Det virker som om USA opptrer ganske paniske i dette kappløpet hvor de ligger etter russerne og kineserne. Showet, for å kalle det med sitt rette navn, beskrevet under virker som en virkeliggjøring av den panikken som hersker i USA. Her er det montert en gammel type motor for å skape lyd og lys, en J-85 motor som satt i våre F-5`er. (Red.)
Watch This Hypersonic Test Aircraft Wow A Crowd With Its Afterburner
Hermeus, a hypersonic aviation startup, hopes to begin actually flight testing this design, with help from the US Air Force, as early as next year.
JOSEPH TREVITHICK View
Joseph Trevithick's Articles
Hypersonic
aviation startup Hermeus added flair to a ceremony to unveil its first
prototype design, the Quarterhorse,
when it started its engine and set it to full afterburner. The reusable
unmanned aircraft remained static on the ground throughout the presentation,
but the company hopes to achieve a first flight as soon as next year.
Hermeus issued a press release about
this event today. The company had announced in August that
it secured some $60 million in funding from the U.S. Air Force and venture
capital firms to support the Quarterhorse flight test program. At that time, it
said it hoped to have the aircraft actually flying within 18 months.
The Air Force has invested in Hermeus ostensibly as part of a broader effort to explore potential future hypersonic and supersonic executive transport aircraft concepts, but the various technologies at play could certainly have other applications. Air Force Brig. Gen. Jason Lindsey, the Program Executive Officer for Presidential and Executive Airlift, which is managing the service's contract with Hermeus, was among those who attended the unveiling ceremony last week.
“When an aerospace company typically
unveils a new aircraft, it’s nothing more than Styrofoam and fiberglass,”
Skyler Shuford, Hermeus' COO, said at the event. “But at Hermeus, we drive to
integrated products. And we really, really like to make fire.”
“We designed, manufactured, and
integrated the aircraft, from nothing but an outer shape, in four months,” he
added.
However, it's not entirely clear if
what the company unveiled last week is actually set to be a flying prototype
itself. It has no rudder, and there are no other clearly apparent flight
control surfaces. It also appears to lack any sort of landing gear.
AIR FORCE THROWS MILLIONS AT STARTUP TRYING TO BUILD
REUSABLE HYPERSONIC AIRCRAFTBy
Thomas NewdickPosted in THE WAR ZONE
AIR FORCE EYES HYPERSONIC VIP PASSENGER AIRCRAFT IN NEW
DEAL WITH AVIATION STARTUPBy Joseph TrevithickPosted in THE WAR ZONE
'AIR FORCE TWO' REPLACEMENT DROPPED WITH FUNDS REDIRECTED
TO SUPERSONIC TRANSPORT RESEARCHBy
Thomas NewdickPosted in THE WAR ZONE
AIR FORCE'S MAYHEM PROJECT TIED TO HYPERSONIC ENGINES FOR
PLANES SUCH AS THE SR-72By Joseph TrevithickPosted in THE WAR ZONE
NASA'S X-59A QUIET SUPERSONIC TEST JET WILL HAVE ZERO
FORWARD VISIBILITY FOR ITS PILOTBy
Joseph TrevithickPosted in THE WAR ZONE
This is not the first time Hermeus conducted a ground test of the engine it is using inside Quarterhorse, which is a so-called turbine-based combined cycle (TBCC) design. A TBCC arrangement combines a ramjet or scramjet with a more traditional jet turbine. The conventional turbine portion of Hermeus' TBCC is a General Electric J85 turbojet, a popular engine used in various aircraft, including the Air Force's T-38 Talon jet trainer. This J85 firing may be what we are actually seeing in the imagery from the unveiling event last week.
Ramjets
and scramjets have difficulty working properly at low speeds, which often
requires high-supersonic or hypersonic air vehicles to be launched using some
sort of rocket booster and makes conventional runway landings more complicated.
In principle, a TBCC configuration would allow an aircraft to take off from and
land on a runway like any other using its regular turbojet, but use its ramjet
or scramjet during the middle portion of a flight. This would greatly increase
the flexibility of the design by allowing it to use existing airport
infrastructure and offering a way around regulations on commercial flight
operations at supersonic speeds and above, among other
potential benefits.
Hermeus says Quarterhorse will be able
to achieve hypersonic speeds — typically considered anything above Mach 5.
"At these speeds — over 3,000 miles per hour — flight times from New York
to London will be 90 minutes rather than seven hours," the company's press
release says. "Mach 5 aircraft have the potential to create an additional
four trillion dollars of global economic growth per year, unlocking significant
resources that can be utilized to solve the world’s great problems."
It will certainly be interesting to
see how Quarterhorse actually performs when flight testing begins and it has a
chance to go soaring at full power.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.