature of the technology and the uncertainties in the development process, operational costs and performance outcomes. GEVs have been suggested as the solution to a number of possible operational roles, with heavy lift being the most appealing attributes. GEVs have been proposed as an alternate to the very large aircraft needed to fulfill these transportation goals. The US Air Force report "Airlift 2025"[citation needed] looked at using GEVs as heavy-lift platforms with the capabilities of insertion into remote locations, long range and good survivability. In the report, GEVs were cited as inappropriate for the intended use as there was a need for another method of transport from the coast to the required destination. Another study by the US Navy’s "Strategic Studies Group XVI"[citation needed] also looked at the possibility of using small GEVs as insertion and extraction craft or naval gunfire teams. Also discussed were the advantages of using WIG craft for transoceanic cargo craft, where their increased speed would reduce resupply times by at least 60%.


Civilian roles for GEVs have been heavily promoted at a number of conferences held since 1993. GEVs have been suggested as recreational craft, small to large ferries and large transport craft. A number of small companies have emerged designing and constructing GEVs for these purposes. A number of large Russian and US companies have gone as far as the preliminary design of a number of concept GEVs mainly for the transport and heavy lift market.


Theoretical research into GEVs’ aerodynamics, ground effect and WIG craft stability has proceeded at a number of research centres. Performance enhancement of takeoff and landing distances as well as methods to increase sea state limitations have been analysed on prototypes and with model tests. Research continues into the determination of the most efficient platform configuration.


Besides the development of appropriate design and structural configuration, special automatic control systems and navigation systems are also being developed. These include special altimeters with high accuracy for small altitude measurements and also lesser dependence on weather conditions. After extensive research and experimentation, it has been shown that "phase radio-altimeters" are most suitable for such applications as compared to laser, isotropic or ultrasonic altimeters.[7]


Even today R&D activities are being carried out for such vehicles in several countries, including Russia, USA, China, Germany, UK and Australia. Other future projects include the horizontal take-off and horizontal landing of Aerospace Planes (ASP) using ekranoplans.


In Russia, the reduced defense spending has forced GEV manufacturers to look for potential sales in the civil market. A number of designs have been proposed for heavy transport while a small GEV, the Amphistar, has been produced in limited numbers.

In 2007, Vice premier and defense minister Sergey Ivanov announced at a meeting of the naval board: "A federal targeted program will be created according to which Nizhniy Novgorod will manufacture wing-in-ground-effect vehicles".[citation needed] The designers of the Beriev aviation scientific and technical complex responded immediately and have promised to create the new ultra-heavy Be-2500 transport amphibious airplane. The Be-2500’s takeoff weight will be about 2,500 tonnes with a useful payload near 1,000 tonnes. Wing span is 125 meters, length is 115 meters and height is 29 meters. Cruising speed at altitude is 770 kilometers per hour, and in ground effect is 450 kilometers per hour. For comparison: wing span of the Boeing 747 is 64.4 meters, the airplane’s length is 70.6 meters, and height is 19.4 meters.

Additionally, the civilian Arctic Trade and Transport Company (Арктическая Торгово-Транспортная Компания) produces "Aquaglide" ekranoplans, small craft capable of transporting five people including the pilot.

In China, GEVs are being researched to fulfill a number of roles in the Chinese military and commercial use. The China Academy of Science & Technology Development and China Ship Scientific Research Centre (CSSRC) started GEV project in 1980. The 702 design bureau and 708 design bureau designed a number of small prototypes. In 1995, the first commercial ferry Tianyi-1 project started. In 1998, the first Tianyi-1 prototype is tested. In 2000, the model is for commercial sale in China. Currently a larger prototype Tianxiang-2 has been completed and a 50 seater Tianxiang-5 is under development.

In the USA, a number of small companies have designed and tested a number of small ferry and recreational craft. The L-325 has gone into limited production and is for commercial sale in the U.S. Aerocon has proposed the development of a large GEV transport craft but does not appear to have gained sufficient funding for the project.

In Germany, the military interest of the 1970s has decreased. As a result the German company RFB has shifted its emphasis from GEV development. The former technical director Mr. Fischer founded a company Fischer Flugmechanik which has designed and built craft for the recreational market, their most notable development being the Airfish recreational craft. Fischer Flugmechanik, in conjunction with Techno Trans research institute, have been sponsored by the German Ministry of R&D to develop a second generation GEV. This has resulted in the development of the two-seat prototype, HW-2VT.

The leading German company for Tandem Airfoil WIG craft is the Botec GmbH, located near Frankfurt.

