Posted on 07/29/2016 8:16:36 AM PDT by DFG
For 40 years it has been the fastest plane ever built, and now the crew who flew the record-breaking, speed-shattering mission have been reunited with the aircraft they once commanded, and climbed back into the cockpit. It was 1976 when U.S. Air Force pilot Maj. Gen. Eldon 'Al' Joersz and Lt. Col. George 'GT' Morgan flew a jet faster than a speeding bullet. They flew faster than anyone had done before, or since. On July 28, 1976, the two men flew a SR-71 Blackbird spy plane for more than a thousand kilometers at 2,193 miles per hour, covering one mile every 1.64 seconds, a record that still stands today.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
Wow. I hadn't really considered that possibility, but that must be a big part of why NASA decided to keep a few SR-71s flying into the 1990s.
Yes, I figured something like that. I mentioned it because I think an SR-71 doing 3500kts would probably be doing it at 80,000+ feet. :)
At least 80,000+ feet. More likely closer to 100 or 120 thousand.
“The engines were huge.”
No they were not.
Those engines were YUUUUUUUUUUUUUUGGGGGGGGGGEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!!!!!
The late Ben Rich, the second head of Lockheed Skunkworks after Kelly Johnson, has been quoted to say three things right before his death in May of 1995.
1 : Inside the Skunk Works we were a small, intensely cohesive group consisting of about fifty veteran engineers and designers and a hundred or so expert machinists and shop workers. Our forte was building technologically advanced airplanes of small number and of high class for highly secret missions.
2 : We already have the means to travel among the stars, but these technologies are locked up in black projects, and it would take an act of God to ever get them out to benefit humanity. Anything you can imagine, we already know how to do.
3 : We now have the technology to take ET home. No, it wont take someones lifetime to do it. There is an error in the equations. We know what it is. We now have the capability to travel to the stars. First, you have to understand that we will not get to the stars using chemical propulsion. Second, we have to devise a new propulsion technology. What we have to do is find out where Einstein went wrong.
We Now Have the Technology to Take ET Home
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9ZZekWMiUQ
thanks for posting; I’m wishing I’d asked more questions of that test-pilot relative.
// But my desire to see the sky overruled my caution, I dimmed the lighting again. To my amazement, I saw a bright light outside my window. As my eyes adjusted to the view, I realized that the brilliance was the broad expanse of the Milky Way, now a gleaming stripe across the sky. Where dark spaces in the sky had usually existed, there were now dense clusters of sparkling stars. Shooting stars flashed across the canvas every few seconds. It was like a fireworks display with no sound. //
seeing the unseen
The J58’s could give more power than the air frame could handle
good old classical hand calculations. No nastran and patran used in that effort.
>>>In Germany the modern Milch Strasse is the translation of our best-known title; while it has long been, and popularly is even now, Jakobs Strasse and Jakobs Weg, Jacob's Road; as the Belt of Orion is his Staff lying alongside the road. And it has been still further associated with that patriarch as his Ladder.<<<
http://www.constellationsofwords.com/stars/milky_way.html
The U-2 pilots, meanwhile, flew their trusty, reliable planes on 9-hour missions (without refueling) at 60,000 feet without breakdowns and without fanfare. If you really wanted to enrage a U-2 pilot, you could ask him if he was hoping to upgrade to an SR-71.
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