Team Typhoon – A New “Challenger” Has Entered the Ring

After their stirring success of winning the STEM Research award at the VEX V5 competition last year with CTL’s Sponsorship, Team Novo is back again but, this time with new allies, a new challenge and thus a brand-new robot.
With Team Cyberforce, the winners of last year’s VEX V5 Poster Design Challenge (and fellow Queen Elizabeth Grammar School members) now joining forces with Team Novo, they are coming at this year’s trial ‘Spin Up’ together as Team Typhoon. CTL has bought the brains behind Team Typhoon’s new robot “Challenger” providing the integral V5 Brain that allows the team to relay real time commands and programme autonomous instructions for “Challenger” to perform in both of “Spin Up’s” ‘Driver’ and ‘Autonomous’ game modes. The team were very grateful for CTL’s continued support and although it is early in the season, they feel confident that with the new parts CTL has provided and their victor’s pedigree that they take ‘Challenger’ above and beyond last years success. Team Leader Zak said “Efficiency is key” and the team already have a strategy to make the best out of their sponsored components as they get set to qualify in regionals this February. CTL wishes Team Typhoon the best of luck at this year’s competition and eagerly awaits to see a fully built ‘Challenger’ enter the ring.

Copernicus Technology Ltd has rejoined ADS

Copernicus Technology Ltd has rejoined ADS https://www.adsgroup.org.uk/ after a short break.
CTL reflected on its short break away from this prestigious membership group, and quickly realised the benefits of being an ADS member and so decided to re-engage.

Over the years CTL was actively involved in the special committees, including the No Fault Found working group, and now like the Phoenix rising from the pandemic, would like to be part of some of the specialist committees again to help shape the industry.

CTL are delighted to announce that the Queen Elizabeth School; Team Nova, Won the STEM Research Project award whilst competing at the VEX IQ World Championship earlier this month.

team nova3The Team consisting of 6 talented and hardworking young students flew out to Dallas Texas in order to take part in the VEX IQ Robotics Challenge, where 720 student teams from all over the world compete by engineering robots around a set challenge. This year’s challenge was ‘Pitching In’, and team Nova placed 4th in their division with their robot Andromeda. Whilst at the championships the team also received the coveted STEM Research Project award for their entry to the VEX Online challenge.

team_nova2.jpgTeam member Zak said “It was an inspiring experience being surrounded by so many enthusiastic people.” CTL sponsored the team earlier this year, to help pay for travel costs and parts for Andromeda. CTL is proud to support STEM projects and are elated at the group’s success of winning the STEM award.

Team Nova is already gearing up for VEX V5 next year and CTL wishes them the best of luck.

 

The partnership of Copernicus Technology Ltd and Aquila Learning Ltd provides the ALaRMS training management system for the Poseidon P-8A Maritime Patrol Aircraft at RAF Lossiemouth. This cutting-edge technology harnesses all requirements of Defence Systems Approach to Training (DSAT) through Analysis, Design, Delivery and Assurance, with the added benefit of linking the training system to the safety and risk systems. Following a rigorous qualification process led by the P-8 delivery team at Defence Equipment & Support (DE&S), ALaRMS is now available for P-8 staff on the Defence Intranet System MODNet, and can in future, be accessed by other Defence organisations that purchase licenses.

Mark Radbourne, the MD of Aquila Learning and the brains behind ALaRMS said: "Over the past 18 months we have seen the huge benefit that ALaRMS brings to Defence in the pursuit of optimised training management and assurance. The seamless link that ALaRMS provides from Analysis to Design to Delivery to Assurance, can now be fully exploited with MODNet connectivity. This digital link makes ALaRMS (and the training data it manages) available to multiple stakeholders for the first time, increasing efficiency, effectiveness and safety across the entire training pipeline of a capability, individual or team."

Mark Corden, who leads the DE&S P-8 Training effort said: "To have undergone the very challenging MODNet approval process under the pandemic circumstances is an enormous credit to teamwork of all parties from a myriad of Defence organisations and our commercial partners of Copernicus Technology and Aquila Learning. All those using ALaRMS on MODNet, with many working from home, are very impressed with how responsive it is, how intuitive the functionality is and, for such a complex platform as the P-8, how it enables disciplined co-ordination of a large number of training requirements".

Copernicus Technology, , are now under a new contract, also supporting the P-8 Course Design Team in developing learning material in preparation for full P-8 training starting in the UK in the 2nd half of 2021. They are using the integrated analysis and design features of ALaRMS to facilitate this significant task.

Our team at Copernicus Technology Ltd, based near RAF Lossiemouth, have had a busy time since May on a new contract supporting the P-8A Poseidon Course Design Team at RAF Lossiemouth developing the courseware for the future aircrew Operational Conversion Unit and Maintenance Training for Engineers. Roo Hornby, who leads the Copernicus team, said: ‘ALaRMS is playing an essential role in ensuring the design and assurance required to develop such a complex training programme. Furthermore, access via MODNet has allowed 90% of the work done so far to be done from home in a highly efficient and coherent fashion.’

Copernicus Technology was formed in 2008 by Jim Cockram, Phil Eastwood, Giles Huby and James Martland to be innovative in an emerging technology - Intermittent Fault Detection.
With great hopes of being pioneers in a new specialist field, we took inspiration for the company name from Nicolaus Copernicus. Born in 1473 Copernicus, and literally on his death-bed in 1543, he published his book 'On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres' which became the trigger for the Scientific Revolution.

And over the 12 years that Copernicus Technology has led the field of Intermittent Fault Detection - not least in their design and production of the portable Voyager Intermittent Fault Detector. Copernicus Technology has always been pleased with their name choice and it's deep routes linked with being pioneering. But now we discover that Copernicus, like many others in Science, had a forebearer too.
A book written by Seb Faulk a lecturer at Cambridge University, 'The Light Ages: A Medieval Journey of Discovery' reveals that Nicolaus Copernicus himself had inspiration from a John of Westwyk who was born to a peasant family in 1350s but, by the age of 20, Westwyk was knowledgeable in Mathematics and Astronomy leading to the creation in 1392 of the disc-shaped instrument to calculate the position of the planets and predict eclipses!

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/forgotten-monk-paved-the-way-for-copernicus-twmm0mk3m

It is amazing that over 600 years ago John of Westwyk was able to tabulate data of planetary position to the equivalent of 18 decimal places!

Pioneering indeed.