In 1984 Phillip Morris Company awarded Dipl. Ing. W. Günther Jörg as the winner of the competition for Future Traffic Systems. Botec Company was founded in 1987 under the leadership of the Tandem Airfoilboat specialist Dipl. Ing. Günther W. Jörg . Dipl. Ing. Günther W. Jörg and his team have developed a large number of WIG craft for the civilian market, some of which have gone into limited production. The development of those TAF (Tandem Airfoil Flairboat) includes a number of craft in different designs and sizes. Botec GmbH has developed Tandem Airfoil Flairboats suitable for leisure boat applications and for commercial applications. Up to 2005, 16 Tandem Airfoil Flairboats had been built and successfully tested according to all rules and regulations. Dipl. Ing. Günther W. Jörg and his team have provided a lot of ideas scheduled for further applications in the commercial transportation sector.


In Japan, GEV technology has been analyzed in order to gain a leading position in the fast ferry design and construction market. A number of research craft have been prototyped and tested but none have proceeded onto development.

In Australia, there are a number of small enterprises, companies and individuals, the most newsworthy being the Rada and Seawing companies. These companies were established in the early 1990s with the goal of developing small commuter and recreational craft. None of the craft built by these companies progressed beyond prototype development. Neither of these companies are functioning at present, however the principals are still active in GEV development. In 2004, a company from Australia known as Sea Eagle emerged, and worked with China’s CSSRC to develop a civilian range of Class B Wing Effect Craft. Currently the Craft is flying in China.

Sea EagleNew Zealand mechanic Rudy Heeman successfully adapted a 2-person hovercraft [8] as a wing in ground effect vehicle in 2010.


Classification

One of the problems that have delayed the development of these craft is the classification and legislation to be applied. IMO has studied the application of rules based on the International Code of Safety for High-Speed Craft (HSC code) which was developed for fast ships such as hydrofoils, hovercraft, catamarans and the like. The Russian Rules for classification and construction of small type A ekranoplans is a document upon which most GEV design is based. However in 2005, the IMO classified the WISE or GEV crafts under the category of ships.


The International Maritime Organization recognizes three classes of ground effect craft:


Type A cannot operate out of ground effect.

Type B can jump to clear obstacles by converting kinetic energy (speed) into potential energy (height), but cannot maintain flight without the support of the ground effect.

Type C are certified as aircraft, with the ability to operate safely and efficiently out of ground effect.

Advantages and disadvantages

A ground effect craft may have better fuel efficiency than an equivalent aircraft flying at low level due to the close proximity of the ground, reducing lift-induced drag. There are also safety benefits for the occupants of the craft in flying close to the water as an engine failure will not result in severe ditching. However, this particular configuration is difficult to fly even with computer assistance. Flying at very low altitudes, just above the sea, is dangerous if the craft banks too far to one side while making a small radius turn.


A takeoff must be into the wind, which in the case of a water launch, means into the waves. This creates drag and reduces lift. Two main solutions to this problem have been implemented. The first was used by the Russian Ekranoplan program which placed engines in front of the wings to provide more lift. The Caspian Sea Monster had eight such engines, some of which were not used once the craft was airborne. A second approach is to use some form of an air-cushion to raise the vehicle most of the way out of the water, making take-off easier. This is used by German Hanno Fischer in the Hoverwing (successor to the Airfisch ground effect craft), which uses some of the air from the engines to inflate a skirt under the craft in the style of a sidewall hovercraft.


From Wikipedia.


IS-2 Soviet Heavy Tank. 1944.
chinese prototype manufacturers

Image by Peer.Gynt

Moscow, Kubunka Tank Museum. Jul 2009.


The Iosif Stalin tank (or IS tank, named after the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin), was a heavy tank developed by the Soviet Union during World War II. The tanks in the series are also sometimes called JS or ИС tanks.


The heavy tank was designed with thick armour to counter the German 88 mm guns, and sported a main gun that was capable of defeating the German Tiger and Panther tanks. It was mainly a breakthrough tank, firing a heavy high-explosive shell that was useful against entrenchments and bunkers. The IS-2 was put into service in April 1944, and was used as a spearhead in the Battle of Berlin by the Red Army in the final stage of the war.

Design and production

[edit] IS-1


The KV series of Soviet heavy tanks was criticized by their crews for their low mobility, and lack of any heavier armament than the T-34 medium tank. In 1942, this problem was partially addressed by the lighter, faster KV-1S tank. The KV series remained much more expensive than the T-34, without having greater combat performance. The heavy tank program was nearly cancelled by Stalin in 1943. However, the German employment of substantial numbers of Panther and Tiger tanks at the Battle of Kursk in the summer of 1943 changed Soviet priorities. In response, the Soviet tank industry created the stopgap KV-85, and embarked on the KV-13 design program to create a tank with more advanced armour layout and a more powerful main gun. Because Marshal Kliment Voroshilov had fallen out of political favour, the new heavy tank series was named Iosif Stalin tank. The IS-85 prototype was initially accepted for production as the IS-1 heavy tank.

