An article written by the late Nick Burge on the development of his submersibles, way back in 1994.
Who is online?
In total there are 2 users online :: 0 Registered, 0 Hidden and 2 Guests :: 1 Bot
None
Most users ever online was 180 on Tue Nov 05, 2019 6:03 am
Latest topics
Search
Most Viewed Topics
Statistics
Our users have posted a total of 12459 messages in 1984 subjects
We have 1012 registered users
The newest registered user is Tony 51
Similar topics
3 posters
Thought you may find this interesting..
Tom(ADMIN)- AMS Forum Owner
- Posts : 3026
Join date : 2010-11-05
Age : 64
Location : Nevada, USA
david f- AMS Treasurer
- Posts : 2401
Join date : 2010-11-10
Age : 73
Location : Cumbria
Very interesting article. Nick was quite a pioneer and everything he built seemed to be "see through"!
It also answers the question about the Apostoloff submarine (Recently built by John W) Those tail feather things would have worked!
It also answers the question about the Apostoloff submarine (Recently built by John W) Those tail feather things would have worked!
Tom(ADMIN)- AMS Forum Owner
- Posts : 3026
Join date : 2010-11-05
Age : 64
Location : Nevada, USA
Very true...Nick was way ahead of his time with his models. I could never understand his obsession with transparent boats...but then nobody ever quite understood Nick at all!
Deep Diver (Fred)- AMS member
- Posts : 268
Join date : 2010-11-07
Age : 75
Location : Peacehaven East Sussex
Nick always said that he was asked why did he put a cover on all the great engineering work that he had put into making the dive system, so he stopped putting a casing over the tube.
As for being ahead of his time, we all went along to Alf's one night and Alf put his new boat on the table, it worked on the idea water would be taken in via a pipe in the bow, a prop in the pipe would then pass this in to a chamber that had a moving vane in it, this would force the water out off the port and starboard side of the boat to make it go forward, you moved the vane to go port or starboard, the next weekend Nick had one on the water.
As for being ahead of his time, we all went along to Alf's one night and Alf put his new boat on the table, it worked on the idea water would be taken in via a pipe in the bow, a prop in the pipe would then pass this in to a chamber that had a moving vane in it, this would force the water out off the port and starboard side of the boat to make it go forward, you moved the vane to go port or starboard, the next weekend Nick had one on the water.
Yesterday at 11:02 am by stig58
» Cheap Arduino Auto leveler
Sat May 11, 2024 6:53 pm by 17b
» No reverse on Brushless ESC
Tue May 07, 2024 3:26 pm by geofrancis
» Peral Submarine of 1888
Mon May 06, 2024 11:16 am by david f
» Newbie needs advice!
Fri Apr 26, 2024 1:58 pm by david f
» Modulated electric fields for submarine communication in a "heads up" from Harry!
Sun Apr 21, 2024 6:09 am by geofrancis
» 868/915 Mhz as a viable frequency for submarines.
Wed Apr 10, 2024 5:48 am by tsenecal
» Laser cut Robbe U47 conversion
Tue Apr 09, 2024 3:40 pm by david f
» ExpressLRS - 868/915 Mhz equipment
Tue Apr 02, 2024 3:27 pm by tsenecal