X43 Hits Mach 7!
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Wait a minute....a cvilian hypersonic aircraft? Would not the passengers need to be in fairly decent shape to be able to withstand the G forces? Oh, and no kids, pregnant people, old folks, anyone with heart problem, sinus trouble, equilibrium problems, etc. that is to say....oh fuck it...I'm probably spouting bullshit again. But seriously, the G. forces seem like a pretty serious issue.
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Why should acceleration be a problem? A hypersonic plane has a higher top speed then a conventional jet, but that just means that it has to spend more time accelerating at the same rate, which doesn't take nearly as long as you might think in the first place. Hell, most of the time between take off and achieving cruising speeds is actually spent gaining altitude, not accelrating.Chardok wrote:Wait a minute....a cvilian hypersonic aircraft? Would not the passengers need to be in fairly decent shape to be able to withstand the G forces? Oh, and no kids, pregnant people, old folks, anyone with heart problem, sinus trouble, equilibrium problems, etc. that is to say....oh fuck it...I'm probably spouting bullshit again. But seriously, the G. forces seem like a pretty serious issue.
But wouldn't you have to be seated the whole time? That'd be awhile if the acceleration was done at a safe rate. I have to say that the few times I have flown, the takeoff acceleration was uncomfortable, to have that prolonged to, say, several minutes.....anyway...just doesn't seem practical, is all.The Kernel wrote:Why should acceleration be a problem? A hypersonic plane has a higher top speed then a conventional jet, but that just means that it has to spend more time accelerating at the same rate, which doesn't take nearly as long as you might think in the first place. Hell, most of the time between take off and achieving cruising speeds is actually spent gaining altitude, not accelrating.Chardok wrote:Wait a minute....a cvilian hypersonic aircraft? Would not the passengers need to be in fairly decent shape to be able to withstand the G forces? Oh, and no kids, pregnant people, old folks, anyone with heart problem, sinus trouble, equilibrium problems, etc. that is to say....oh fuck it...I'm probably spouting bullshit again. But seriously, the G. forces seem like a pretty serious issue.
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Chardok, the shaking you feel during takeoff is not mere acceleration g-forces. In fact, most of the acceleration is done in the air, and you barely feel it because you aren't increasing your speed all that fast.Chardok wrote: But wouldn't you have to be seated the whole time? That'd be awhile if the acceleration was done at a safe rate. I have to say that the few times I have flown, the takeoff acceleration was uncomfortable, to have that prolonged to, say, several minutes.....anyway...just doesn't seem practical, is all.
Let's play with some numbers.
Let's assume that the aircraft is going Mach 7 at sea level (because I remember the speed of sound at sea level and don't feel like working it out at 60,000 feet). So the aircraft is going 7*340 = 2400m/s at full speed. My car does 0-60mph in ten seconds, an acceleration that you can barely notice. That's 0-27 m/s in 10s, or 2.7 m/s².
Let's apply that same acceleration to our hypothetical aircraft. V = at, so t = V/a. (2400 m/s) / (2.7 m/s²) = 890s, or 15min. This is actually lower than the time a typical airliner spends accelerating.
So no, the acceleration would be perfectly innocuous. We're not talking about an Amerika-Bomber or something here.
Let's assume that the aircraft is going Mach 7 at sea level (because I remember the speed of sound at sea level and don't feel like working it out at 60,000 feet). So the aircraft is going 7*340 = 2400m/s at full speed. My car does 0-60mph in ten seconds, an acceleration that you can barely notice. That's 0-27 m/s in 10s, or 2.7 m/s².
Let's apply that same acceleration to our hypothetical aircraft. V = at, so t = V/a. (2400 m/s) / (2.7 m/s²) = 890s, or 15min. This is actually lower than the time a typical airliner spends accelerating.
So no, the acceleration would be perfectly innocuous. We're not talking about an Amerika-Bomber or something here.
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True, but like alot of the space program, the initial cost of developement is too expensive to ask the private sector to do, because you know they won't. So the goverment doing the intitial development for military purposes will hopefully get it to the point where the private sector can sink its teeth into it and get it to the point where it can be used for commercial uses.The Kernel wrote:
You still have to make it economical which is a much bigger hurdle then developing a working hypersonic jet. There are some serious limits to how fuel efficient a hypersonic jet can be, and this demonstration, while impressive, does nothing to solve those issues.