[edit] IS-2


Gun choice


Two candidate weapons were the A-19 122 mm gun and the BS-3 100 mm gun. The BS-3 (later adopted on the SU-100 tank destroyer and the T-55 tank) had superior armour penetration (185 mm compared to 160 mm), but a less useful high explosive round. Also, the BS-3 was a relatively new weapon in short supply. Excess production capacity existed for the A-19 and its ammunition. Compared to the older 76.2 mm tank gun, the A-19 had very good armour penetration, similar to that of the effective 75 mm high velocity gun mounted on the German Panther, and delivered 3.5 times the kinetic energy of the older F-34.


After testing with both BS-3 and A-19 guns, the latter was selected as the main armament of the new tank, primarily because of its ready availability and the effect of its large high-explosive shell when attacking German fortifications. The A-19 used a separate shell and powder charge, resulting in a lower rate of fire and reduced ammunition capacity, both serious disadvantages in tank-to-tank engagements. However, the gun was very powerful, and while its 122 mm armour piercing shell had a lower muzzle velocity than similar late-issue German 75 mm and 88 mm guns, Soviet proving-ground tests established that the A-19 could penetrate the front armour of the German Panther tank [2], and it was therefore considered adequate in the anti-tank role.


German Army data on the penetration ranges of the 122 mm A-19 gun against the Panther tank showed it to be much less effective than the Soviets thought: the A-19 gun was unable to penetrate the glacis plate of the Panther at any distance, and could only penetrate the bottom front plate of the hull at 100 m.[3] It was however the large HE shell the gun fired which was its main asset, proving highly useful and destructive in the anti-personnel role. The size of its gun continued to plague the IS-2, the two-piece ammunition was difficult to manhandle and very slow to reload (the rate of fire was only about two rounds per minute). Another limitation imposed by the size of its ammunition was the payload: a mere 28 rounds could to be carried inside the tank. [4]


IS-2 Production


The IS-122 prototype replaced the IS-85, and began mass production as the IS-2. The 85 mm guns could be reserved for the new T-34-85 medium tank, and some of the IS-1s built were rearmed before leaving the factory, and issued as IS-2s.


The main production model was the IS-2, with the powerful A-19. It was slightly lighter and faster than the heaviest KV model 1942 tank, with thicker front armour and a much-improved turret design. The tank could carry thicker armour than the KV series, while remaining lighter, due to the better layout of the armour envelope. The KV’s armour was less well-shaped and featured heavy armour even on the rear, while the IS series concentrated its armour up front. The IS-2 weighed about the same as a German Panther and was lighter than the German heavy tank Tiger series. It was slightly lower than both.


While the design was good for its time, Western observers[who?] tended to criticize Soviet tanks for their lack of finish and crude construction. The Soviets responded that it was warranted considering the need for wartime expediency and the typically low battlefield life of their tanks[5].


Early IS-2s can be identified by the ‘stepped’ front hull casting with its small, opening driver’s visor. The early tanks lacked gun tube travel locks or antiaircraft machine guns, and had narrow mantlets.


Later improved IS-2s (the model 1944), had a faster-loading version of the gun, the D25-T with a double-baffle muzzle brake and better fire-control. It also featured a simpler hull front without a ‘step’ in it (using a flat, sloping glacis armour plate). Some sources called it IS-2m, but it is not to be confused with the official Soviet designation IS-2M for a 1950s modernization. Other minor upgrades included the addition of a travel lock on the hull rear, wider mantlet, and, on very late models, an antiaircraft machine gun.

IS-3

In late 1944 the design was upgraded to the IS-3. This tank had improved armour layout, and a hemispherical cast turret (resembling an overturned "soup bowl") which became the hallmark of post-war Soviet tanks. While this low, hemispherical turret may have made the IS-3 a smaller target, it also imposed severe penalties inside the tank by significantly diminishing the working headroom, especially for the loader (Soviet tanks in general are characterized by uncomfortably small interior space compared to Western tanks). The low turret also limited the maximum depression of the main gun, since the gun breech had little room inside the turret to pivot on its vertical axis. As a result, the IS-3 was less able to take advantage of hull-down positions, a tactic at which Western tanks were better suited[6]. The IS-3’s pointed prow earned it the nickname Shchuka (Pike) by its crews. It weighed slightly less and stood 30 cm lower.


The IS-3 came too late to see action in World War II. Though some older sources claim that the tank saw action at the end of the war in Europe, there are no official reports to confirm this. It is now generally accepted that the tank saw no action against the Germans, although one regiment may have been deployed against the Japanese in Manchuria.


In 1952, a further development was put into production, the IS-10. Due of the political climate in the wake of Stalin’s 1953 death, it was renamed T-10.


