Project Mayhem: The US Hypersonic Bomber

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  • Опубликовано: 25 дек 2022
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Комментарии • 960

  • @megaprojects9649
    @megaprojects9649  Год назад +21

    Get Surfshark VPN at surfshark.deals/mega - Enter promo code MEGA for 85% off and 3 extra months for free!

    • @tonypate9174
      @tonypate9174 Год назад

      HEAD OF PUDD even uploads on Boxing day ....Bless him

    • @Uahmedtahaalnady
      @Uahmedtahaalnady Год назад

      😁the problem if it is fuel consuming ICBM >> how it will it return back from enemy territory ..& the capiltalistim ignorant propaganda narcists want to add a pilot to this equation ... yeah to ease its capture of course 😂
      tell the US propaganda to think about drones in deceiving taxpaying population .. rather than the "stealth myths" 👻

    • @mikek9297
      @mikek9297 Год назад

      It was a great looking plane... before some moron crashed it ;)

    • @Gunni1972
      @Gunni1972 Год назад

      I rather enjoy the Military-sized holes in Windows since windows 98. The Heavy duty ones are the best, followed by the Tactical ones.

    • @PiDsPagePrototypes
      @PiDsPagePrototypes Год назад

      10:50 ish,... that's a really messy sentence, "Twice the thrust of the Boeing 737 Max, one of the largest engines commercially available,..."
      As it's not the Boeing 737 Max producing the thrust, but it's LEAP-1B engines, perhaps there's meant to be an 'equipped with' in the middle there.
      Kinda stands out as it's not up to the usual standard on this channel ;)

  • @silverthorngoodtree5533
    @silverthorngoodtree5533 Год назад +56

    Fun fact, in late 1990's over montana, you could see a high altitude scramjet wake now and again. Some simple math, weather info, and you got a speed over mach 6. Pre internet though, story went no where. Still plenty of us saw it more than once, the population was so low where it flew over, I doubt more than a dozen people knew what a scram jet was.

    • @MasterBlasterSr
      @MasterBlasterSr Год назад +4

      Yup, white sands too. Seen them myself, on missiles, unbelievably fast, makes all other missiles look slow.

    • @Double_Vision
      @Double_Vision Год назад +3

      Those good old doughnuts on a stick contrails were always something special.

    • @jonathanpfeffer3716
      @jonathanpfeffer3716 Год назад +2

      the us has operated a whole host of hypersonic aircraft and missiles, the idea that we haven’t is a strange myth. not sure how the myth started since many of them are public, except maybe whatever the hell you are describing.

  • @DarthTaterZ
    @DarthTaterZ Год назад +217

    Can't describe how cool it would be if it turns out a classified military aircraft debuted in Top Gun. Would be like if an F-117 showed up in the original

    • @DemoDick1
      @DemoDick1 Год назад

      That would be right in Kelly Johnson’s wheelhouse, actually. Hide in plain sight.

    • @mikeharvey9184
      @mikeharvey9184 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/-YeklWRS_rc/видео.html

    • @Laminar-Flow
      @Laminar-Flow Год назад +1

      @@mikeharvey9184 they shot scenes at China lake for maverick; this is where some less secret and known test aircraft are flown out of. China actually retasked spy satellites (using up precious fuel) to take pictures of darkstar because their intelligence hadn’t caught any details about it and it was within a military facility

    • @carinhall4508
      @carinhall4508 Год назад +1

      They couldn't even write a script for it and you think they got ultra classified access? Yeah, no.

    • @carinhall4508
      @carinhall4508 Год назад +6

      @@Laminar-Flow when you see that the movie is nothing more than a flashy recruitment tool/patriotism generator, you'll begin to understand.

  • @johnholbrooks4394
    @johnholbrooks4394 Год назад +74

    I have several questions but we all know the first rule of project mayhem.
    You do not ask questions 😂

    • @Jadefox32
      @Jadefox32 Год назад +7

      Well you can ask questions just don't expect answers

    • @caseytopan5977
      @caseytopan5977 Год назад

      Don’t talk about **********

    • @crazyeyez1502
      @crazyeyez1502 Год назад +3

      Mr Durden won't be happy.