In any case, if the government is serious about developing hypersonic planes for civilian use, what they need to do is start funneling some subsidies into airplane manufacturers just like they did during the SST development (which they eventually pulled which is why it was canned).
They say, "the tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots." I suppose it never occurred to them that they are the tyrants, not the patriots. Those weapons are not being used to fight some kind of tyranny; they are bringing them to an event where people are getting together to talk. -Mike Wong
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But as far as board culture in general, I do think that young male overaggression is a contributing factor to the general atmosphere of hostility. It's not SOS and the Mess throwing hand grenades all over the forum- Red
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And after several more minutes, you'd be at your destination.Chardok wrote:But wouldn't you have to be seated the whole time? That'd be awhile if the acceleration was done at a safe rate. I have to say that the few times I have flown, the takeoff acceleration was uncomfortable, to have that prolonged to, say, several minutes.....anyway...just doesn't seem practical, is all.
It is not like we are talking about grueling 12hr flights or anything....
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Occam might have something to say about that...Peregrin Toker wrote:I don't know... of course, it's possible that the USAF has another secret aircraft which bears a striking resemblance to a F-111 from a long distance but otherwise has nothing in common with it.Rogue 9 wrote: Bullshit. F-111 is a strike bomber, despite the designation. It wouldn't be flying escort for anything; when it was still in operation it usually got an escort itself.
Fine.Okay, I can't remember if the RAF officer actually identified the refuelling aircraft...Further, why would they modify a B-52 when a KC-135 would work just as well, and in fact better?
Handily, an F-111 isn't all that much longer than an F-117, if at all. Its a strike bomber, not a heavy bomber.Wrong - he made a drawing of what he saw, and it looked NOTHING like a F-117. (the sighted aircraft was at least the length of a F-111, and didn't have the vaguely W-shaped tail of the F-117)As for enlongated triangle, you pretty adequately described an F-117.
Tell me, what possible configuration would produce rings of smoke at regular intervals, as opposed to a continuous contrail, even a wide, annular one? That would suggest an engine that's pulsing in some way, rather than producing continuous thrust. That's no way to fly anything at subsonic speeds, much less hypersonic.What about experimental engine types which are being kept completely secret to anyone outside the airforce and the corporations which manufacture them?There's a very good reason why no known aircraft leaves "donuts on a rope" contrails. There is no possible engine or wing configuration that would leave such a trail and still fly. That's a cartoon thing.
BTW - what about the unidentified sonic booms, then? Those which even aviation experts can't explain?
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There are pulsejets in design right now, but they would not produce a pulsed contrail. The pulsing is incredibly rapid. Pulsing frequency low enough to be visible in the contrail would shake the aircraft apart. Not a good thing for what is supposedly a photorecon aircraft.
That in itself is probably the most damning point. An aircraft can only have a pulsed contrail if the thrust is pulsed. Even a pulse of a few cycles per second is going to make an aircraft that is a truly atrocious camera platform.
That in itself is probably the most damning point. An aircraft can only have a pulsed contrail if the thrust is pulsed. Even a pulse of a few cycles per second is going to make an aircraft that is a truly atrocious camera platform.
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No you can't, if you think what you've posted is proof you need your head examined.Peregrin Toker wrote:
I can prove it.
No such thing ever happened. What did happen is Boeing took out a paten on a very basic design for a hypersonic plane they called Aurora. Now why exactly would they take out a patent on something so fucking secret? And why would the US military use a name already used for Canadian P-3's? We don't like replicating names; it causes confusion and lawsuits (this is why the F-16 is the Fighting Falcon BTW, A French executive jet already had recently taken the name Falcon)1. Back in the eighties (I can't remember when) on the US Military budget appeared something called "Project Aurora" which a lot of money apparently was spent on. So the American armed forces have definately worked on some kind of Aurora project.
Ex military personal and people living near military bases have also reported thousands of UFO landings. The donuts on a rope contrails defy logic, a pulsed engine makes zero sence for a high speed aircraft, as does the distrinctly diferent sonic boom BS. Sonic booms don't get different, they just get louder.2. People living in the vicinity of secret air bases (not just Area 51) occassionally report jet trails resembling "donuts on a rope" (No known jet aircraft leave such trails) as well as sonic booms distinctly different from those of known supersonic aircraft. (and such reports also come from retired Air Force personnel and other people with knowledge about aviation) So the USAF have some kind of supersonic aircraft which is top secret.
