![]() |
Re: Aircraft pics
Bill,
The USAF Museum is one of the places I hope to visit one day. Tons of neat stuff there....... Steve |
Re: Aircraft pics
Bill,
There was a very informative cable series on several years ago called WINGS. I think it was on The Discovery Channel at the time. I haven't seen it for some time, but I was always impressed with the breath of information and detailed manufacturing and in-flight footage they gathered. Do you know the where-abouts of this series? Steve |
Re: Aircraft pics
They still play Wings on the Discovery Wings channel. The early episodes with the British narration are getting rare and the XB-70 was one of those episodes. I saw it in 1988 but not since. Here's a Googled photo of the ill-fated XB-70 just before the collision. Joe Walker's orange-tailed F-104 is on the B-70's right wing and you can see Walker getting in close to the right wing of the XB. Walker, a highly-experienced test pilot to include flights in the X-15, surely knew about wingtip vorticies (basically horizontal tornadoes that trail aft from the wingtip of every aircraft) but he may have underestimated the strength of the massive XB-70's wingtip vorticies.
http://i12.photobucket.com/albums/a2...hotos/XB70.jpg |
Re: Aircraft pics
That thing looks like a praying mantis
|
Re: Aircraft pics
Here's a link to a series of photos of the collision and then the spin/crash of the XB-70. Text is French but the photos tell the story.
http://www.xb70.free.fr/mono/Texte/crash/crash.htm |
Re: Aircraft pics
[ QUOTE ]
That thing looks like a praying mantis [/ QUOTE ] Good eye! I think that was the intent https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...ns/naughty.gif Scare the hell out of the prey ( Russians in this case ). BTW Bill, I would have thought that at mach 3+ this B-70 would have been able to outrun SAMs. I know that the SR-71 can outrun them, but that is reported to run faster than mach 4. https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...emlins/eek.gif https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...ns/worship.gif Steve |
Re: Aircraft pics
I think the difference was that the XB-70 was only able to sustain high Mach numbers for relatively short periods whereas the SR-71 could do so for longer periods. Also, by the time the XB-70 first flew, ICBMs had taken over the prominent role in the U.S. Strategic Integrated Operations Plan (SIOP) and thus the XB-70 was basically obsolete as it rolled out the factory doors. Just as with the battleships of the U.S. Navy, the idea of the XB-70 was overtaken by technology, at least as far as the Cold War was concerned. Battleships did have one last hurrah during the 1991 Gulf War as they lobbed "Volkswagens" (WWII-era 2,000 pound cannon shells) into Kuwait but otherwise they were long out of date. Perhaps the XB-70, had it been in use in 1991, could also have pummeled the Iraqi Republican Guard, free from the threat of Iraqi SAMs and interceptors.
|
Re: Aircraft pics
I can't imagine the incredibly sick feeling that must ensue
following the destruction of such an expensive development aircraft like the XB-70. https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...lins/frown.gif If memory serves me right, I believe that the XB-70 that crashed was actually the later design varient ( articulating wings ). Makes you wonder how a company could absorb such a loss. To put it in context, how would an automaker today deal with an auto development project that ended in failure? https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...lins/dunno.gif Nuch |
Re: Aircraft pics
PONTIAC AZTEK! https://www.yenko.net/ubbthreads/imag...s/rolleyes.gif
|
Re: Aircraft pics
O.k., a little self indulgent but what the heck.....me in the back of a Learjet 40XR on my way to Sharm El Sheikh.
http://i65.photobucket.com/albums/h2...33090_4568.jpg |
All times are GMT. The time now is 09:04 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.