To: corkoman
Ok - what happens when the sun goes down? These puppies drop and roll right? They cannot stay up indefinitely, right?
From NASA:
"On 26 Jun 2003 the aircraft was making the second in a series of shakedown flights leading toward a planned 40-hour long-endurance mission, when the aircraft broke apart in flight. The lightweight, highly flexible flying wing took off at 10:06 a.m. local time. About 16 minutes into the flight the aircraft encountered atmospheric turbulence causing abnormally high wing dihedral (upward bowing of both wingtips). Unobserved mild pitch oscillations began, but quickly diminished.
Thirty minutes into the flight the aircraft again encountered normal turbulence and then experienced an unexpected, persistent high wing dihedral configuration. As a result, the aircraft became unstable as pitch oscillations grew. Airspeed deviated from the normal flight speed, and the deviations grew with every cycle of the oscillation, soon exceeding the aircrafts design speed. The resulting high dynamic pressures caused the wings outer wing panels to fail and the solar cells and skin on the upper surface to rip off."
Forget indefinitely. The thing can't even stay in the air for 45 minutes.
5 posted on
07/24/2011 5:24:10 AM PDT by
Renderofveils
(My loathings are simple: stupidity, oppression, crime, cruelty, soft music. - Nabokov)
To: Renderofveils
My tax dollars well spent...not.
6 posted on
07/24/2011 6:29:41 AM PDT by
JimmyMc
To: Renderofveils
Forget indefinitely. The thing can't even stay in the air for 45 minutes.That's what I was thinking when first looking at the image. That thing couldn't survive even light afternoon turbulence. It's an expensive toy!
7 posted on
07/24/2011 6:32:32 AM PDT by
CharlyFord
(t)
To: Renderofveils
Forget indefinitely. The thing can't even stay in the air for 45 minutes. It flew up to 97,500' altitude in 45 minutes?
8 posted on
07/24/2011 7:28:12 AM PDT by
Mike Darancette
(Pelosi: Obamacare indulgences for sale.)
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