Actually there's a photo of the alleged sighting over Scotland, I've seen it and it looks pretty blatantly fake, the aircraft are all dark despite it being daylight and are out of scale.3. A RAF officer (I think) - or some other type of British guy with a lot of knowledge about military aircraft - has reported seeing in broad daylight a trio of F-111s escorting an unidentified aircraft resembling an elongated black triangle, while said mystery plane was refuelling in-flight from a modified B-52. So the USA (or some other NATO power) has a triangular aircraft which Britain doesn't know of... officially.
Also, similar craft have been sighted repeatedly in Scotland, where the USAF IIRC have some of its European bases.
No its most likely utter bullshit.To be honest, I don't think these aircraft are the same - but the black triangular aircraft is most likely supersonic and definately secret.
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The pulse-wave detonation engines (PDEs) that are being researched work at around 2.5kHz, compare this to normal pulsejets which only fire a few hundred times a second. The idea that the doughnuts-on-a-string contrails are from a Black Project stationed at Groom Lake and likely the Aurora isn't new. I can't say the contrails would fit the PDE hypothesis, even if the Aurora/Black Knight/Switchblade aircraft in question used the fuselage as the aerospike for external detonation of LH2 or liquid methane.Howedar wrote:There are pulsejets in design right now, but they would not produce a pulsed contrail. The pulsing is incredibly rapid. Pulsing frequency low enough to be visible in the contrail would shake the aircraft apart. Not a good thing for what is supposedly a photorecon aircraft.
That in itself is probably the most damning point. An aircraft can only have a pulsed contrail if the thrust is pulsed. Even a pulse of a few cycles per second is going to make an aircraft that is a truly atrocious camera platform.
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Logic says that's pretty fucking unlikely and history also shows that highly trained personal people can confuse massive four engine bombers with single engine fighters at long distances.Peregrin Toker wrote:
I don't know... of course, it's possible that the USAF has another secret aircraft which bears a striking resemblance to a F-111 from a long distance but otherwise has nothing in common with it.
The picture shows a KC-135, which for some reason (the fact that the pictures fake most likely) is the same size as the F-111's.Okay, I can't remember if the RAF officer actually identified the refuelling aircraft...
You can't clearly see the F-117's tail from below you know. But I guess a single eyewitness account and an editied photo beat out all other logic and a total lack of any hard evidence.Wrong - he made a drawing of what he saw, and it looked NOTHING like a F-117. (the sighted aircraft was at least the length of a F-111, and didn't have the vaguely W-shaped tail of the F-117)
As noted by others a pulsed engine would be a horrible idea, and the fact that all you can do is appeal to the possibility of yet more logical secret programs isn't helping your case.What about experimental engine types which are being kept completely secret to anyone outside the airforce and the corporations which manufacture them?
You made the claim; lets see some proof of it. But that will be a bit hard for you, since it's a claim of something that makes no sense and that's suppose to be occurring in a nation, which is home to several thousand supersonic fighters. To round it all of the reports mostly come from around Nellis Air Force base... the world's largest military aircraft training range and one devoid of noise restrictions.BTW - what about the unidentified sonic booms, then? Those which even aviation experts can't explain?
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Thank you AV, my terminology was poor. I was refering to pulse-wave detonation engines, not to the archaic pulsejets on such things as the V-1.
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Curiously, someone on another board has brought up the Switchblade concept and someone who's an engineer in the USAF said there is a patch for it which basically means it is a real project (I have to question that). There is also a patent..
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The reported aircraft had delta wings, which the F-117 doesn't.Sea Skimmer wrote:You can't clearly see the F-117's tail from below you know. But I guess a single eyewitness account and an editied photo beat out all other logic and a total lack of any hard evidence.Wrong - he made a drawing of what he saw, and it looked NOTHING like a F-117. (the sighted aircraft was at least the length of a F-111, and didn't have the vaguely W-shaped tail of the F-117)
As for the photo being edited - the photo wasn't produced by the original spotter - it was made by some desperate hoaxer later as a means of corroboration.Actually there's a photo of the alleged sighting over Scotland, I've seen it and it looks pretty blatantly fake, the aircraft are all dark despite it being daylight and are out of scale.