    • @timewave02012
      @timewave02012 Год назад +2

      His name is Robert Paulson

  • @DadJeff-jo7pm
    @DadJeff-jo7pm Год назад +68

    I've talked with a couple of Pilots of the Blackbird (SR-71) the top speed is downplayed due to National Security reasons. Its rated speed of Mach 3 is nowhere near the actual top speed.
    The X-15 Exceeded Mach 6 prior to exiting the Atmosphere, climbing above the Karman Line 100KM.
    The Blackbird exited the Atmosphere as well 1 time, the Pilot cut the engines carefully eased the craft out of the envelope, then carefully eased back in re-lit the engines and continued his mission.
    This is part of the reason Pilots wear NASA Space-suits with Oxygen packs included.
    Not just because of the scarcity of breathable air at 85,000 feet, or the freezing temps.

    • @zachtroxclair5653
      @zachtroxclair5653 Год назад +8

      They wear space suits because at the altitude they flew at if they lost pressurization they would die from their blood boiling. Same reason an astronaut wears a suit not just because of the lack of oxygen. Boiling points of fluid change with pressure.

    • @Flameancer
      @Flameancer Год назад +6

      If this is actually true then I see why we’re getting a space force. We have fighters in earth orbit/beyond?!

    • @AnnWahlquist
      @AnnWahlquist 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@zachtroxclair5653exactly.....

    • @proteusnz99
      @proteusnz99 9 месяцев назад +1

      Actually I think Mach 3.3-3.7 is a reasonable limit for the A-12/SR-71. The airframe was basically heat-treated on each supersonic flight, so reputedly got stronger over the years. I would suggest that the limiting factor might be the Mach cone (shock wave) coming off the nose, past Mach 3.7 the nose shock will start to intersect the engine inlets, an engine unstart at that sort of speed would probably exceed structural strength of the airframe.

  • @herbertkeithmiller
    @herbertkeithmiller Год назад +83

    1:58 the SR-71 didn't have glass windows they had fused silica quartz windows because of the temperature the outside of the aircraft would reach. Glass couldn't handle the temperature difference and might crack fused quartz could. Most everything about the SR-71 had to be designed around the heat the aircraft would generate in flight. This made it very expensive to operate.

    • @Laminar-Flow
      @Laminar-Flow Год назад +2

      The engines were so optimized for high speed flight they needed to be started with triethylborane

    • @tlxatom7004
      @tlxatom7004 Год назад

      @@Laminar-Flow yep that fuel had such a high flashpoint

    • @Laminar-Flow
      @Laminar-Flow Год назад +7

      @@tlxatom7004Flashpoint doesn’t really have anything to do with the use of triethylborane, it had to do with the main fuel. Triethylborane has a very low flashpoint (-20 C roughly), however it ignites upon contact with oxygen. It was used to START the engines… The acronym for it was TEB and there was a switch + counter in the cockpit telling the pilot how many TEB shots or starts were left before they ran out.
      SR-71’s actual fuel had a high flashpoint because it had a dual use (to cool the skin of the aircraft) and it could not be risked that fuel in tank would ignite. The main fuel could have a match dropped into it and the flame would be extinguished. More commonly known as low volatility fuel than low flashpoint fuel.

    • @chriswilliams2928
      @chriswilliams2928 Год назад +1

      @@Laminar-Flow a close friend of mine used to buy the fuel for the SR71

    • @charlesgrove6905
      @charlesgrove6905 Год назад +1

      @@Laminar-Flow If I remembered correctly they often would leak fuel on the runway due to the necessity to design for thermal expansion in the shell. I think this also played into the use of that particular fuel chemistry.

  • @RCAvhstape
    @RCAvhstape Год назад +448

    J-58 engines were used in the SR-71, which never needed to be towed and was perfectly capable of taking and landing under its own power. I think you've got something mixed up there.

    • @rolfkarlstad4015
      @rolfkarlstad4015 Год назад +100

      He's always got a handful of complete gibberish non-facts in his videos. Cool beard, though.

    • @bigrob966
      @bigrob966 Год назад +31

      I am almost positive it was yet another misunderstanding regarding the D-21, which wasn't towed, but used a ramjet.