In the mid-1950s, the remaining IS-2 tanks (mostly model 1944 variants) were upgraded to keep them battle-worthy. This upgrade produced the IS-2M, which introduced fittings such as external fuel tanks on the rear hull (the basic IS-2 had these only on the hull sides), stowage bins on both sides of the hull, and protective skirting along the top edges of the tracks. IS-3 was also slightly modernized as IS-3M.


Operational history


The IS-2 tank first saw combat in the spring of 1944. IS-2s were assigned to separate heavy tank regiments, normally of 21 tanks each.[7] These regiments were used to reinforce the most important attack sectors during major offensive operations. Tactically, they were employed as breakthrough tanks. Their role was to support infantry in the assault, using their large guns to destroy bunkers, buildings, dug-in crew-served weapons, and other ‘soft’ targets. They were also capable of taking on any German AFVs if required. Once a breakthrough was achieved, lighter, more mobile T-34s would take over the exploitation.


The IS-3 first appeared to Western observers at the Allied Victory Parade in Berlin in September 1945. The IS-3 was an impressive development in the eyes of Western military observers, the British in particular, who responded with heavy tank designs of their own.


By the 1950s, the emergence of the main battle tank concept – combining medium tank mobility with the firepower of the heavy tank – had rendered heavy tanks obsolete in Soviet operational doctrine. In the late 1960s, the remaining Soviet heavy tanks were transferred to Red Army reserve service and storage. The IS-2 Model 1944 remained in active service much longer in the armies of Cuba, China and North Korea. A regiment of Chinese IS-2s was available for use in the Korean War, but saw no service there. In response to border disputes between the Soviet Union and China, some Soviet IS-3s were dug in as fixed pillboxes along the Soviet-Chinese border. The IS-3 was used in the 1956 Soviet invasion of Hungary and the Prague Spring in 1968.


During the early 1950s all IS-3s were modernised as IS-3M models. The Egyptian Army acquired about 100 IS-3M tanks in all from the Soviet Union.[8] During the Six Day War, a single regiment of IS-3M tanks was stationed with the 7th Infantry Division at Rafah and the 125th Tank Brigade of the 6th Mechanized Division at Kuntilla was also equipped with about 60 IS-3M tanks.[9] Israeli infantry and paratrooper units had considerable difficulty with the IS-3M when it was encountered due to its thick armour, which shrugged off hits from normal infantry anti-tank weapons such as the bazooka.[9] Even the 90mm AP shell fired by the main gun of the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) M-48A2 Patton tanks could not penetrate the frontal armour of the IS-3s at normal battle ranges.[9] There were a number of engagements between the M48A2 Pattons of the IDF 7th Armoured Brigade and IS-3s supporting Egyptian positions at Rafah in which several M48A2s were knocked out in the fighting.[9] Despite this, the slow rate of fire, poor engine performance (the engine was not well suited to hot-climate operations), and rudimentary fire control of the IS-3s proved to be a significant handicap, and about 73 IS-3s were lost in the 1967 war.[9] Most Egyptian IS-3 tanks were withdrawn from service, though at least one regiment of IS-3 tanks was retained in service as late as the 1973 October war.[9] The IDF itself experimented with a few captured IS-3M tanks, but found them ill-suited to fast moving desert tank warfare; those that were not scrapped were turned into stationary defensive pillbox emplacements in the Jordan River area.[9]


After the Korean War, China attempted to reverse-engineer the IS-2/IS-3 as Type 122 medium tank.[10] The project was cancelled in favour of the Type 59, a copy of the Soviet T-54A.


Type Heavy tank

Place of origin Soviet Union

Service history

In service 1943–1970s

Used by Soviet Union, Cuba, China, North Korea, Egypt

Wars WWII, Hungary, Six Day War, Czechoslovakia

Production history

Designer Zh. Kotin, N. Dukhov

Designed 1943 (IS-2), 1944 (IS-3), 1944–45 (IS-4)

Manufacturer Kirov Factory, UZTM

Produced 1943–45 (IS-2), 1945–47 (IS-3), 1945–46 (IS-4)

Number built 3,854 IS-2, 2,311 IS-3, 250 IS-4

Specifications (IS-2 Model 1944[1])

Weight 46 tonnes

Length 9.90 m

Width 3.09 m

Height 2.73 m

Crew 4

Armor 30–160 mm

Primary

armament D25-T 122 mm gun (28 rds.)

Secondary

armament 2×DT, 1×DShK machine guns

Engine 12-cyl. diesel model V-2

600 hp (450 kW)

Power/weight 13 hp/tonne

Suspension torsion bar

Fuel capacity 820 l

Operational range 240 km

Speed 37 km/h


From Wikipedia



(Source from China rapid prototype company blog)

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