Haldex Secures Order Worth SEK 1,000 Million for Air Disc Brakes

Haldex has secured an order for a new design of Air Disc Brakes from SAFHolland,
a global manufacturer of trailer axles and suspension systems
STOCKHOLM–(Business Wire)–
The total order value is estimated to approximately SEK 1,000 million over a
five year period. In addition the order will generate aftermarket deliveries for
many years to follow. Deliveries will start in 2011 and the brakes will be
manufactured in Haldex plant in Landskrona, Sweden

The new Air Disc Brake design, ModulT, is significantly lighter than a
conventional Air Disc Brake and provides the end user with a reliable and robust
design. The weight savings are up to 15% compared to current designs which will
allow a higher pay-load of the vehicle and thus have a positive contribution to
the environment.

Haldex CEO Joakim Olsson states “this is a major break through for our Air Disc
Brake product line where we have taken advantage of all the experience from the
existing disc brake model, which in combination with new techniques allowed us
to design a competitive brake for demanding customers”.

Haldex (www.haldex.com), headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden, is a provider of
proprietary and innovative solutions to the global vehicle industry, with focus
on products in vehicles that enhance safety, environment and vehicle dynamics.
Haldex is listed on the Nasdaq OMX Stockholm Stock Exchange and had net sales of
nearly 5.5 billion SEK in 2009. The number of employees amounts to about 4,000.

Haldex discloses the information in this press release according to the Swedish
Securities Market Act and/or the Swedish Financial Trading Act. The information
was provided for public release on Monday July 12, 2010.

This information was brought to you by Cision http://www.cisionwire.com

Joakim Olsson, President and CEO
Tel: 46 (0)8-545 049 52

Copyright Business Wire 2010

World”s fastest car”s lift problem fixed

London, March 17 (ANI): Reports indicate that engineers designing the Bloodhound SSC, which is the world”s fastest car, believe they now have a solution to keep the vehicle flat on the ground.

Bloodhound SSC is being built to smash the world land speed record by topping 1,000mph (1,610km/h).

Initial iterations of the car”s aerodynamic shape produced dangerous amounts of lift at the vehicle”s rear.

But, according to a report by BBC News, the latest modelling work indicates the team has finally found a stable configuration, allowing the project to push ahead with other design areas.

“At Mach 1.3, we”ve close to zero lift which is where we wanted to be,” said John Piper, Bloodhound”s technical director.

“Up until this point, we”ve had some big issues. We”ve had lift as high as 12 tonnes, and when you consider the car is six-and-a-half tonnes at its heaviest – that amount of lift is enough to make the car fly,” he told BBC News.

“We”re very close now to fixing the exterior aero surface, which really opens the floodgates to the rest of the design work to really get going,” he added.

By playing with the position and shape of key elements of the car”s rear end, the design team has now found the best way to manage the shockwave passing around and under the vehicle as it goes supersonic.

Bloodhound”s aero shape is not completely fixed.

Further work is still required on the jet intake ducts, the winglets that control lift, the air brakes (deployable structures that slow the car), and the large rear fin.

The team also needs to model the air flow into the car.

But, settling on the principal exterior surface means the team can now push forward on the main chassis structure and interior packaging of all the components that go into the vehicle.

The solution is a major milestone in Bloodhound”s design.

To claim the world land speed record, Bloodhound will have to better the mark of 763mph (1,228km/h) set by the Thrust SuperSonic Car in 1997.

It will be powered by a combination of a hybrid rocket and a jet engine from a Eurofighter-Typhoon.

Three who worked on Thrust are also engaged in the Bloodhound project, including driver Wing Cmdr Andy Green, project director Richard Noble and chief aerodynamicist Ron Ayres.

They plan to mount their assault on the record in late 2011, driving across a dried up lakebed known as Hakskeen Pan, in the Northern Cape of South Africa. (ANI)