[ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jun-1998
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Contact: Peter Dunn
puapjd@admin.warwick.ac.uk
44-1203-523708
University of Warwick

Martin Bell MP To Launch New Machine Designed To Take On The Most Impossible Mine Fields

Martin Bell MP made a special visit to the University of Warwick on Monday 6th July to launch a new machine designed to take on some of the toughest mine fields in the world and help return those mined areas to agricultural use by the local people.

Called Tempest the sturdy car sized machine is designed to take on almost impossibly overgrown mine fields and open them up to precise manual mine clearing by human deminers. Almost all deminning has to be carried out by human beings. This is a slow operation when you have a flat piece of ground but almost impossible when the passage of time has created jungle conditions on the top of a mined area.

The remote controlled Tempest machine has been designed especially to smash into these overgrown mine fields and make them available for human deminers. Its advantages are:

Tempest was constructed only after the research team consulted widely with human deminning teams to find out exactly what sort of machine would benefit their work. The machine, a joint project between the University of Warwick and the Development Technology Workshop Ltd, will this summer travel to Cambodia (and possibly Bosnia) to be tested on real mine fields.

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