    • @cruisinguy6024
      @cruisinguy6024 Год назад +53

      These videos have been rampant with false information lately

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Год назад +56

      @@cruisinguy6024 The research staff may be getting stretched a bit thin perhaps.

    • @cruisinguy6024
      @cruisinguy6024 Год назад +60

      @@RCAvhstape wouldn’t surprise me, seems like they have at least 50 different channels at this point each of which puts out 5 videos a week lol

  • @HomeSlice97
    @HomeSlice97 Год назад +198

    I always kind of assumed that we’d eventually get back to prioritizing speed in aircraft, as detection improved

    • @JohnnyWednesday
      @JohnnyWednesday Год назад +11

      Speed is stealth given the altitude that speed allows it to reach

    • @badluck5647
      @badluck5647 Год назад +3

      Is it even possible for a pilot to survive the Gs from a plane that can outrun a hypersonic missle?

    • @matthewdavis7588
      @matthewdavis7588 Год назад +21

      @@badluck5647 we’ve sent people to space and those have some pretty crazy speeds and G forces on them I don’t see why the same couldn’t be done here

    • @JohnnyWednesday
      @JohnnyWednesday Год назад +36

      @@badluck5647 - As long as you accelerate within the human body's limits - then you can go as fast as you like - just try not to stop or start suddenly.

    • @Uahmedtahaalnady
      @Uahmedtahaalnady Год назад

      😁the problem if it is fuel consuming ICBM >> how it will it return back from enemy territory ..& the capiltalistim ignorant propaganda narcists want to add a pilot to this equation ... yeah to ease its capture of course 😂
      tell the US propaganda to think about drones in deceiving taxpaying population .. rather than the "stealth myths" 👻

  • @markbailey6230
    @markbailey6230 Год назад +25

    No one really knows how fast the SR-71 could really fly. I've listened to several of Brian Shul's motivational talks, (one in person) and he said many times that he always had "Plenty of throttle left" when he was flying at the top end of the high speed envelope. Obviously the airframe had it's speed limits, but they were all theoretical limits based on engineering. Who knows, maybe it could do mach 4 for short sprints. It was Brian's back seater in the Libya mission that told him he should pull back on the throttles before he flew it apart, although in nicer words. Long live the SR-71 and it's successors.

  • @christophermitchell7001
    @christophermitchell7001 Год назад +41

    The Lockheed "Have Blue" was first flown in the mid 1970's ( after being drawn up in the late 60's) , and its production model the f-117 wasn't shown to the public until the early 90's after it had already been used in Panama and the first yf-22 and yf-23 models were already being put together. Additionally, the initial programs that led to the JSF ( and the f-35) program were being spun up and were in place before the testing of the f-22 and 23 even really got underway.... Id wager that, If they are showing us this thing and telling us all about what it may be able to do, then it actually can do a lot more and they are already building ( maybe even flying) its replacement while they are making plans for that replacement's replacement.

  • @thehobbyguy7089
    @thehobbyguy7089 Год назад +64

    Simon, I'm sure you know this, but if you do not. The Chinese were so concerned by the rolling model of the Darkstar created by Lockheed for Maverick, they retasked one of their satellites to get a closer look at it.

    • @andreawinship6987
      @andreawinship6987 11 месяцев назад

      How unusual is this actually, for the development of new technology designed in part to attack news China?

  • @fergusuan7371
    @fergusuan7371 Год назад +3

    Just to be clear, the SR-71 was NEVER "towed into the air".
    It's P&W J58 engines had variable geometry intake cones that directed high pressure air through bypass tubes around the engine core and straight into the afterburner to work as a ramjet. This was only used at altitude and the engines ran as afterburning turbojets at normal altitude... Hence the many videos of performance takeoffs at airshows.
    That statement was simply drivel.

  • @104thDIVTimberwolf
    @104thDIVTimberwolf Год назад +35

    We were hearing rumors about this as I was getting out of the Air Force in 1988. It was unofficially referred to as Aurora.

