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6 hydraulic highlights that keep London running.

By |2018-03-02T16:34:15+00:00May 21st, 2017|Blog|

How Big Hydraulics keeps London running smoothly. What caught our eye from The Shard? The Shard, next door to London Bridge Station, is the UK’s tallest building at 306m and one of the iconic landmarks of London. Opened in February 2013 after four years of construction, its 95 floors house hotels, apartments, restaurants and offices [...]

Double ferrule or Single ferrule hydraulic compression fittings?

By |2018-03-02T16:17:04+00:00March 27th, 2017|Blog|

Hydraulic compression fittings explained. Read our take after 30 years of using single and double ferrule fittings. Before you start. Rigid pipe or hoses? If you want a permanent installation and a neat job, piping it up with tube and compression fittings will give you a “better job.” Debatable? Yes, hoses have a big place [...]

The Hydraulics to Craft the Perfect Espresso Coffee

By |2018-03-02T16:31:04+00:00January 30th, 2017|Blog|

Clever water hydraulics crafts the perfect Espresso. Can a hydraulic process really capture the craft of the barista maestro and produce the perfect espresso? The world loves espresso. The world loves espresso coffee. There are 21,000 coffee shops in the UK alone, so the Allegra Coffee Portal tells us. This article tries to [...]

Car Hydraulics Battles The March Of All-Electric

By |2022-05-13T08:20:16+01:00December 16th, 2016|Blog|

How soon will car hydraulics be heading to Beaulieu Motor Museum? Why do designers love electric? Electrics has big attractions for designers. Electric actuation has made big inroads towards replacing hydraulics in systems everywhere. We have discussed before about the enormous growth in pure electric actuation on aircraft. Out go those hoses, pumps, control valves [...]

Hybrid Marine Power on Boats

By |2018-03-02T16:26:25+00:00September 13th, 2016|Blog|

Setting the pace – and pulse in hybrid marine power technology: leading the fleet is the USS Zumwalt Class destroyer. But Sarum Hydraulics asks how realistic is hybrid marine power technology on smaller vessels? Hybrid marine power on boats – the buzzword in 2016 is hybrid. There’s good reason that the one word that keeps popping up [...]

Low Pressure Hydraulics: 7 Questions Answered

By |2018-03-02T16:16:06+00:00August 9th, 2016|Blog|

Why wouldn’t you look at low pressure hydraulics first? We wrote a thoughtful blog on low pressure hydraulics last year and asked the question "why wouldn’t you look at low pressure hydraulics first?”. The article generated a lot of interest and we have had endless discussion over it. Designers love a chat! Our premise was [...]

Underground farming: a revolution in food production or a hole in the ground?

By |2018-03-02T16:34:30+00:00July 13th, 2016|Blog|

How innovative hydraulics, advanced optoelectronics and clever control could just be the dream ticket for a hydroponic future. Farming underground, in your attic and in a factory unit using high tech lighting and hydroponics is a great tech story for the press. But is it the start of what will become a massive [...]

What can hydraulic designers learn from the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter?

By |2018-03-02T16:24:09+00:00June 14th, 2016|Blog|

Where a neat aerospace electro-hydraulic actuator might point the way on future mobile hydraulics. Sarum Hydraulics loves innovative hydraulic design. There is always something interesting that a clever hydraulic designer comes up with whether it is aerospace, offshore, marine, mobile or the myriad other fluid power applications. The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) [...]

Sarum Hydraulics enters the robot age: to be or not to be – it’s a question of automation.

By |2018-03-02T16:23:19+00:00May 24th, 2016|Blog|

The payback game: so just which hydraulic manufacturers will profit from the robot challenge? The FT recently reported that China bought 66,000 out of 240,000 robot units sold globally last year. The UK bought only an estimated 2400 units in 2015, according to statistics from the International Federation of Robotics. It makes riveting [...]

The rise of the Japanese Jutaku houses: how micro housing is redefining living small in the 21st century

By |2020-10-19T09:43:53+01:00April 13th, 2016|Blog|

The craze for kyosho jutaku, that distinctly Japanese variant of the micro home, may have started in the thirteenth century, but there’s good reason why jutaku has more recently exploded in popularity outside Japan. These micro houses are often built on unused, “leftover” land —urban infill, in the truest sense of the term. We’re talking [...]

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