Jaguar teams up with Bloodhound to hit desert for round of testing

Posted on 6 Nov 2014 by Callum Bentley

The Bloodhound project today started the 12-month countdown to its first Land Speed Record attempt, and celebrated Jaguar joining the programme as Innovation Partner, by staging a high-speed communications test at Hakskeen Pan, South Africa.

An L39 jet aircraft flew multiple passes down Bloodhound’s specially prepared desert track, synchronised with the Jaguar F-TYPE R Coupé driven by project director Richard Noble and a Jaguar XF saloon, at closing speeds* of up to 500mph (804km/h), 50% of the speed BLOODHOUND SSC will ultimately travel.

The cars carried the same equipment that will stream data, voice and imagery live from the Bloodhound SSC during test runs and record attempts in 2015 and 2016.

The event was attended by representatives of the Northern Cape Government, the project’s hosts in South Africa, and was the successful culmination of months of preparation by Bloodhound’s Technical Communications Partners MTN, Emcom and Poynting.

Data from over 300 sensors, plus three streams of 720p video, will be transmitted live via single channel from the jet and rocket powered vehicle as it blasts down the desert racetrack during the test. By way of comparison, a modern F1 car transmits 150 channels of data over a single radio channel during a Grand Prix weekend. Each run by Bloodhound SSC will generate information equivalent to 125 MP3 music tracks played concurrently.

Beaming data at over 1,000mph (1600km/h) will push available communications technology to the limit. To meet the challenge, MTN and Poynting Antennas have created a bespoke 4G LTE (Long-Term Evolution) network for the Project, based on known and trusted mobile telephone technology. The 800MHz signal is highly focused, rather than broadcast, to ensure the network has ‘link budget’ capable of streaming 4 Megabytes per second of data live from the car as it covers a mile in 3.6 seconds (a kilometer in 2.25 seconds).

BloodHound_Hakskeenpan_14Today the signal was captured by Bloodhound engineers on the track. In 2015 and 2016, it will travel to the team’s mission control centre and then be relayed to the nearest town, Upington, 80 miles (130 kilometers) away, to be fed into the internet, ready to be viewed by schools, colleges and other audiences worldwide.

For this test, custom-made Poynting antennas with Sierra Wireless Air Prime embedded LTE modems were mounted on the Jaguar XF, replicating the kit which will be built in to Bloodhound’s tail fin. Simulated data and footage from four high-resolution Stemmer Imaging cameras, equipped with unique BJR lenses, was streamed live from the Jaguar XF during the high-speed passes.

Driving in tandem was an All-Wheel-Drive Jaguar F-TYPE R Coupé carrying Emcom’s latest Digital VHF Radio technology. This equipment has been specially calibrated to ensure clear voice communication from the team to both Andy Green in the supersonic car and Jaguar’s two rapid response Vehicles. Today’s test ensured there were no frequency clashes across the spectra the team will be utilising across the 54 square mile (142 square km) area of Hakskeen Pan.

Flying the full length of the track above the cars in the L39 Jet, Bloodhound’s IT manager Sarah Covell measured signal strength from the 60m tall solar powered MTN mast 9 miles (14.5 km) from the west of the track.

Conor La Grue, Bloodhound SSC’s Engineering Lead – Commercial, will join a line up of other high profile speakers at this year’s Manufacturing Directors’ Conference happening at Birmingham’s ICC on November 26 & 27. Find out more or register your attendance here.