From: HVAC on
An X-51A Waverider flight-test vehicle successfully made the longest
supersonic combustion ramjet-powered hypersonic flight May 26 off the
southern California Pacific coast.

The more than 200 second burn by the X-51's Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne-
built air breathing scramjet engine accelerated the vehicle to Mach 5.
The previous longest scramjet burn in a flight test was 12 seconds in
a NASA X-43.
Air Force officials called the test, the first of four planned, an
unqualified success. The flight is considered the first use of a
practical hydrocarbon fueled scramjet in flight.

"We are ecstatic to have accomplished most of our test points on the
X-51A's very first hypersonic mission," said Charlie Brink, a X-51A
program manager with the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-
Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. "We equate this leap in engine
technology as equivalent to the post-World War II jump from propeller-
driven aircraft to jet engines."

The X-51 launched at about 10 a.m. from here, carried under the left
wing of an Air Force Flight Test Center B-52 Stratofortress. Then,
flying at 50,000 feet over the Point Mugu Naval Air Warfare Center Sea
Range, it was released. Four seconds later an Army Tactical Missile
solid rocket booster accelerated the X-51 to about Mach 4.8 mach
before it and a connecting interstage were jettisoned. The launch and
separation were normal, Mr. Brink said.

Four X-51A cruisers have been built for the Air Force and the (Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency) by industry partners Pratt &
Whitney Rocketdyne and Boeing. Air Force officials intend to fly the
three remaining X-51A flight test vehicles this fall, Mr. Brink said.

Air Force officials currently plan to fly each on virtually identical
flight profiles, building knowledge from each successive flight.

Hypersonic flight, normally defined as beginning at Mach 5, five times
speed of sound, presents unique technical challenges with heat and
pressure, which make conventional turbine engines impractical. Program
officials said producing thrust with a scramjet has been compared to
lighting a match in a hurricane and keeping it burning.

"This first flight was the culmination of a six-year effort by a
small, but very talented AFRL, DARPA and industry development team,"
Mr. Brink said. "Now we will go back and really scrutinize our data.
No test is perfect, and I'm sure we will find anomalies that we will
need to address before the next flight. But anyone will tell you that
we learn just as much, if not more, when we encounter a glitch."

Mr. Brink noted while development of the X-51A's engine and the test
program are complex, controlling costs has been a key objective. The
team has incorporated or adapted existing proven technologies and
elected from the outset not to build recovery systems in the flight
test vehicles, in an effort to control costs and focus funding on the
vehicle's fuel-cooled scramjet engine.

Mr. Brink said he believes the X-51A program will provide knowledge
required to develop the game changing technologies needed for future
access to space and hypersonic weapon applications.
From: Larry on
HVAC <mr.hvac(a)gmail.com> wrote in news:5b5a760e-8a23-4ac6-ad45-6de501d82a82
@m21g2000vbr.googlegroups.com:

> Mr. Brink said he believes the X-51A program will provide knowledge
> required to develop the game changing technologies needed for future
> access to space and hypersonic weapon applications.
>
>

Unlike Mr Brink, I believe the X-51A program to be just another load of
government bureaucrats driving us into total bankruptcy......



--
Creationism is to science what storks are to obstetrics.

Larry

From: HVAC on

"Larry" <noone(a)home.com> wrote in message
news:Xns9D86687F6BA38noonehomecom(a)74.209.131.13...
> HVAC <mr.hvac(a)gmail.com> wrote in
> news:5b5a760e-8a23-4ac6-ad45-6de501d82a82
> @m21g2000vbr.googlegroups.com:
>
>> Mr. Brink said he believes the X-51A program will provide knowledge
>> required to develop the game changing technologies needed for future
>> access to space and hypersonic weapon applications.
>>
>>
>
> Unlike Mr Brink, I believe the X-51A program to be just another load of
> government bureaucrats driving us into total bankruptcy......


With further improvement we could have an X-51A-type
aircraft deliver a nuke anywhere in the world in under
2 hours.

I think that's a great idea and what could possibly go wrong?




--
Too Stupid to Understand Science? Try Religion


From: Brian Wraith on
On 5/28/2010 7:51 AM, HVAC wrote:
> "Larry"<noone(a)home.com> wrote in message
> news:Xns9D86687F6BA38noonehomecom(a)74.209.131.13...
>> HVAC<mr.hvac(a)gmail.com> wrote in
>> news:5b5a760e-8a23-4ac6-ad45-6de501d82a82
>> @m21g2000vbr.googlegroups.com:
>>
>>> Mr. Brink said he believes the X-51A program will provide knowledge
>>> required to develop the game changing technologies needed for future
>>> access to space and hypersonic weapon applications.
>>>
>>>
>>
>> Unlike Mr Brink, I believe the X-51A program to be just another load of
>> government bureaucrats driving us into total bankruptcy......
>
>
> With further improvement we could have an X-51A-type
> aircraft deliver a nuke anywhere in the world in under
> 2 hours.
>
> I think that's a great idea and what could possibly go wrong?
>
>
>
>

Probably more useful for photo intelligence. Regardless, it is a
tremendous technology with very significant potential in the civilian
sector.

Some people would rather see monies invested in technology diverted to
SEIU and ACORN.
From: Lord Vetinari on
"Brian Wraith" <brianwraith(a)newzealand.invalid> wrote in message
news:hton0f$hib$1(a)news.eternal-september.org...
[snip]
> Some people would rather see monies invested in technology diverted to
> SEIU and ACORN.

SEIU is funded by union dues. Which ACORN do you mean? Are you sure you
don't mean COI?