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Back in the saddle again
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Central TX west of Houston
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X15 and X-series planes
I remember as a kid reading about this stuff in books, and probably encyclopedias. They fuel my imaginations, and still do to an extent. These and the SR71 are absolutely the things that young mens dreams are made of.
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Steve '08 Boxster RS60 Spyder #0099/1960 - never named a car before, but this is Charlotte. '88 targa ![]() |
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![]() Notice the airframe numbers in the pictures Mine is 66671 It was faster ![]() From N.A.A. in Downey CA. Picture @ Edwards AFB
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Dad worked for North American Aviation. He gave my older brother an X-15 model, some kind of corporate promo deal, the sort of thing a lawyer for NAA would have on his desk.
I think we have probably had a thread about this before
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You do not have permissi
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Is that an airplane, or a missile with a person attached?
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Non Compos Mentis
Join Date: May 2001
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My favorite quote about the X-15:
"The X-15 is the only airplane I flew where I was glad when it ran out of gas" |
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Back in the saddle again
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Rocket with a person and wings strapped on.
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Steve '08 Boxster RS60 Spyder #0099/1960 - never named a car before, but this is Charlotte. '88 targa ![]() |
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Reading about it in books!
He!!, I remember when the news would have reports of the flights on TV.
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Back in the saddle again
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I know we've had several about the SR71/A12/YF12. The X-planes have probably been mentioned, but I don't remember those threads.
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Steve '08 Boxster RS60 Spyder #0099/1960 - never named a car before, but this is Charlotte. '88 targa ![]() |
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The X-Series are so evocative because they represent such rapid advancement in speed and technology that it seemed at the time that a solution to all of our problems was just over the horizon. That period of time in post-war America must have been one of continuous wonder and amazement.
Measure it in terms of increases in speed of the fastest human on the planet. It took thousands of years for man to go from walking to the wheel to animals and sailboats. The steam engine ruled for a couple of hundred years before the internal combustion engine transformed transportation and made air travel possible. It took perhaps 50 years for airplanes to transform from rickety biplanes to 500 MPH piston-driven fighters. Then came rockets and jet engines and in barely a decade humans went from being limited by the sound barrier to traveling thousands of miles per hour. The rate of increase in the maximum speed of human travel was increasing at exponential rates with seemingly no end in sight. In the space of barely 20 years humans went from perhaps 500 miles per hour to 24,000 miles per hour. Sadly, as with Hotel California, we haven't had that spirit here since 1969. Humans haven't even attempted to increase the speed record in half a century. The X-Plane program and the narrow window of time in which they flourished will remain a lost golden age. So it is good to remember those more innocent and hopeful times and honor those magnificent machines and the people who made them possible.
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Quote:
But!!! https://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/imagegallery/image_feature_231.html Quote:
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Steve '08 Boxster RS60 Spyder #0099/1960 - never named a car before, but this is Charlotte. '88 targa ![]() |
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There are quite a few (dozens, really) books out there on the X-planes and the SR-71, I have a bunch of them and I'd highly recommend them. Some are quite detailed. Brian Shul has a nice book on the SR71, he's a really nice guy to talk to.
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canna change law physics
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To me, if you are going to "increase speed" for commercial travel, we need "Semi-Ballistic" "planes".
Basically, speed up using air breathing engines, then rocket takeover for a ballistic path to the destination, landing similar to space shuttle, but powered. Anywhere on the planet in 90 minutes or less.
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James The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the engineer adjusts the sails.- William Arthur Ward (1921-1994) Red-beard for President, 2020 |
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