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Originally posted by ShatteredSkies
Not really, considering that the Space Shuttle is an aerodynamic designed known as, a Wing Body aircraft.
Sure the Shuttle is made up of Ceramic bricks, and the rockets and main fuel tank might as well be a giant rectangular shape with alot of gas in it, but the shuttle is still aerodynamic.
Originally posted by sardion2000
What about Vacuum villed Aerostats, does anybody know how high that can fly?
Originally posted by waynos
Originally posted by sardion2000
What about Vacuum villed Aerostats, does anybody know how high that can fly?
Never heard of those. How do you create a vacuum in an aerostat without is collapsing?
Even better than Helium , according to Hunt, is the idea to use a vacuum-lift system in the hybrid aircraft. During normal operation of the aircraft, lift is provided by the vacuum contained within rigid cells. As a precautionary measure, the new hybrid aircraft will use a Dual-Aerostatic-Lift system that will include the use of vacuum-lift and the use of a lifting gas. The lifting gas is expanded into collapsible gas bags, in the event of rupture of the vacuum-lift cell wall.
Originally posted by waynos
Thanks, yes I figured that any such system would need to be rigid but I wondered how you would make it strong enough yet light enough to fly.
Originally posted by veritas 7
Have been wondering for a while now, what exactly determines a planes maximum altitude?
Is it the power of the engines?
The shape of the wings?
Materials used etc?
Or just plain aerodynamics?
Done some research on the subject, but know real conclusive answer's!
Anyone help?
Originally posted by veritas 7
So how about this then!
If you had a plane that could go to 60,000 ft, because of the height it was designed for, and with the engine's that it had as standard, could you then change engine's, or increase thrust, to make the aircraft go higher? Obviously if the aircraft's frame/structure could withstand it!
Is it possible?
Originally posted by RegenmacherNot sure where that 125,000' altitude is coming from on the SR-71, since the MiG-25 holds the record at 123,524 feet
Among other records, the Ye-266 set the world's absolute altitude record for a ground-launched aircraft at 118,867 ft. on 25 July 1973. After the Streak Eagle broke many of the Ye-266's time-to-climb records (but not its absolute or payload-to-altitude records), the modified Ye-266M reclaimed its records over a two year period starting in 1975. Some of the Ye-266M's records have since been broken by the Sukhoi P-42, but six still stand. Among these is the absolute altitude record of 123,492 ft. and the altitude record with a 2,000 kg payload, 121,622 ft.
"Ye-266" is actually a invented name. The designation was used to cover three aircraft, the Ye-155R-1, Ye-155R-3 and Ye-155P-1. The former two were modified prototypes of the MiG-25R while the latter was a modified prototype of the MiG-25P. The P-1 was powered by R-15B-300 engines while the R-1 and R-3 used the more powerful R-15BD-300s.
The "Ye-266M" was actually the Ye-155M, a technology demonstrator for the MiG-31. It retained the airframe of the MiG-25P but used the very powerful R-15BF2-300 engines.
It should be noted that the A-12, the F-12 or the SR-71 could all have easily broken the absolute altitude records set by the Ye-155 series, but any such record attempt would be a one-way trip in a Blackbird. The Blackbird has strict AoA limitations which would undoubtedly be exceeded during a zoom to an altitude in excess of 100,000 ft. If the AoA limits are exceeded, a pitch-up results, leading to a structural break-up at supersonic speeds.