You're sure that Nellis AFB isn't home to aircraft which are virtually unknown to the public?. To round it all of the reports mostly come from around Nellis Air Force base... the world's largest military aircraft training range and one devoid of noise restrictions.
Many UFO sightings are caused by secret military aircraft.Ex military personal and people living near military bases have also reported thousands of UFO landings.
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The F-117 is shaped like a friggin' delta!Peregrin Toker wrote:The reported aircraft had delta wings, which the F-117 doesn't.Sea Skimmer wrote:You can't clearly see the F-117's tail from below you know. But I guess a single eyewitness account and an editied photo beat out all other logic and a total lack of any hard evidence.Wrong - he made a drawing of what he saw, and it looked NOTHING like a F-117. (the sighted aircraft was at least the length of a F-111, and didn't have the vaguely W-shaped tail of the F-117)
Unsupported assertion. Prove that secret U.S. military aircraft are the source of the sightings. Especially the ones not over U.S. territory.As for the photo being edited - the photo wasn't produced by the original spotter - it was made by some desperate hoaxer later as a means of corroboration.Actually there's a photo of the alleged sighting over Scotland, I've seen it and it looks pretty blatantly fake, the aircraft are all dark despite it being daylight and are out of scale.Way to cover your ass there...You're sure that Nellis AFB isn't home to aircraft which are virtually unknown to the public?
You done yet, or will I have to pick apart yet another post full of crazy conspiracy theory crap?
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Argh! Stupid lack of edit. Used instead of >_<
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I love how you state that as if it's incontrovertible fact, you stupid bitch.Peregrin Toker wrote:Many UFO sightings are caused by secret military aircraft.
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More likely they'd think it was a black airplane. Cause, you know, it looks like an airplane.
Besides, this ignores the whole problem with the theory, which is that secret aircraft are not flown in the public eye. The F-117 flew only at night when it was black, and pretty much just in the desert around Tonopah.
Besides, this ignores the whole problem with the theory, which is that secret aircraft are not flown in the public eye. The F-117 flew only at night when it was black, and pretty much just in the desert around Tonopah.
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And it still only flies missions at night.
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I don't know about that; the whole flying wing concept isn't exactly new, but how many people before the F-117's public introduction knew about flying wing aircraft designs?Howedar wrote:More likely they'd think it was a black airplane. Cause, you know, it looks like an airplane.
Interesting point, one which I was not aware of. Are you sure they only flew these things at night? They fly them during the day now; are you certain they didn't perform ANY day trials with them before they were introduced?Besides, this ignores the whole problem with the theory, which is that secret aircraft are not flown in the public eye. The F-117 flew only at night when it was black, and pretty much just in the desert around Tonopah.
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Moron, the fucking F-117 is a giant delta wing from below.Peregrin Toker wrote: The reported aircraft had delta wings, which the F-117 doesn't.
Desperate means of corroboration seems to describe your totally unsupported BS pretty well. Show some proof or shut up moron.As for the photo being edited - the photo wasn't produced by the original spotter - it was made by some desperate hoaxer later as a means of corroboration.
There's no reason to believe that it is and parts of the base that where highly classified, such as the USAF's collection of stolen and captured Soviet SAM's and AAA gear have been opened to the public. Now lets see you actually prove that any hypersonic classified aircraft exist.You're sure that Nellis AFB isn't home to aircraft which are virtually unknown to the public?
Prove it moron or shut up. You are making the claim, you are the one who must support it. We are under no obligation hear, you fucking are.Many UFO sightings are caused by secret military aircraft.
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The F-117 only flew at night or even left the hanger before November 1988, there's no reason to doubt this and no reason for anyone to lie about it. In interviews many of the early pilots talked about how they had a hard time working because there schedules had to be completely reserved whenever they where at the base.The Kernel wrote:
Interesting point, one which I was not aware of. Are you sure they only flew these things at night? They fly them during the day now; are you certain they didn't perform ANY day trials with them before they were introduced?
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— Field Marshal William Slim 1956
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Completely. Pilots made their first flights at night, for crying out loud.The Kernel wrote:Interesting point, one which I was not aware of. Are you sure they only flew these things at night? They fly them during the day now; are you certain they didn't perform ANY day trials with them before they were introduced?
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