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Just think about your experience with non-stealth commercial aircraft. When they are low, they obscure brighter sky, they look dark. Because the total air above them is brighter than their reflection. When they are flying high, they are light compared to the sky, because they reflect more than the amount of air which is above them at that altitude. Active lighting = more flexibility and low observability. Low observability, not invisible. Radar stealth is also low observability, not invisible----such craft are detectable but at shorter ranges than conventional craft, and missions are designed with these quantitative parameters in mind.
"any kind of range"? I don't believe that. Lower observability sure, but unlike radar stealth, there is some minimum total emissions. Friction and combustion still make heat, you can't change the laws of physics. If you want to gain energy & altitude you have to burn. You can try to modify it from one bright dot to a more diffuse blob.
Originally posted by Zaphod58
Yes, friction is going to play a role, but not nearly as much as you think it will. There are ways to alleviate even that heat to a degree that makes it very hard to track the aircraft. Otherwise, what's the point of stealth? All you'd have to do is point an IR camera at the sky and look for a heat source.
The F-117 used ceramics, and upward vented exhaust on top of the wing. The B-2 uses baffles and a long exhaust (as well as a rumored active system). The F-22 and F-35 have to move beyond those, as both of those don't allow for much power (I've watched the F-117 roll 8,000 feet on a 10,000 foot runway on take off). So they have to move to a different way of hiding the IR signature, or again, what's the point.
Originally posted by gariac
Yes energy needs to be conserved. So the name of the game is not just observability but the ability to lock on target. Notch the flight path, vary routes, etc. Stealth is more than just the aircraft technology.
Originally posted by mbkennel
Well they had better be awfully good. This is what a F22 looks like in infrared under performance flight.
www.youtube.com...
Originally posted by Zaphod58
reply to post by smurfy
A crew chief on Okinawa used the JP7 that had leaked out of the bird to put out a gasoline fire started by the V8 start cart (either a Cadillac or Oldsmobile engine, I think it was a Cadillac though). Everyone else was running for the door, he picked up a broom and swept some JP7 over the fire, while everyone crapped themselves, and put it out.
To start the engines required the use to Triethylborane (TEB) to get the temperatures high enough to ignite the fuel. That's what created the characteristic green flame on engine start.
Originally posted by crazyewok
Wouldnt its stealth abilitys though just be well out of date? I mean this is 1964 tec
Originally posted by crazyewok
reply to post by Zaphod58
Out of intrest why did they retire thr F-117?
Originally posted by Zaphod58
reply to post by ownbestenemy
Not so much quick (stall to break up is something like 15 knots), just high. One of the advantages developed after the overflights were stopped were side looking cameras for both the U-2 and the SR-71. With their operational altitudes they can look for a couple hundred miles or more.