Title
Report entitled 'Lead Ball Screw Practice'
Reference
MS/2214/10
Production date
20-06-1980 - 20-06-1980
Creator
- Simpson, David MichaelBiographyBiography
(Active 1964 - 2009) Aeronautical Engineer
David Michael Simpson was an aeronautical engineer who was involved in a number of projects covering both aircraft and satellite design. He began his career in 1964 as an Aeronautical Engineering Apprentice working at Hawker Siddeley Aviation Ltd. Following completion of his training, he would become an Aircraft Design Engineer working on the Hawker Siddeley Hawk jet trainer, computer-aided design research and future projects weight engineering.
In 1976 he joined the Royal Navy and served as a Lieutenant in the Fleet Air Arm at Royal Naval Air Station Lee-on-Solent also known as HMS Daedalus. He would leave the Navy 2 years later in 1978 and go on to work as a Project Engineer at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory. Here he worked on a number of projects beginning as a Thermal Analyst on CHASE and the ROSAT soft X-ray wide-field camera. In this position, he was responsible for the design and production of general-purpose finite difference thermal analysis software THETA. He would go on to work on Thermo-mechanical design and Non-Linear Drive Mechanism Analysis for the ERS-1 spacecraft before becoming Engineering Manager on CHASE (Coronal Helium Abundance Spacelab Experiment). This was launched on the space shuttle Challenger in 1985.
In 1988 David Simpson moved to Principia Mechanica Ltd as the Head of Mechanical Systems. Here he began as Chief Engineer and Stress Analysis of the Hypervelocity Impact Test Facility for the Atomic Energy Authority, where he designed the facility, safety system and operating procedures. He also worked as Supervising Engineer at the Seismic Test and Qualification Centre as well as a Project Manager on the 6 Degree-of-Freedom ship motion simulator and the Downhole Seismic Source Programme.
In 1990 he would join Astrium Ltd beginning as Principal Engineer working on structural dynamic analysis before going on to work on the SOHO payload module mechanical system. In 1993 he would go on to work as Payload Systems Design & Technology Group Leader responsible for the snapdragon spacecraft architecture. In 2003 he became the Systems Engineering Manager for the European Space Agency’s TerraSAR-L.
In 2009 David Simpson would retire from Astrium but would remain on call as a consultant.
Scope and Content
A report entitled 'Lead Ball Screw Practice' relating to the use of leaded ball screws in the construction of CHASE and especially the requirement for them to be kept in a clean environment.
Extent
1 item
Language
English
Level of description
ITEM
Repository name
Science Museum, London
Associated people and organisations
- Rutherford Appleton LaboratoryBiographyBiography
A laboratory has existed on the Chilton site since 1957 when the then Rutherford High Energy Laboratory, an establishment of the National Institute for Research in Nuclear Science (NIRNS), was set up.
In 1965, as part of a government re-structuring of scientific research bodies, the Science Research Council (SRC) which took over management of the Rutherford High Energy Laboratory from NIRNS along with many other UK science bodies.
The Rutherford Laboratory merged with the Atlas Computer Laboratory and Appleton Laboratories in 1975 and 1979 respectively. The Laboratory was re-named after the physicists Ernest Rutherford and Edward Appleton. In 1998, with the closure of the Royal Greenwich Observatory, some of its offices became part of RAL. The foundations of the the Laboratory's Central Laser Facility were laid when laser technology moved from Joint European Torus at Culham into RAL.
RAL’s has undertaken pioneering work in areas such as particle physics, scientific computing, laser development, space research, and technology.
As of 2018, approximately 1200 staff work on site. The site is funded and managed by the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC).
Conditions governing access
Open Access
Conditions governing Reproduction
Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions