Saturday, 30 May 2026

What Could We Make Next? R&D in the Philip M Russell Ltd Workshop

 


What Could We Make Next? R&D in the Philip M Russell Ltd Workshop

Some of Our Best Ideas Start With: “Surely We Could Make That Ourselves?”

There is a dangerous phrase in the Philip M Russell Ltd workshop.

It usually starts innocently enough.

We are teaching a lesson, filming a demonstration, repairing something, planning a sailing video, or trying to explain a difficult concept to a student, and then someone says:

“Surely we could make that ourselves?”

At that point, the sensible thing would be to stop, make a cup of tea, and ask whether the world really needs another home-made prototype.

Unfortunately, sensible thinking is not always the strongest force in our workshop.

Instead, the sketchbook comes out. The laser cutter is considered. The 3D printer is inspected. A box of leftover fixings appears from somewhere. Someone says, “It only needs to be simple,” which is almost always the beginning of something that is not simple at all.

But this is also where some of our most useful ideas begin.

R&D at Philip M Russell Ltd is not about inventing gadgets for the sake of it. It is about solving real problems that appear in teaching, filming, sailing, photography, and practical science. Sometimes the problem is that commercial equipment is too expensive. Sometimes it is the wrong size. Sometimes it is not visible enough on camera. Sometimes it simply does not exist.

And sometimes, of course, it exists perfectly well — but we still think we can improve it.

The Workshop as a Problem-Solving Space

The Philip M Russell Ltd workshop is not a pristine engineering laboratory with gleaming benches and a white-coated team of technicians. It is much more interesting than that.

It is part classroom support centre, part media production workshop, part science equipment development space, part boat-improvement department, and part “where did I put that 3 mm Allen key?” museum.

The equipment available gives us a wide range of possibilities:

  • laser cutting for accurate flat parts, templates, signs and teaching aids
  • 3D printing for small components, brackets, clips, adaptors and prototypes
  • hand tools for fitting, adjusting and finishing
  • printing and display equipment for classroom materials and visual boards
  • camera and video equipment for testing how things look on screen
  • sailing equipment and boat projects that constantly create new practical problems

That combination is important. We are not designing in isolation. We can make something, test it in a lesson, film it under studio lights, take it to the river, discover it does not quite work, and then bring it back for version two.

In proper engineering language, this is an iterative design process.

In workshop language, it is more like:

“That nearly worked. Now we know what broke.”

Custom Science Practical Equipment

One of the strongest areas for future R&D is custom science practical equipment.

School science equipment has to survive repeated use, limited budgets, hurried lessons, mixed ability groups and the occasional student who believes that “gentle handling” means “hit it slightly less hard than usual”.

For private tuition, especially when teaching online, the demands are slightly different. Equipment must not only work scientifically, it must also be clear, visible and easy to explain on camera.

A practical may be perfectly acceptable in a classroom but almost useless on video if the important part is too small, hidden by a clamp stand, or only visible from one awkward angle.

That gives us an opportunity.

Could we design practical equipment specifically for teaching, filming and revision?

Making Practical Work More Visible

A good science practical should do three things:

It should demonstrate the principle clearly.

It should allow students to collect meaningful results.

It should help students understand the method, not merely follow instructions.

For example, a resistance wire experiment can be done with a metre ruler, wire and crocodile clips. It works, but it can be imprecise. The wire may not start exactly at zero. The crocodile clip may not make contact at the point being measured. The student may record the length from the wrong place.

A small custom-made end stop or measuring guide can solve part of that problem. It does not need to be complicated. It simply needs to make the starting point reliable and repeatable.

That is exactly the sort of R&D we enjoy: a small improvement that makes the practical better, the teaching clearer and the results more reliable.

A Flower Model That Comes Apart

One possible project is a custom model showing the structure of a flower.

Many students can memorise the words:

stamen, anther, filament, stigma, style, ovary, ovule, petal, sepal.

But memorising the words is not the same as understanding the structure.

A layered, take-apart flower model could make this much easier. Instead of a flat diagram in a textbook, students could physically remove each part and see how the flower is organised.

Imagine a large teaching model made from laser-cut and 3D printed parts:

The petals could lift away.

The sepals could form a separate outer layer.

The stamens could be removable, with enlarged anthers to show where pollen is produced.

The carpel could be split into stigma, style and ovary.

The ovary could open to reveal ovules.

Labels could be added magnetically or slotted into place, allowing students to test themselves.

This would be useful for GCSE Biology, but also ideal for video lessons. A camera could look directly down onto the model while the teacher removes each layer and explains its function.

Instead of saying, “This part is the stigma,” we could show it, remove it, replace it, compare it and ask students to identify it again.

That turns a labelled diagram into an interactive learning tool.

A Leaf Model Built in Layers

The same idea could work beautifully for the structure of a leaf.

Leaf structure is one of those topics where students often learn the labels without fully appreciating the three-dimensional organisation.

A layered model could show:

  • waxy cuticle
  • upper epidermis
  • palisade mesophyll
  • spongy mesophyll
  • air spaces
  • vascular bundle
  • xylem
  • phloem
  • lower epidermis
  • guard cells and stomata

Each layer could be removed in sequence, showing how the structure relates to function.

The palisade layer could contain upright green cells packed with chloroplasts.

The spongy mesophyll could have visible air spaces to show gas movement.

The vascular bundle could use different colours or removable sections to distinguish xylem and phloem.

The stomata could be enlarged so that guard cells can be opened and closed.

This would be particularly useful because students often confuse the roles of the different tissues. A physical layered model would help them see why the palisade layer is near the top, why the spongy mesophyll has spaces, and how water, glucose, carbon dioxide and oxygen move through the leaf.

It would also look excellent on camera, which matters. A teaching model that works in person and on screen is much more useful for modern tuition.

Laser-Cut Teaching Aids

The laser cutter opens up another set of possibilities.

Laser-cut teaching aids can be made quickly, accurately and repeatedly. They are especially useful when students need to move pieces around, match labels, build diagrams or practise processes.

Possible projects include:

Chemistry bonding kits
Students could build ionic lattices, covalent molecules or giant structures using laser-cut pieces and connectors.

Physics ray diagram boards
Mirrors, lenses, rays and objects could be moved around physically to demonstrate reflection, refraction and image formation.

Biology process cards
Respiration, photosynthesis, digestion, immunity and the menstrual cycle could become sequencing activities rather than static notes.

Maths transformation boards
Shapes could be moved, reflected, rotated and enlarged on a grid.

Exam command word boards
Students could match “describe”, “explain”, “compare”, “evaluate” and “calculate” to the type of answer required.

The great advantage of making these ourselves is that they can be designed around actual student difficulties. If several students make the same mistake, that mistake can become the starting point for a new teaching aid.

That is much more responsive than waiting for a commercial product that may never exist.

3D Printed Components

3D printing is ideal for the awkward little parts that are difficult to buy.

Not everything needs to be a grand invention. Sometimes the most useful object is a small clip, bracket, spacer, adaptor or holder.

Possible 3D printed workshop projects include:

  • sensor holders for practical science investigations
  • clamp adaptors for unusual camera angles
  • cable guides for the studio
  • equipment trays for small practical components
  • mounts for microphones, lights or action cameras
  • replacement knobs, feet, spacers and brackets
  • custom holders for pens, probes, rulers or thermometers
  • safe stands for fragile teaching models

The beauty of 3D printing is that it encourages experimentation. A first version can be rough. It only needs to answer one question:

Does the idea work?

If it does, we improve it. If it does not, we have lost a little filament and gained useful information.

That is not failure. That is prototyping.

Better Camera Mounts for Sailing and the New A-Rater

One of the more exciting R&D areas is camera mounting for sailing films, especially with the arrival of the A-Rater project.

Filming boats is difficult. Filming a classic racing sailing boat is even harder. Filming from the boat while it is moving, heeling, tacking, gybing, vibrating and occasionally being attacked by spray is a proper engineering challenge.

A normal camera mount is rarely enough.

We need mounts that are:

  • strong enough to hold the camera securely
  • gentle enough not to damage the boat
  • quick to fit and remove
  • resistant to vibration
  • safe if knocked by crew
  • positioned to show useful sailing action
  • suitable for wet conditions
  • stable enough for smooth footage

For the A-Rater, this becomes even more important. A Thames A-Rater is not just any sailing boat. It is elegant, historic, dramatic and visually fascinating. The filming needs to show the height of the rig, the movement of the crew, the shape of the sails, the speed through the water and the atmosphere of racing on the Thames.

Possible camera mount projects include:

Mast-facing cockpit mounts
To capture the helm, crew movement and sail handling.

Low bow mounts
To show the boat cutting through the water.

Stern mounts
To film the wake, following boats and the overall sailing position.

Boom or rigging-safe mounts
Designed carefully to avoid interfering with control lines or crew movement.

Removable clamp systems
Using protective pads so the boat is not damaged.

360 camera mounts
Allowing footage to be reframed afterwards, especially useful when the action is unpredictable.

The challenge is not simply holding a camera. The challenge is holding a camera in the right place without creating a new hazard or damaging a boat that deserves respect.

That is where workshop R&D becomes part engineering, part filming, part sailing judgement and part common sense.

Sailing-Specific Parts, Templates and Storage Solutions

Sailing generates endless small problems.

Where should this rope go?

How do we store that without tangling it?

Can we make a template for this fitting?

Can we protect that edge?

Can we label these parts?

Can we make a better way of carrying or organising equipment?

The workshop could help with a wide range of sailing-specific projects:

  • rope and control line organisers
  • labelled storage boards
  • templates for fittings
  • protective pads for camera clamps
  • small tool holders for the boat park
  • laminated rigging checklists
  • sail repair templates
  • varnishing guides and masking templates
  • storage boxes for shackles, split rings and small fittings
  • custom signs or labels for boat equipment

These are not glamorous projects, but they are often the ones that save the most time.

A well-designed storage solution can prevent damage, reduce frustration and make future jobs easier. Anyone who has spent ten minutes looking for the one shackle that was “definitely here yesterday” will understand the value of better organisation.

Display Boards for Tuition

The workshop can also support the tuition side of the company through display boards and visual teaching resources.

Even in a digital age, physical display boards still matter. They help students see connections between ideas. They provide quick reference points. They make the learning space feel purposeful.

Possible display boards include:

GCSE Physics equation boards
Grouped by topic, with units and rearrangement prompts.

Chemistry reaction boards
Showing key reactions, tests for ions and required practical summaries.

Biology process boards
Photosynthesis, respiration, immunity, digestion, hormones and inheritance.

Maths method boards
Algebraic manipulation, graph transformations, trigonometry, indices and surds.

Exam technique boards
Command words, common errors, calculation structure and how to show working.

These boards could be printed, mounted, laminated or made modular so that parts can be changed.

They would support in-person lessons but could also appear in the background of videos, reinforcing the idea that Philip M Russell Ltd is a practical, visual and highly prepared learning environment.

From Problem to Prototype

The most important part of R&D is not the equipment. It is the thinking process.

A good prototype usually follows a simple route:

1. Notice the Problem

The best ideas often come from irritation.

A camera angle does not work.

A student misunderstands a diagram.

A practical gives inconsistent results.

A piece of equipment is awkward to use.

A boat part needs a better storage solution.

Instead of ignoring the problem, we ask whether it can be improved.

2. Sketch the Idea

A sketch does not need to be beautiful. It simply needs to capture the idea before it disappears.

This might be a rough drawing on paper, a digital layout, a cardboard mock-up or a few measurements scribbled beside a cup of tea.

3. Build a Simple Version

The first version should not be perfect. In fact, it probably should not try to be.

A prototype exists to test the idea.

Does it fit?

Does it hold?

Does it explain the concept?

Does it survive being used?

Can it be seen clearly on camera?

4. Test It Properly

This is where reality gets a vote.

The object may work beautifully on the bench and fail completely in the classroom, studio or boat park.

That is useful. The test reveals what the sketch could not.

5. Improve It

Version two is almost always better.

The mount becomes stronger.

The model becomes clearer.

The teaching aid becomes easier to use.

The storage box gains a handle.

The label moves to where people can actually read it.

Good R&D is not magic. It is patient improvement.

Why This Matters for Teaching

At first glance, workshop R&D might seem separate from tuition.

It is not.

The best teaching often depends on making difficult ideas visible, memorable and practical. Students do not all learn in the same way. Some need words. Some need diagrams. Some need worked examples. Some need to hold the model, move the pieces and see the process happen.

A custom model of a flower or leaf is not just a nice object. It is a way of helping students understand structure and function.

A better practical apparatus is not just a technical improvement. It is a way of helping students produce better results and understand experimental accuracy.

A display board is not just decoration. It is a revision tool.

A filmed demonstration is not just a video. It is a resource that can help students beyond the lesson.

The workshop supports the classroom because both are trying to solve the same problem:

How do we help students understand things more clearly?

Why This Matters for Media Production

The same is true for filming.

Good video production often depends on small pieces of equipment that viewers never notice.

A camera mount.

A cable guide.

A lighting bracket.

A labelled battery tray.

A safe way of attaching an action camera to a boat.

A display stand for a science demonstration.

When these things work, nobody comments on them. The video simply looks better.

When they do not work, everything becomes harder.

Workshop R&D helps us build the tools that allow filming to happen more smoothly, especially when the filming environment is not a controlled studio but a river, a sailing boat, a laboratory bench or a practical lesson.

The Joy of Making Useful Things

There is also a simple pleasure in making something useful.

Not everything has to become a product. Not every prototype has to be sold. Some things are worth making because they solve one real problem well.

There is satisfaction in taking an idea from a rough sketch to a physical object. There is even more satisfaction when that object helps a student, improves a lesson, supports a video or makes a boat project easier.

Of course, not every idea works.

Some prototypes are too flimsy.

Some are too complicated.

Some solve a problem that, on reflection, did not really need solving.

Some go into the “interesting but not quite” box, which is an essential part of any workshop.

But even those are useful. They teach us what not to do next time.

What Could We Make Next?

So what could we make next?

A layered flower model?

A take-apart leaf structure?

A new camera mount for the A-Rater?

Laser-cut revision tools?

3D printed sensor holders?

Display boards for tuition?

Sailing storage templates?

A better way to film practical science experiments?

The honest answer is probably: several of them.

The workshop works best when it connects different parts of the company. A design idea from sailing may help with filming. A filming problem may inspire a 3D printed bracket. A teaching problem may become a laser-cut resource. A science practical may lead to a new piece of equipment.

That crossover is where the interesting ideas live.

Conclusion: R&D Is Really Just Curiosity With Tools

Research and development sounds grand, but in practice it often begins with curiosity.

Why does this not work better?

Could this be clearer?

Could we make this cheaper?

Could we make it stronger?

Could we make it easier to film?

Could we make it easier for a student to understand?

At Philip M Russell Ltd, the workshop gives us a way to answer those questions physically. We can sketch, cut, print, test, adjust and try again.

Some of our best ideas really do start with the phrase:

“Surely we could make that ourselves?”

And while that phrase can be dangerous, it is also one of the reasons the workshop exists.

Because sometimes the thing you need is not waiting in a catalogue.

Sometimes it is waiting on the workbench.

All I need is time.

Friday, 22 May 2026

From Classroom to Camera Boat: Preparing to Livestream a National Sailing Event

 


From Classroom to Camera Boat: Preparing to Livestream a National Sailing Event

Some companies spend Friday in a meeting room.

We spent it preparing cameras, batteries, radios, boats, waterproof kit and enough cables to make a small telephone exchange jealous.

This week, Philip M Russell Ltd moves beyond the classroom, the laboratory and the online teaching studio, and heads out onto the River Thames to help livestream and document a National sailing event at Upper Thames Sailing Club.

It sounds simple enough: point a few cameras at some boats and press “go live”.

Anyone who has ever tried filming sailing will now be quietly laughing into their buoyancy aid.

Because livestreaming a sailing event is not just video production. It is sport, weather, water, timing, sound, power management, communications, safety, storytelling and a certain amount of controlled panic — all happening at once.

And that is exactly why it is interesting.


A Different Kind of Company Day

Philip M Russell Ltd is often associated with teaching, tutoring, science lessons, online education and experiment demonstrations. A normal working week might involve GCSE Physics, A-Level Chemistry, maths revision, laboratory demonstrations, video editing, lesson planning, exam writing or building better teaching aids.

But the company has always been more than a desk and a whiteboard.

We film.
We photograph.
We build equipment.
We solve practical problems.
We teach using cameras, sound, lighting and demonstrations.
We make technical things understandable.

So when a National sailing event comes to Upper Thames Sailing Club, it becomes a natural extension of what we already do.

The classroom skills do not disappear. They simply get wet.


Why Livestreaming Sailing Is Much Harder Than It Looks

A football pitch is inconveniently large, but at least it stays where you put it.

A river sailing course does not.

The boats are constantly moving. The wind shifts. The fleet spreads out. Trees create strange gusts and wind shadows. Boats disappear behind moored craft, committee boats, safety boats, riverbanks, masts and occasionally one another.

Then there is the River Thames itself.

At Upper Thames Sailing Club, the racing is close, technical and often very tactical. Boats are not simply going round marks in open water. They are dealing with current, banks, trees, river traffic, shifting breeze and very little room for error.

For the sailors, that is part of the challenge.

For the camera operator, it means one thing:

The best shot is usually happening somewhere you are not pointing.


The Camera Plan: Shore, Boat and Possibly Committee Boat

A good sailing livestream needs more than one viewpoint.

From the shore, we can capture the start line, the club atmosphere, spectators, preparation, launching and some of the close racing. Shore-based cameras are more stable, easier to power and safer for long continuous filming.

But sailing is not a shore-based sport.

To show the racing properly, we need to get closer to the action. That is where the camera boat and safety boat work become important.

A boat-based camera can follow the fleet, capture mark roundings, film starts from the water, and show the speed and movement that a static camera often misses. It can also capture the spray, the concentration on the sailors’ faces and the small tactical decisions that make racing so fascinating.

There may also be opportunities to use the committee boat as a camera position, especially for starts and finishes. But every position has a trade-off.

A shore camera is stable but distant.
A boat camera is close but moving.
A committee boat view is dramatic but operationally busy.
A safety boat can get useful angles but must remain a safety boat first.

That last point matters.

The filming is important, but the racing and safety responsibilities come first.


The Sound Problem: Wind, Water and Race Signals

If video is difficult on the river, sound is even worse.

Wind noise can ruin otherwise excellent footage. Water slaps against hulls. Engines produce low rumble. People speak while facing away from the microphone. Race signals happen suddenly. Radios crackle. Someone always chooses the most important moment of the day to shout something useful while standing just out of microphone range.

In the teaching studio, sound can be controlled. Microphones are placed carefully. The room is quiet. Levels are checked. The teacher faces the camera. The experiment is on the bench.