    • @cahg3871
      @cahg3871 Год назад +5

      Project Aurora was the designation for the hypersonic aircraft program,so you nailed it.There are many who thought it was the name for a singular jet.✌️

  • @TheInsaneupsdriver
    @TheInsaneupsdriver Год назад +3

    the Saber Rocket engine company in England made a pre cooler that can be used for either rockets or turbines, mach 6 capable. they have it fully working, WELL! Lockheed bought the rights to it about 4 or 5 years back. It brings the air down to -150C in a fraction of a second and somehow got by the frost problem with sucking that much heat out of air. they used the super cooled fuel through a device that looks like a refrigerator cooler wrapped around a safety cone, but allot beefier. the plan was for a single stage trans atmospheric hybrid rocket plane. atleast the engine works! they've been working on it since the early 70's

  • @exist
    @exist Год назад +75

    As someone who's talked to previous Skunkworks engineers, that worked in these SAP's, the turbine-based combine cycle engine was built and tested throughout the 80's and 90's on experimental airframes. The main issue I heard was that they kept having engine malfunctions when switching to the secondary propulsion system. Wouldn't surprise me if they've got it working already, as well as have the actual aircraft already flying.

    • @Jadefox32
      @Jadefox32 Год назад +12

      well it wouldn't surprise me if this was the basis for strange contrail formations reminiscent of a scramjet engine sometimes seen in satellite photos in the 1980s and 90s. Project Aroura was probably a test bed for these (something the airforce kept saying didn't exist.

    • @Denpachii
      @Denpachii Год назад +17

      @@Jadefox32 It does not exist until it does, when they can't hide it anymore, and you find there are already six in use.

    • @danceyrselfkleen
      @danceyrselfkleen Год назад +4

      Why would you lie about talking to engineers?

    • @exist
      @exist Год назад

      @@danceyrselfkleen You can say I'm lying all you want, doesn't change the facts lmfao

    • @exist
      @exist Год назад

      @@Jadefox32 This is what I was told, was never told what aircrafts were tested with them, but they did confirm there were multiple prototypes being tested with these engines. I'm guessing it was around the time they were talking about a Blackbird replacement. Also to add some validity, all the contrails in the 80s and 90s were in the direct flight paths from the Skunkworks Palmdale facility, out to Edwards, and over to Nellis/Groom.

  • @robert1marshall
    @robert1marshall Год назад +3

    The dark star was first hinted at in an interview from Ben rich in 1995 just a few months before he passed away.

  • @martinstallard2742
    @martinstallard2742 Год назад +138

    1:00 the need for speed
    2:55 powering the SR-72
    5:58 sponsorship
    7:22 stealth vs. speed
    10:24 project mayhem

  • @TacticalBeard
    @TacticalBeard Год назад +12

    3:00 almost reminds me of the Normandy SR1

    • @GrimmHades
      @GrimmHades Год назад +2

      Maybe be mass effect was played during design phase

    • @Uahmedtahaalnady
      @Uahmedtahaalnady Год назад

      😁the problem if it is fuel consuming ICBM >> how it will it return back from enemy territory ..& the capiltalistim ignorant propaganda narcists want to add a pilot to this equation ... yeah to ease its capture of course 😂
      tell the US propaganda to think about drones in deceiving taxpaying population .. rather than the "stealth myths" 👻

  • @michaelpipkin9942
    @michaelpipkin9942 Год назад +22

    Building the models of the "Stealth Fighter" before the public knew what it looked like was fun. They came out with some wild designs.
    One looked like the smooth quiver of an arrow, the other look like, well, this.

    • @kennethng8346
      @kennethng8346 Год назад +7

      I recall a model maker came out with what they thought was the missing F17. It had ultra smooth curves everywhere. And then the F117 came out with flat panels everywhere. Whoops.

    • @michaelpipkin9942
      @michaelpipkin9942 Год назад +2

      @@kennethng8346 That's the "smooth quiver of an arrow" I meant.
      The opposite direction but still cool.

