
- •Методические указания к практическим занятиям по дисциплине «Английский язык» для студентов 1 курса очной и заочной форм обучения специальности «Автомобили и автомобильное хозяйство»
- •Unit 1 Brands
- •1. Read the article and answer the questions which follow.
- •Brand dna
- •2. Answer the questions:
- •3.Here are some of the factors people consider when buying a car.
- •4. Work with a partner to label the types of cars.
- •5. Find the cars which fit the description.
- •6. Match words from the two boxes to form expressions .
- •7. Complete the sentences using the expressions from the two boxes above.
- •Unit 2 Car parts
- •1. Read these short descriptions of well-known cars. Can you guess which cars they are?
- •2. Сomplete the following dialogue between a driving instructor and a learner taking a first driving lesson.
- •3. Can you remember which nouns can follow which verbs? Complete the table.
- •4. Look at this extract from a tour of a car factory and complete the text with the words below.
- •5. A spokesperson for a major car maker is giving a presentation about a new car model. Complete the sentences from the dialogue below with the features. Three features are extra.
- •6. Match the words from the two boxes to make expressions.
- •7. Now match the expressions above with the correct definition.
- •Unit 3 Safety
- •1. Read the article and answer the questions which follow.
- •3. Translate the following information:
- •4. Complete the text about car recalls with words below:
- •5. Now report on the results of the meeting. Write an email to your subsidiary in France explaining your decision. Complete the table.
- •5. Now complete the sentences with words from the table.
- •Unit 4 Materials and their properties
- •1. Read this text and answer the questions.
- •Aluminium – the car maker’s metal of the year.
- •2. Answer the questions:
- •3. Complete these sentences about materials and their properties using the words :
- •4. Read the presentation by a car designer and put the six extracts in the correct order.
- •5. Are the following sentences about the presentation true of false?
- •6. Match the design vocabulary on the left with the correct definition on the right.
- •3. Match the words from the two boxes to make expressions.
- •4. Now use the expressions above to complete the sentences.
- •5. The phrases below are used to talk about the future. First put them in the table.
- •6. Now use the phrases to discuss the following statement in small group. Do you think these things will happen in the next five/ten/twenty years?
- •7. Work with a partner. Prepare a short presentation on one of these topics.
- •Supplementary Reading What Was The First Car? a Quick History of the Automobile for Young People
- •How The Car Changed The County, Town by Town
- •The Atomic Automobile
- •Bentley. The new generation
- •Издательство «Нефтегазовый Университет»
- •625000, Г. Тюмень, ул. Володарского, 38
- •625039, Г. Тюмень ул. Киевская, 52
The Atomic Automobile
The Ford Nucleon concept car
During the 1950s, much of the world was quivering with anticipation over the exciting prospects of nuclear power. Atomic energy promised to churn out clean, safe electricity that would be "too cheap to meter." It seemed that there was no energy problem too large or too small for the mighty atom to tackle during the glorious and modern Atomic Age.
It was during this honeymoon with nuclear energy– in 1957– that the Ford Motor Company unveiled the most ambitious project in their history: a concept vehicle which had a sleek futuristic look, emitted no harmful vapors, and offered incredible fuel mileage far beyond that of the most efficient cars ever built.
This automobile-of-the-future was called the Ford Nucleon, named for its highly unique design feature… a pint-size atomic fission reactor in the trunk. Ford's engineers imagined a world in which full-service recharging stations would one day supplant petroleum fuel stations, where depleted reactors could be swapped out for fresh ones lickety-split.
The car's reactor setup was essentially the same as a nuclear submarine's, but miniaturized for automobile use. It was designed to use uranium fission to heat a steam generator, rapidly converting stored water into high-pressure steam which could then be used to drive a set of turbines. One steam turbine would provide the torque to propel the car while another would drive an electrical generator. Steam would then be condensed back into water in a cooling loop, and sent back to the steam generator to be reused. Such a closed system would allow the reactor to produce power as long as fissile material remained. Using this system, designers anticipated that a typical Nucleon would travel about 5,000 miles per charge. Because the powerplant was an interchangeable component, owners would have the freedom to select a reactor configuration based on their personal needs, ranging anywhere from a souped-up uranium guzzler to a low-torque, high-mileage version. William Ford alongside a 3/8 scale Nucleon modelAnd without the noisy internal combustion and exhaust of conventional cars, the Nucleon would be relatively quiet, emitting little more than a turbine whine.
The vehicle's aerodynamic styling, one-piece windshield, and dual tail fins (which are absent in some photographs) are reminiscent of spacecraft from 1950s-era science fiction, but some aspects of the Nucleon's unique design were more utilitarian. For instance, its passenger area was situated quite close to the front of the chassis, extending beyond the front axle. This arrangement was meant to distance the passengers from the atomic pile in the rear, and to provide maximum axle support to the heavy equipment and its attendant shielding.
Part 2
Another practical design aspect was the addition of air intakes at the leading edge of the roof and at the base of the roof supports, apparently to be used as part of the reactor's cooling system.Ford's nuclear automobile embodied the naive optimism of the era. Most people were ignorant of the dangers of the atomic contraption, as well as the risk that every minor fender-bender had the potential to become a radioactive disaster. In fact, the Nucleon concept was often received with great enthusiasm. Some sources even claim that the US government sponsored Ford's atomic car research program.
The Nucleon's silent, sleek, and efficient design was poised to secure its place in the American lifestyle of the future. It seemed inevitable that the internal combustion engine would fade into obscurity, becoming a quaint relic of a pre-atomic past. But the Nucleon's design hinged on the assumption that smaller nuclear reactors would soon be developed, as well as lighter shielding materials. When those innovations failed to appear, the project was scrapped due to conspicuous impracticality; the bulky apparatus and heavy lead shielding didn't allow for a safe and efficient car-sized package. Moreover, as the general public became increasingly aware of the dangers of atomic energy and the problem of nuclear waste, the thought of radioactive atomobiles zipping around town lost much of its appeal. Atoms had broken their promise; the honeymoon was over.
The Ford Nucleon sans tail fins
Ford never produced a working prototype, nevertheless the Nucleon remains an icon of the Atomic Age. In spite of the Nucleon's flaws, its designers deserve a nod for their slapdash ingenuity. Their reckless optimism demonstrates that one shouldn't consider a task impossible just because nobody has tried it yet– some ideas need to be debunked on their own merit. With today's looming energy crisis and slow migration to alternative fuel sources, we may not have seen the last of the atomic automobile concept. A safe atomic vehicle may not be entirely beyond our reach, as the US Navy has demonstrated with its perfect record of nuclear safety. Perhaps one day fossil fuels will wither under the radioactive glare of the mighty atom, and our highways will hum with the steam turbines of mobile Chernobyls. It could be a real blast.
Written by Alan Bellows on August 27th, 2006 at 10:52 pm
From DamnInteresting.com