On the river, the sound has other ideas.

This is where experience from online teaching and video production becomes very useful. Clear sound is not a luxury. It is the difference between a viewer understanding what is happening and simply watching some boats drift silently around the screen.

For a sailing livestream, we need to think about:

  • wind protection on microphones
  • backup audio where possible
  • race signals and commentary
  • radio communication
  • reducing engine noise
  • choosing moments where natural sound adds atmosphere rather than chaos

Sometimes the best audio is not perfect studio sound. It is a carefully balanced mix of commentary, river ambience, sails, rigging, signals and enough wind noise to remind people that this is real sailing, not a computer simulation.


Batteries, Cables and the Quiet Fear of “1% Remaining”

Nothing focuses the mind quite like a battery icon turning red during a live event.

Livestreaming on land is power hungry. Livestreaming on the water is worse.

Cameras need power.
Monitors need power.
Radios need charging.
Phones and tablets need charging.
Streaming equipment needs power.
Audio recorders need power.
Action cameras need power.
And if something is waterproof, it often means changing the battery is slightly more awkward than opening a normal flap.

Battery management becomes a proper production task.

It is not enough to have batteries. They need to be charged, labelled, packed, protected and rotated. Spare batteries need to be easy to find. Power banks need to be charged the night before. Waterproof cases need to be organised so that the item you need is not buried under the item you only brought “just in case”.

And of course, the thing you need most urgently will usually be in the other bag.

This is where the company’s practical side comes in. Years of building teaching setups, filming lessons, running online sessions and managing technical kit make a big difference. The principles are the same:

Plan the system.
Test the system.
Have backups.
Expect something to fail.
Make sure the failure does not stop the whole production.


From Online Teaching to Live Sailing Coverage

At first glance, online teaching and sailing livestreams seem completely different.

One involves students, whiteboards, experiments and exam technique.
The other involves boats, wind shifts, waterproof clothing and the possibility of dropping expensive electronics into the Thames.

But the underlying skills are surprisingly similar.

In the online teaching studio, we use multiple cameras to show the teacher, the experiment, the close-up view and the wider explanation. We need clear sound. We need good timing. We need to know when to switch views. We need to tell a story so that the student understands what is happening.

A sailing livestream needs the same thinking.

The viewer needs context.
Where is the start line?
Which boat is leading?
Why did that boat tack?
Why has the fleet split?
What does that sound signal mean?
Why is everyone suddenly heading for the same mark?

Good filming is not just about recording what happened. It is about helping the viewer understand why it mattered.

That is exactly the same principle as good teaching.


The Storytelling Challenge

A National sailing event is not just a sequence of races.

There are people preparing boats. There are crews checking sails, adjusting rigging, launching, talking tactics and watching the weather. There are volunteers helping with race organisation, safety, results, judging, food, logistics and all the unseen work that makes a club event happen.

A livestream can show the racing, but the wider filming and photography can tell the fuller story.

That means capturing:

  • boats being rigged before racing
  • sailors preparing and launching
  • safety boats heading out
  • race officers and volunteers at work
  • close racing on the water
  • mark roundings and starts
  • still photographs for social media and club records
  • short clips for later edits
  • behind-the-scenes moments that show the scale of the event

The race is the centrepiece, but the event is bigger than the race.

That is where photography, video editing and storytelling come together.


The Weather Always Has a Vote

No matter how carefully we plan, the weather will make its own contribution.

Too little wind and the racing can become slow, tactical and difficult to make visually exciting. Too much wind and filming from a boat becomes physically harder, wetter and more unstable. Rain affects equipment. Bright sun creates glare on the water. Grey skies flatten the image. Wind direction changes the whole shape of the course.

That is why sailing filming needs flexibility.

You cannot simply create a fixed shot list and expect the river to obey it. You need to read the situation, adapt the camera positions and make decisions quickly.

This is one of the joys of filming live sport. It is also one of the reasons it is so much harder than a planned studio shoot.

In the studio, we can ask the student to repeat the experiment.

On the river, the perfect start happens once.


Technical Problem-Solving in Real Time

A great deal of Philip M Russell Ltd’s work involves solving practical problems.

In teaching, that might mean designing a better demonstration so a student can actually see what is happening. In video production, it might mean finding a better camera angle, improving sound or creating a clearer edit. In R&D work, it might mean building equipment that does not yet exist in exactly the form required.

Livestreaming sailing combines all of that.

How do we power the kit?
How do we keep it dry?
How do we get the signal out?
How do we film from a moving boat?
How do we capture sound without drowning the viewer in wind noise?
How do we make the racing understandable to someone who is not standing at the club?

These are not abstract questions. They are practical problems that have to be solved before, during and after the event.

That is what makes this kind of work so satisfying.

It is not just pressing buttons. It is designing a working system under real-world conditions.


The Value of Documenting Club Sport

Local and national sailing events rely on huge amounts of volunteer effort. Much of that work happens quietly. The sailors may be the most visible part of the event, but the event exists because people give time, expertise and energy behind the scenes.

Filming and photography help capture that.

They preserve the atmosphere.
They promote the sport.
They help clubs reach new audiences.
They give competitors something to share.
They show future sailors what the event feels like.
They create a record of the day.

For a sailing club, good media coverage is not just decoration. It is outreach.

Someone may watch a clip and decide to visit the club.
A young sailor may see the racing and feel inspired.
A family member may follow the livestream because they cannot be there in person.
A sponsor, class association or sailing community may use the footage to promote future events.

That is why this work matters.


A Company That Moves Between Worlds

One of the enjoyable things about Philip M Russell Ltd is that the work does not fit neatly into one box.

One day we may be helping a student understand electrical resistance.
Another day we may be filming a science experiment.
Another day we may be editing a sailing video from Croatia.
Another day we may be designing a piece of equipment in the workshop.
And this week, we are preparing to help livestream a National sailing event on the River Thames.

That variety is not a distraction from the company’s purpose. It is part of it.

The connecting thread is communication.

Helping students understand.
Helping viewers see.
Helping audiences follow a story.
Helping organisations share what they do.
Helping practical ideas become visible.

Whether the camera is pointing at a physics experiment or a fleet of racing boats, the aim is the same:

Make the important things clear.


Conclusion: More Than Just a Livestream

Preparing to livestream a National sailing event is exciting, technical, slightly nerve-racking and almost certainly more complicated than it first appears.

There are cameras to prepare, batteries to charge, radios to check, boats to organise, waterproof cases to pack and plenty of decisions to make before the first race even starts.

But it is also a perfect example of what Philip M Russell Ltd does best: combining teaching, filming, technical problem-solving and storytelling.

The classroom may be dry, warm and predictable.

The River Thames is not.

But whether we are explaining a science concept to a student or filming racing boats from a camera boat, the challenge is the same:

Capture the action.
Explain what matters.
Tell the story clearly.

And ideally, keep the cameras dry.

Thursday, 21 May 2026

Helping Students Beyond Lessons

 


Helping Students Beyond Lessons

“Teaching Doesn’t End When the Lesson Finishes”

Some of the students we help will never actually meet us.

They may never sit in the classroom. They may never join an online lesson. They may never appear on Zoom from the other side of the screen while a camera is pointed at an experiment in the lab.

But they may still find one of our YouTube videos at 10.30pm the night before a mock exam.
They may read a blog post explaining a topic that suddenly makes sense.
They may see a short social media explanation that reminds them how to structure a six-mark answer.
They may download a worked solution, watch a demonstration, or simply pick up one small piece of confidence at exactly the moment they need it.

That is why teaching no longer ends when the lesson finishes.

For Philip M Russell Ltd and Hemel Private Tuition, education is not just about the hour booked in the diary. It is about building a wider learning environment that students can return to again and again.


The Lesson Is Only the Beginning

A private lesson is powerful because it is personal. The student can ask questions, make mistakes, pause, go back, and explore the parts of the subject that are causing difficulty.

But learning does not happen only during that hour.

Very often, the real work happens afterwards:

A student sits down with their notes.
They try an exam question.
They realise they understand half of it but not all of it.
They look back at the explanation.
They need another example.
They need to hear it again, perhaps in a slightly different way.

This is where wider educational outreach becomes so important.

A lesson might introduce the idea. A video can reinforce it. A blog can explain it slowly. A worked solution can show the structure. A short social media post can remind the student of the key mistake to avoid.

Together, these resources create a support system that carries on after the lesson has ended.


Why Not Every Student Can Have Private Tuition

Private tuition can make a huge difference, but it is not available to everyone.

Some students cannot afford regular tuition.
Some live too far away.
Some are already overloaded with school, homework, part-time work, family responsibilities, or anxiety around exams.
Some students do not even know what help they need until they are already struggling.

That matters.

If education only exists behind a booked lesson, many students are left outside the door.

This is one reason I believe educational outreach is worth the time and effort. A clear explanation placed online can help a student I will never meet. A video demonstration can support a learner who does not have access to specialist equipment at school. A revision blog can guide a parent who wants to help but is unsure where to start.

It will never replace good teaching, but it can widen access to good explanations.


YouTube: Teaching That Students Can Replay

One of the great strengths of YouTube is that students can pause, rewind, replay, and return.

In a normal lesson, a student might say they understand, but later discover that the idea has slipped away. With a video, they can go back to the exact point where the explanation becomes difficult.

This is particularly useful in science and maths.

For example, a student learning about speed of sound experiments might need to see the echo method explained more than once. They may need to watch how the distance is measured, how the time is recorded, why the sound travels there and back, and why the final calculation involves dividing by two.

A student studying interference from two speakers may need to visualise maxima and minima rather than simply read the formula. Seeing a diagram, hearing the explanation, and watching the calculation develop step by step can turn a confusing topic into something manageable.

YouTube also allows practical demonstrations to reach students who may not have seen the experiment clearly in school. A multi-camera setup can show the apparatus, the measurements, the close-up detail, and the teacher’s explanation at the same time.

That is one of the reasons our studio and laboratory approach is so valuable. The camera can go where a classroom of students cannot: right next to the sensor, above the apparatus, or close to the part of the experiment where the important observation is happening.


Blog Tutorials: Slowing the Explanation Down

Videos are excellent, but sometimes students need words.

A blog tutorial allows an explanation to be structured carefully. The student can read at their own pace, copy key points, look again at a diagram, and follow a worked example without feeling rushed.

A good educational blog can do several things:

It can introduce the topic in plain English.
It can explain why the topic matters.
It can break the method into stages.
It can highlight common mistakes.
It can provide exam-style language.
It can give parents a way to understand what their child is trying to learn.

For example, a blog on quadratic graphs might not simply say “complete the square”. It can show why completing the square reveals the turning point, how that connects to the graph, and why examiners often ask students to link algebraic form with graphical meaning.

A blog on communicable diseases can help a GCSE Biology student sort the information into viruses, bacteria, fungi, and protists, rather than facing a muddle of names and symptoms.

A blog on A-Level Chemistry periodicity can warn students that trends are useful, but not enough on their own. They must explain using nuclear charge, shielding, atomic radius, and electron structure.

This slower style of explanation is especially helpful for students who are capable but overwhelmed.


Worked Solutions: Showing the Thinking, Not Just the Answer

Students often tell me they understand a topic when watching someone else do it, but struggle when they face a question alone.

This is where worked solutions are useful.

A poor worked solution simply gives the answer.
A good worked solution shows the thinking.

It explains why a method was chosen.
It shows the first step.
It points out traps.
It explains what the examiner is likely to reward.
It checks whether the answer is sensible.

This is particularly important in maths and science, where the route to the answer matters as much as the final number.

For example, in a physics calculation, students may know the formula but use the wrong distance, forget to convert units, or fail to realise that a wave has travelled to a wall and back again.

In chemistry, students may produce the correct final answer but lose marks because they have not shown enough working.

In biology, students may know the content but fail to structure a longer answer in a way that matches the mark scheme.

Worked solutions teach students how to think like exam candidates, not just how to memorise facts.


Revision Advice: Helping Students Use Their Time Properly

Many students do not fail because they are lazy. They struggle because they do not know how to revise effectively.

They reread notes and mistake familiarity for understanding.
They highlight pages without testing recall.
They avoid the topics they find hardest.
They spend too long making beautiful revision materials and not enough time answering questions.
They panic close to the exam because everything feels equally urgent.

Educational outreach can help here too.

Short revision blogs, videos, and posts can remind students to:

Use active recall.
Practise exam questions early.
Mark their answers honestly.
Keep a list of weak topics.
Return to difficult material several times.
Use mark schemes carefully.
Revise in short, focused blocks.

This kind of advice is not glamorous, but it can transform how a student approaches their work.

Sometimes the most helpful thing a student can hear is not a new fact, but a better way to organise the facts they already have.


Social Media as a Teaching Tool

Social media is often blamed for distraction, and sometimes quite rightly. But it can also be used constructively.

A short post can deliver one useful idea quickly:

“Don’t just quote the formula — explain what each symbol means.”
“In a six-mark science answer, structure is your friend.”
“If you cannot explain why you used a method, you may not understand the method yet.”
“Revision is not reading. Revision is retrieval.”

These short explainers can catch students where they already are.

A teenager may not sit down to read a full article on exam technique, but they might see a 30-second post that makes them think. A parent may see a LinkedIn post and realise their child needs help with method, not just motivation.

Used properly, social media can become a signpost towards better learning.

It does not replace proper teaching. But it can open the door.


Experiment Demonstrations: Making the Invisible Visible

Science is meant to be seen, tested, measured, and questioned.

Unfortunately, not every student gets enough practical experience. Some schools have limited equipment. Some demonstrations are difficult to see from the back of a classroom. Some experiments are rushed because of timetable pressure. Some students miss the lesson and never quite catch up.

This is where filmed demonstrations can be extremely valuable.

A close-up camera can show a colour change clearly.
A second camera can show the full apparatus.
A sensor display can show live data.
A teacher can pause the experiment and explain what is happening.
A replay can allow the student to observe the result again.

For example, in physics, a PASCO sensor can make motion, force, sound, or magnetic field changes visible. In chemistry, a carefully filmed reaction can show stages students might otherwise miss. In biology, microscope work can be brought onto a screen so that everyone sees the same thing clearly.

The aim is not just to entertain. It is to help students connect theory with evidence.

That is what science education should do.


Short Explainers: Small Pieces of Confidence

Not every explanation needs to be long.

Sometimes a student needs one small idea at the right moment.

What is the difference between accuracy and precision?
Why does increasing temperature increase rate of reaction?
How do you structure a comparison question?
Why do we draw a tangent on a graph?
What does “evaluate” actually mean in an exam question?

Short explainers are powerful because they remove one obstacle at a time.

A student who feels lost in a subject often does not need the whole course explained again. They need the next barrier removed. Then the next. Then the next.

This is where a library of small, clear explanations becomes useful. It allows students to patch gaps before those gaps become major problems.


Exam Technique: The Missing Link

Many capable students lose marks not because they do not know the subject, but because they do not answer the question being asked.

They describe when they should explain.
They explain when they should calculate.
They calculate correctly but forget units.
They know the content but ignore the command word.
They write everything they know and hope some of it is relevant.

Exam technique is not a trick. It is the skill of communicating knowledge in the form the examiner needs.

That is why educational content should include guidance on:

Command words.
Mark schemes.
Working out.
Units and significant figures.
Diagrams.
Structured longer answers.
Common traps.
Time management.

A student may understand a physics concept beautifully, but if they do not show the method, they may lose marks. A biology student may know the process but fail to use the right key terms. A maths student may reach the answer but not justify a step.

Teaching beyond lessons means helping students turn understanding into marks.


Supporting Parents Too

Educational outreach is not only for students.

Parents often want to help but feel unsure. The subjects may have changed since they were at school. Exam boards may seem confusing. The language of modern mark schemes can feel unfamiliar.

A clear blog or video can help parents understand:

What their child is studying.
Why a topic is difficult.
What good revision looks like.
When tuition might help.
How to support without taking over.
Why confidence matters as much as content.

For parents of GCSE and A-Level students, this can be reassuring. They may not need to teach the subject themselves, but they can learn how to encourage better habits and recognise when a student is genuinely stuck.

In that sense, outreach supports the whole learning environment around the student.


The Personal Side: Why This Matters to Me

After many years of teaching, I have learned that students rarely struggle in neat, predictable ways.

Sometimes the problem is knowledge.
Sometimes it is confidence.
Sometimes it is exam technique.
Sometimes it is a missing practical experience.
Sometimes it is simply that nobody has explained the idea in a way that fits how that student thinks.

That is why I like creating a range of resources.

A lesson can be personal.
A video can be replayed.
A blog can be read slowly.
A worked solution can be followed step by step.
A short post can provide a timely reminder.
An experiment can make the abstract real.

Each format helps in a different way.

And because students learn differently, that variety matters.


Practical Examples of Outreach in Action

Here are some examples of how educational outreach can support students beyond formal tuition:

1. The student revising late at night

They are stuck on a physics calculation. A worked example shows not only the formula, but why the distance must be doubled or halved. Suddenly the answer makes sense.

2. The parent trying to understand A-Level Chemistry

They read a blog about periodicity and realise that their child is not simply memorising trends. They need to explain the reasons behind those trends.

3. The GCSE student who missed a practical

A filmed experiment demonstration shows the apparatus, the method, the result, and the conclusion. The student can now connect the required practical to the exam question.

4. The student who panics during maths papers

A short post reminds them to draw a diagram, label known values, and plan before rushing into algebra.

5. The student who cannot afford weekly tuition

They may still benefit from free videos, revision advice, blog explanations, and exam technique guidance.

None of these replace the value of direct teaching, but they all extend its reach.


Education Should Not Vanish Behind a Paywall

Private tuition is, by its nature, limited. There are only so many hours in a week and only so many students one teacher can work with directly.

But educational knowledge should travel further than that.

Of course, a business must be sustainable. Lessons, resources, equipment, studio time, and preparation all have costs. But there is also a wider responsibility in education: to make useful explanations available where possible.

A helpful video may lead a student to book tuition.
A blog may support a current student between lessons.
A social media post may help someone who will never become a client.
All of these outcomes have value.

For me, that is part of what a modern education company should do.


Teaching in a Connected World

We now live in a world where a student’s learning does not come from one source.

They learn from school, textbooks, videos, websites, tutors, parents, friends, apps, and social media. Some of that information is excellent. Some of it is confusing. Some of it is wrong.

That means trusted educational voices matter.

A teacher’s role is not only to explain content, but to help students find clarity in the noise.

This is why Philip M Russell Ltd continues to create educational content across different platforms. The aim is not simply to post for the sake of posting. The aim is to build a connected learning environment where students can find clear, thoughtful, practical help.


Conclusion: The Lesson May End, But the Teaching Continues

At the end of a lesson, the camera may switch off. The student may close the notebook. The Zoom call may end. The classroom may become quiet.

But the learning should not stop there.

A good explanation can keep working long after it is first given.
A video can help a student months later.
A blog can guide a parent.
A worked solution can unlock a difficult question.
A short post can remind someone not to give up.

Some of the students we help will never actually meet us.

And that is exactly why educational outreach matters.

Teaching does not end when the lesson finishes. Sometimes, that is when the next stage of learning begins.

Wednesday, 20 May 2026

Can a Media Production Company Actually Go Green?

 


Can a Media Production Company Actually Go Green?

Greener Media Production at Philip M Russell Ltd

Making videos uses energy. The question is how intelligently you use it.

There is a slightly uncomfortable truth about modern media production: it is not as invisible as it looks.

A finished video may appear on YouTube, a blog, a social media feed, or inside an online lesson as if by magic. But behind that short clip may be several cameras, lights, microphones, computers, hard drives, batteries, chargers, studio equipment, internet streaming, editing software, rendering time, cloud storage, and sometimes a vehicle journey or two.

So, can a media production company actually go green?

The honest answer is: not perfectly — but much more intelligently than many people realise.

At Philip M Russell Ltd, this is not just a theoretical question. The company sits at the intersection of education, video production, photography, sailing films, online teaching, R&D, and workshop-based making. All of those activities use energy. The challenge is to ask where that energy comes from, how much is wasted, and whether better decisions can reduce the environmental impact without reducing the quality of the work.


Media Production Is Not Energy-Free

It is easy to think of video as clean because there is no smoke coming out of the camera.

But media production has a very real footprint.

A typical filming or teaching setup may involve:

  • Camera batteries being charged before a shoot
  • Studio lights running for several hours
  • Audio equipment, monitors, and switchers
  • Computers editing and rendering large files
  • External drives storing hundreds of gigabytes of footage
  • Internet upload and streaming
  • Heating or cooling the filming space
  • Travel to locations
  • Recharging phones, tablets, action cameras, drones, and 360 cameras

Then there are the hidden costs: replacing equipment, buying extra storage, keeping old devices on standby, and creating far more footage than is eventually used.

In our case, this becomes especially obvious when working on sailing films. A day on the water may produce footage from conventional cameras, action cameras, 360 cameras, still photography, and sometimes drone-style or long-lens shots from the shore. The final video may be ten or twenty minutes long, but the source material could be enormous.

The “green” question is not whether we can make all of that vanish.

It is whether we can make sensible, practical choices at every stage.


Starting with the Power Supply

One of the biggest advantages at Philip M Russell Ltd is that the company already operates from a building with a strong renewable energy setup.

We have:

  • 26 solar panels
  • large battery storage
  • a heat pump
  • good insulation
  • solar-powered battery charging whenever possible

This means that a significant amount of the day-to-day energy used for teaching, filming, editing, and charging equipment can come from solar generation and stored electricity.

That changes how you think about production.

Instead of simply plugging everything in without thought, there is now a rhythm to the work. If the sun is shining, that may be the best time to charge camera batteries, recharge portable power banks, run workshop equipment, or do heavier computer work.

It is not always possible to match every task perfectly to the weather — British sunlight has a sense of humour — but it does encourage better planning.

A sunny day is not just good for filming.

It is also good for charging the tools that make the filming possible.


Charging Camera Batteries from Solar Power

Camera batteries are small individually, but media production involves a lot of them.

A filming day may require batteries for:

  • Main cameras
  • Action cameras
  • 360 cameras
  • Audio recorders
  • Wireless microphones
  • Monitors
  • Lights
  • Tablets
  • Phones
  • Gimbals
  • Remote controls
  • Portable hard drives or backup systems

The temptation is to leave chargers permanently plugged in and top everything up at random. But a greener system requires a little more discipline.

A practical workflow might look like this:

  1. Charge camera batteries during strong solar production.
  2. Use labelled battery boxes for charged and discharged batteries.
  3. Avoid unnecessary overnight charging.
  4. Use multi-chargers efficiently rather than scattering chargers everywhere.
  5. Keep a written or digital checklist so fewer “panic charges” are needed before a shoot.

This may sound simple, but small improvements matter when repeated daily.

Good organisation is often green organisation.


The Electric Whaly: Filming on the Water Without the Petrol Engine

One of the more satisfying examples is the electric Whaly.

The Whaly is used as a safety boat, camera boat, and general support platform for sailing filming. It is powered by an electric outboard, and its battery can be charged from our home solar system.

That gives it a lovely circular logic.

The sun helps charge the boat.
The boat goes onto the Thames.
The boat films sailing.
The footage helps create educational and sailing content.

And, unlike a petrol outboard, the electric motor is quiet.

That quietness matters for filming. It means less engine noise on the soundtrack, less disturbance on the river, and a calmer filming environment. When recording sailing, natural sound is important: the water, wind, rigging, sail movement, and conversations between crew. A noisy engine can ruin all of that.

So, in this case, the greener choice is also the better media production choice.

That is when sustainability becomes genuinely powerful: not when it feels like a compromise, but when it improves the result.


Online Teaching: Reducing Travel Without Reducing Quality

Another important part of the company’s greener approach is online teaching.

Not every lesson has to involve a car journey. Not every student needs to travel to a classroom. Not every demonstration needs to be limited to whoever is physically in the room.

The multi-camera teaching studio allows students to learn online while still seeing real demonstrations clearly. This is particularly important for science teaching, where students need more than a talking head and a slide deck.

With the right camera angles, students can see:

  • Close-ups of apparatus
  • Live experiments
  • Data readings
  • Calculations being worked through
  • Diagrams and annotations
  • Practical demonstrations from multiple viewpoints

This reduces travel, but it also improves access. A student who cannot easily travel can still receive a high-quality lesson. Parents do not need to drive across town. Time is saved. Fuel is saved. The lesson can still be interactive.

Of course, online teaching still uses energy. Computers, cameras, lights, microphones, and internet connections all have a footprint. But compared with repeated car journeys, especially over many weeks, it can be a very sensible choice.

The key is not to say online is always better.

The key is to use the right format for the right lesson.


The Heat Pump and the Studio Problem

Studios are not always easy spaces to run efficiently.

Video production often benefits from controlled conditions: good lighting, reliable sound, comfortable temperature, reduced background noise, and predictable equipment setup.

But all of that requires energy.

Heating the teaching and filming environment with a heat pump helps reduce reliance on fossil fuels. Good insulation also matters enormously because the greenest unit of energy is often the one you do not need to use in the first place.

A well-insulated space means:

  • Less heat loss
  • More stable filming conditions
  • Less energy demand
  • More comfortable teaching sessions
  • Fewer distractions from cold rooms or noisy heating systems

This is where environmental thinking overlaps with professional production standards. A cold, uncomfortable studio is not good for anyone. Neither is a room full of fan noise, draughts, and flickering lights.

A greener studio still has to be a good studio.


The Difficult Bit: High-Power Equipment

This is where honesty matters.

It is easy to write a cheerful green blog and pretend everything has been solved. It has not.

Some parts of media production are still energy-hungry.

Editing and rendering video can use a lot of power. High-resolution footage, especially 4K, 8K, 360 video, or multi-camera timelines, places heavy demands on computers. Large monitors, fast storage, graphics cards, and backup systems all add to the load.

Then there is the problem of data.

Modern video creates huge files. A sailing project, competent crew course, or multi-camera lesson can generate hundreds of gigabytes very quickly. Storing that footage responsibly becomes part of the environmental equation.

Do we really need to keep every failed shot forever?

Do we need three versions of the same export?

Do we need to film everything in the highest possible resolution?

Sometimes the answer is yes. Often the answer is no.

A greener media workflow means asking practical questions before pressing record:

  • What resolution is actually needed?
  • How many cameras are useful, rather than merely impressive?
  • Can the footage be logged properly so we do not waste hours searching later?
  • Can unusable footage be deleted after review?
  • Can archive drives be powered down when not in use?
  • Can rendering be scheduled when solar power is available?

This is not glamorous, but it is important.

Green production is not only about solar panels.
It is also about workflow discipline.


The Electric Vehicle Question

Transport remains one of the harder problems.

An electric vehicle would fit naturally into the company’s environmental approach. It would make sense for carrying camera gear, travelling to filming locations, attending events, and supporting sailing production work.

But electric vehicles are still expensive, especially when you need enough space for equipment.

That is one of the realities of going green. Sometimes the better environmental option exists, but the cost is still a serious barrier. Businesses have to make decisions that are financially sustainable as well as environmentally desirable.

So, for now, the practical approach is to reduce unnecessary travel where possible.

That means:

  • Using online meetings when they genuinely work
  • Combining journeys where possible
  • Planning shoots carefully
  • Avoiding repeated trips caused by forgotten equipment
  • Using local filming opportunities
  • Making the most of each location visit

Again, organisation helps.

A badly planned filming trip wastes time, fuel, battery power, and patience.


Greener Does Not Mean Lower Quality

There is a common assumption that greener production means compromising quality.

I do not think that is true.

In many cases, greener decisions improve quality because they force better planning.

For example:

  • Charging batteries properly reduces failed shoots.
  • Using quieter electric boats improves sound recording.
  • Reducing unnecessary footage makes editing more focused.
  • Better insulation improves comfort and consistency in the studio.
  • Online teaching reduces wasted travel time.
  • Efficient lighting can reduce heat and power use.
  • Solar-aware scheduling encourages more deliberate workflows.

The environmental benefit is real, but so is the professional benefit.

Waste is rarely a sign of creativity. More often, it is a sign that the process needs improving.


Practical Examples from Our Work

1. Filming Sailing on the Thames

Sailing filming involves water, wind, unpredictable movement, and lots of batteries. Using the electric Whaly as a support and camera boat reduces noise and avoids petrol use on the river. Charging it from solar power makes the process even better.

It also allows us to capture calmer, cleaner audio and move quietly around sailing boats without disturbing the scene.

2. Creating Online Science Lessons

The teaching studio allows students to see real experiments remotely. This reduces travel while preserving the practical nature of science education. Instead of replacing experiments with slides, the cameras bring the experiment to the student.

3. Workshop R&D

When designing teaching aids, camera mounts, prototypes, and experimental apparatus, the workshop can use solar-generated electricity whenever possible. Laser cutting, 3D printing, and tool charging are not energy-free, but they can be managed more intelligently.

4. Editing and Rendering Video

Large video projects can be scheduled to make better use of available solar power. This does not solve the entire energy problem, but it is a practical improvement. It also encourages better file management and fewer unnecessary exports.

5. Social Media and Blog Production

Daily content creation can become digitally messy. Photos, drafts, videos, exports, and backups accumulate quickly. Greener media production includes digital housekeeping: deleting obvious waste, archiving properly, and not treating cloud storage as a bottomless cupboard.


What Still Needs Improving?

There are still plenty of challenges.

The company still uses high-power computers. Video rendering still demands energy. Some filming still requires travel. Camera gear has manufacturing and replacement costs. Storage demands continue to grow. Electric vehicles are still expensive. Batteries themselves have environmental impacts.

There is also the danger of “green theatre” — doing something that looks good while ignoring the larger impact.

That is why the goal should not be to claim perfection.

The goal should be continuous improvement.

A useful question is:

Can this be done with less waste, less travel, less unnecessary energy, or better timing?

If the answer is yes, then it is worth considering.


The Bigger Lesson: Sustainability Is a Design Problem

For a company like Philip M Russell Ltd, sustainability is not a separate department. It is part of design.

It affects how we design lessons, how we film, how we charge equipment, how we store files, how we heat the studio, how we travel, how we build apparatus, and how we plan future projects.

That makes it interesting.

Going green is not just about buying “eco” products. It is about thinking like an engineer, a teacher, a filmmaker, and a slightly obsessive organiser all at the same time.

Where does the energy come from?
Where is it wasted?
What can be redesigned?
What can be avoided?
What can be improved without making the work worse?

These are good questions for any modern company.


Conclusion: Going Green Is Not One Big Decision

A media production company can go greener, but not by pretending that videos, computers, cameras, and studios have no environmental cost.

The real answer is more practical.

Use solar power where possible.
Store energy intelligently.
Charge equipment deliberately.
Reduce unnecessary travel.
Make online teaching genuinely useful.
Use electric transport where it makes sense.
Manage data properly.
Plan shoots carefully.
Avoid waste.
Keep improving.

At Philip M Russell Ltd, the aim is not to be perfect. The aim is to make better decisions more often.

Because making videos uses energy.

The question is how intelligently you use it.