Friday, April 3, 2026

(Grim) Reaper


Costing $30 million apiece, the US has reportedly lost a dozen in the Gulf and one of these apparently to friendly fire. Beside which, its remote pilots are throwing sickies due the mental strain involved in watching individuals go about their daily business before literally raining Hellfire down on them.

Apparently not fighting fair is bad for your wellbeing as well as theirs, and so trends are toward drones that (a) are cheaper (b) can be swarmed and (c) use AI instead of remote pilots.

The Reaper was developed as a replacement for the Predator, originally developed by someone known as the father of UAV (or drone) technology. And he began it with colleagues ~ in the style of Jobs and Wozniak ~ in a garage in California. Specifically Abraham Karen teamed up with a fellow engineer and a pre-med student that he met at an aero-modelling meet.

Bankrupted, they were bought out (and taken on) by General Atomics ~ the world never really having been the same since. The reason the contractor took them on was because they'd been struggling with developing a UAV themselves... the advantage of working in a garage ever being the focus imminent penury provides.

Bar Wars


Devil is as ever in the detail and figuring out how to prevent the boat sliding out of its moorings and bouncing down the motorway takes me most of the morning and a lot of head-scratching. In the end I'd a pair of 'Tudor' style cup-hooks that I drive in either side, making a quick-release handle from a length of doweling that's a perfect fit; albeit secured by cable-ties to prevent it from popping out of place.

For the snuggest possible fit too I've glued a patch of rubber foam on the topside of the drone to prevent it from rattling around. I drive it up and down the road at upto 35 m.p.h. on what I'd consider to be taxi-trials, and job's a good 'un. My spec calls for sustained speeds of 50 m.p.h. as a reasonable minimum on motorways, beside a dash capability of 70 m.p.h. should people in Ormskirk ever launch a missile attack.

The second prototype was used throughout for this exercise, it being the one to be relocated elsewhere for wiring up and flying with four lift-motors... all being well, as the person set to be tasked with this has yet to learn about it.

As a consequence it has lost two of its 'tuna-tin' motors, and so I make an executive decision to go full speed ahead and install the regular motors prior to the PR shot.

A second consideration is that there is little but cheese in the fridge, and thus one of the tins has gone towards a tuna-cheese toastie for the 'mission director'.

Spare Keel


Already out there on the aftermarket, you simply have to pop the spare off in order to mount a maritime drone on your wheels. Now available on our merch page, enter your model number and click on 'SAW YOU COMING' for pricing.

It's already been for a drive up the motorway to see if I've torqued the 19mm nuts sufficiently, and at the service station was lucky enough to spot a couple of traffic officers.

I was thus able to enquire whether, unladen, it met applicable regs and they were kind enough to threaten me with a ticket for wasting their time.

Ed. Note how Dilbert drilled holes in the wrong place and try not be equally stupid.

Boxing Clever


Wander out to the garage in my dressing-gown to see how the tail-gate adapter is shaping up... encourage all the staff to come in night-wear on dress-down Fridays.

Nice thing is it can be checked for fit, "Suits you, Sir!", whilst still off the vehicle: handy on bank holidays if you don't want neighbours wondering why a man in his jim-jams is wrestling with a boat at the backside of an RV.

Looking at it though I realise that once its days are done hauling maritime drones it will make the ideal nesting box for the tits I'm always watching out for upstairs with my binos?

And now if you'll excuse me there's a double-bill of Frasier I have to study...

Scrap Book


Introduced in the same year as that Mini, ferry Royal Iris is set to be scrapped after having sent some seventeen million passengers on their way. I'd have used it any number of times as a teenager, when we'd travel across the river to pass the time of day... tickets were only required upon arrival and so if you returned to the pier above at Liverpool the ride came for free. This landing stage was a floating pier and rose and fell with the tide; still does, albeit on a smaller scale altogether. Main pic is courtesy of Bernard Rose, who like me appears still to be alive.

Ed. And the couple in the foreground could have stepped right out of a Mini...

Thursday, April 2, 2026

FWD Thinking?


Nothing I like more really than a derelict car or aeroplane, and discovered this one down the side of a Staffordshire warehouse yesterday. If you're reading this abroad then you may have heard of a Staffordshire Terrier... but this is not one of those.

