The Mysterious Case of Rudolf Diesel

There is/was a good BBC World Service short programme/podcast 'The Diesel Engine', part of a series on inventions that changed the world, which included an account of Rudolph Diesel's research and development, endeavours to promote the technology, and his demise.

(I have a copy I downloaded, along with others from that series, from the BBC a few years back, but can't currently find it on what is now BBC Sounds.)
 
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IIRC, one of his early experiments used powdered coal as a fuel.
I wish you hadn't said that, it has brought back unpleasant memories. I was part of a team that converted a gas fired brick kiln to a coal dust fired one. I think I have got all the coal dust from behind my ears now it was nearly 40 years ago.
 
What's mysterious about it? A depressed man flung himself off a cross-channel ferry. Sad but not very mysterious.
Thanks. I guess that clears that up, eh? It's a pity Douglas Brunt didn't know you were an eye witness. He could have saved himself a lot of bother and research.
 
I have to say, the review I read of it in the Washington Post didn’t particularly inspire me to want to read it.

The gist of the review was that the author had taken a few historical facts and woven them into a fairly far-fetched hypothesis.
 
I have to say, the review I read of it in the Washington Post didn’t particularly inspire me to want to read it.

The gist of the review was that the author had taken a few historical facts and woven them into a fairly far-fetched hypothesis.
That's a point of view and it may well be true but I'm enjoying the read, nonetheless.
 
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