    • @Pijawek
      @Pijawek Год назад +4

      The story of this model is a bit more complicated, but really wild.
      In 1982 USAF decided, that the new plane made by Northrop would be called F-20. The last one was the F-18 and many people asked why they skipped number 19. In reality, it was because of Northrop - F-20 was designed to sell abroad, and Russians used odd numbers for their planes - i.e. MiG-15, 19, 21, or Su-17 and 27, so the Northrop boys wanted an even number so there will be no confusion. But many believed that F-19 is the new secret stealth fighter, that many people were talking about.
      Testors, a well known model company, decided to capitalize on that rumors and introduced a model of the hypothetical F-19 in 1986. Making models of machines that don't exist isn't all that uncommon, but at that time everybody knew that USAF is getting a new stealth fighter. Testors as a company worked closely with american aviation industry, producing higly detailed models for pilot training and engineers. So when they introduced that model, everybody assumed that it's based on the real stealth fighter. When F117 crashed a little bit later, many televisions used F-19 model as an ilustration. One congresmann even oficially asked Lockheed why they refuse to show them the stealth fighter since they showed it to Testors.
      In 1988 F-117 was officialy revealed, and it didn't look anything like the F-19 model. But Testors didn't mind - all the publicity made their model insanely popular, and today it's commonly assumed that it was the best selling scale model of all times.

    • @darksuit9035
      @darksuit9035 Год назад +1

      I had the Y-shaped one that resembled a fidget spinner (or the three ended foam boomerang thing)

    • @hobbyhermit66
      @hobbyhermit66 Год назад +2

      I have the Testors F19 and the counterpart to it in my model room, still in their boxes. Both kool designs.

  • @erasmus_locke
    @erasmus_locke Год назад +244

    Just imagine if we got a b21 raider level of stealth but with the speed and altitude of an SR-71

    • @reloadss4680
      @reloadss4680 Год назад +15

      they got the altitude maybe we have to see the wing desigin the orginal b2 was supposed to fly high then the airforce wanted a lower flying bomber

    • @creepycraiyons3519
      @creepycraiyons3519 Год назад +18

      Shhhh

    • @justinpaul3110
      @justinpaul3110 Год назад +35

      Unfortunately, what makes planes fast and maneuverable also makes it more easily spotted by radar.

    • @reloadss4680
      @reloadss4680 Год назад +6

      @@creepycraiyons3519 Lmao

    • @kennethng8346
      @kennethng8346 Год назад +27

      The thermal emissions of this craft will make it real easy to locate without radar. Airplanes have always been a balancing act. If you ever see something that can do everything and has no disadvantages, it probably isn't totally real.

  • @jamesspry3294
    @jamesspry3294 Год назад +13

    Awesome!
    My favourite plane is/was the SR71 and a little piece of me died when it was retired...
    Now I can be happy knowing that it's children live on!

    • @bobbobinson2649
      @bobbobinson2649 Год назад +3

      Yea it’s a cool plane and this new one is also cool as well

  • @ace9xx
    @ace9xx Год назад +4

    If I remember correctly from somewhere, it is a common misconception that the heat is generated by friction. In reality, the majority of the temperature increase comes from a pressure build-up and the friction contributes too, but in a much smaller part.

  • @timbrwolf1121
    @timbrwolf1121 Год назад +3

    I bet top gun didn't spend a dime on military aircraft this time around for 2 reasons.
    1. The military is having dire recruitment issues. When the original top gun released the recruitment for the navy skyrocketed.
    2. The filming was probably pretty good training.

  • @scottturcotte1860
    @scottturcotte1860 Год назад +2

    I got a laugh about how the Chinese were pranked, when their spy satellite was taking pictures of a movie prop Darkstar... thinking it was a new supersecret aircraft! LOL

  • @dextermorgan1
    @dextermorgan1 Год назад +26

    You can bet we already have one of these in service. The US has had a Hypersonic aircraft since the early 90s. It was picked up on seismometers in California on Tuesdays and Thursday mornings. It traveled from area 51, over California, out over the ocean and back.

    • @RuiLuz
      @RuiLuz Год назад +7

      The "Project Aurora" you mean, not sure if it was hypersonic, but it had indeed some exotic means of propulsion.

    • @kennethng8346
      @kennethng8346 Год назад +7

      Testing or in service? I'm sure the US has done technology demonstration planes, but they may have been too expensive to field (yes even for the US). Orrrrrr, they kept running the conventional engines until they were far at sea (and away from seismic detectors) and then lit the high speed engines.