It is in fact a late-model Mini, my first love whom I affectionately called EEK525F for that is what it said on the front. But don't it just get you thinking about transverse transmissions? It was designed by Alec Issigonis, whose father hailed from the west coast of Turkey at such time as it was still Greek; a shipbuilding engineer, he moved to London where Alec was born.

Fresh from designing the Morris Minor ~ the first British car to sell over a million ~ he would introduce what was originally called the Morris Mini Minor in 1959. Arriving at the same time as both me and the Beatles, the world has never really recovered since. The brief was a car under ten feet long with a 10-inch wheel in each corner, suitable for people wearing pink mini-skirts and knee-high boots: the fashion among men at the time.

There is however a sinister twist: it practically introduced engines squeezed into the space above sideways. It was utterly horrendous to work on yourself, and would be replaced in my affections by a Morris Minor pick-up with a canvas roof and tail-gate whose principal facility was the fact my friends could sit on the wheel arches at back when returning from the pub, relieving their bladders out the rear-end on the move: and you don't see that in the BYD adverts, do you?

Ford however took one apart, decided the company must be losing money on each sale ~ which they were ~ and responded with the Cortina. All five versions of this, between 1962 and 1982, were rear-wheel drive (and interesting fact, the head of Ford Europe at the time lived three doors up from me in Hatfield; enjoying evenings of fine wines, food and discussions about the Anglia from time to time).

But here's the thing: put the engine the other way around, as in every model of the Cortina, and everything falls naturally into place. The radiator is at the front, where it needs cooling in the draught. Then there's the engine, followed by clutch and then gearbox... just about where it needs a lever for you to change gear. Set off and the weight is thrown on the rear wheels, where the traction is required, and hit a corner and with a bit of luck you can drift it out instead of spinning it into a railing as I did once with my glorious Sierra 2.7 litre V6 company car.

The modest reduction in length of the car ~ which nobody's bothered about now ~  meant however that any number of manufacturers went down this route, including a reluctant BMW once it had taken charge of a revived Mini. And what this meant was that whereas everything was easily fixed and replaced on a Morris Minor, which you could literally stand in alongside the engine-block, was that maintenance required a workshop visit. And has, ever since, moreso.

But it's Easter, and so gather round.

Story! Story! Story!

Oh come on, alright then. I thought I had it somewhere, but can't find the printed photo of the De Havilland Trident sat on the former airfield in Hatfield before it was broken up for scrap with a jack-hammer. I let myself in, for what beats a derelict car but a derelict airliner? And it's rows of seats, still there in 1970s orange! And the smell always the same, a kind of musty vapour that mingles with the memory of the thousands of passengers this aircraft must have flown to destinations like the Costa Brava... shiny, happy people holding hands.

But come closer. I was tasked with my ground-school for the 737 at East Midlands airport with the legendary John Kinsella who we'd break in the pub with for lunch and go to it in the afternoon fuelled off the back of a few pints of bitter and a Scotch chaser... look away now if you're flying Ryanair tomorrow.

But there had been a derelict Vickers Viscount on the far side of the field, which was used by engineers for various training tasks related to maintenance; the aircraft as was so often the case having crashed and been written off. Sadly in this case, both airliner and its young co-pilot had been written off.

One evening the master-switch having been flicked, the last engineer out the house looked back to see the cabin lights still on... so let himself back and walked up front in order to throw the switch which he figured he'd omitted.

And there, just long enough for him to appreciate what it was, the apparition of that same figure sat again momentarily in the right-hand seat before vanishing back into eternity.

Fuck.

Ed. The Mini popularised the sub-frame, the foremost one of which in the picture. It meant the body was a monocoque, whereas the Morris Minor had floor-panels that could be removed. The author once removed that on the passenger side, which meant they got wet every time he drove through a puddle: the fastest way of losing a girlfriend that he knows.

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Unalloyed Joy


Pleased with how the plywood version of the tail-gate adapter is looking, and let junior take it to school this morning for a 'show and tell'. In fact it went on, he says, to come third in handiwork: the picture on his phone showing entries on display and suitably labelled too:

    1st        Class 9A        D. Hoskyns      Base for bed-side lamp.

   2nd       Class 8C        L. Blythe          Mahogany fruit-bowl.

   3rd        Class 9B        C. Hilton          Means of deploying maritime drone.

Though I'd done a good deal of it so as not to distract him from online gaming, I could not have been prouder!