    • @dextermorgan1
      @dextermorgan1 Год назад +2

      @Anne Frank Vape Pen Yes.

    • @dextermorgan1
      @dextermorgan1 Год назад +4

      @@RuiLuz I don't know if it was necessary project Aurora, but something traveling at Hypersonic speeds was definitely tracked by the USGS back in the 90's. It was flying at or above 100,000 ft. As far as the Aurora goes, I tend to believe Ben Rich when he said that was the code name for the B2 while it was being built.

    • @dextermorgan1
      @dextermorgan1 Год назад +2

      @@kennethng8346 Testing as far as I know. Some aviation buffs saw what looked like a 1/4 scale demonstrator landing in Palmdale in 2018 I believe it was. By now, who knows what they've accomplished with the program. The US has let the Russians and Chinese get ahead in hypersonic missile tech(and even that's debatable) but I highly doubt they've let them get ahead in hypersonic airplane tech also. There's some really cool stuff flying around out in the desert, and over the ocean.

  • @Tomyironmane
    @Tomyironmane Год назад +17

    Upon death, a member of Project Mayhem has a name. *His* name is Robert Paulsen.

  • @bremnersghost948
    @bremnersghost948 Год назад +7

    Neil Armstrong would have Loved this!! From X15 to Aurora/Darkstar.

  • @joelrowbotham180
    @joelrowbotham180 Год назад +3

    NASA talked about using a similar concept to make the first true space plane over a decade ago but didn’t have the finding to pursue it. A space plane that can take off from a regular runway with ramjet engines, switch over to scramjets to get it the edge of space, and then use small rocket engines to boost it into low earth orbit. Would’ve dropped the cost of space flight by an insane amount, but sadly think the space shuttle disasters scared them away from it

  • @st3yo980
    @st3yo980 Год назад +4

    2 Pontiac 400 engines started the J-58’s , but ain’t ever been towed thru the air with anything 😂

  • @Kenneth_James
    @Kenneth_James Год назад +3

    Not glass windows. They were made of 1.25-inch thick solid quartz.

  • @scoobyruuuu
    @scoobyruuuu Год назад +13

    Brian Shul has one of the most inspiring stories ever. Also the largest private collection of Sr71 photos.

  • @borysnijinski331
    @borysnijinski331 Год назад +1

    You cannot equate thrust to horsepower, because thrust is a force in Newtons and horsepower is a measure of how fast work is done in units on Newton-metres per second. Which means that while engine thrust does not change with speed, horsepower starts at 0hp with zero speed and increases as speed increases.

  • @jeremythornton433
    @jeremythornton433 Год назад +2

    "It can't be done". Skunkworks: "Hold my beer".

  • @patgiblinsongs5
    @patgiblinsongs5 Год назад +3

    Simon, thank you for these videos, I love your content!
    But, there are at least 2 inaccuracies in your writer’s research concerning the SR-71.
    The J-58 engine could absolutely take the SR-71 from the ground to its max speed and altitude without any external assistance, save a quick meet up with a KC-135.
    Also, while several SR-71’s were lost due to catastrophic yaws, that was an issue that the crews and Skunk Works personnel worked hard to resolve. Had “tumbling end over end” happened every time each aircraft reached higher altitudes, the program would’ve quickly been killed, rather than being honorably retired…twice.

  • @ZeeBri
    @ZeeBri Год назад +10

    THE FIRST RULE OF PROJECT MAYHEM IS THAT YOU DO NOT ASK QUESTIONS

    • @Chronozia
      @Chronozia Год назад

      I was wondering how far I'd have to scroll before I saw something like this. Turns out, I only had to scroll about half a page lol

  • @hobbyhermit66
    @hobbyhermit66 Год назад +2

    Never heard of SR71 tumbling. It's shape should prevent that. It did tend to yaw badly if one engine flamed out. I think the SR72 is more speculation than anything else. That, or it's already in service. Hard to say, with Skunkworks.

  • @niros9667
    @niros9667 Год назад +4

    Literally looks like a Mass Effect ship irl... Such a cool project.

  • @jc1982discovery
    @jc1982discovery Год назад +7

    If they are giving details out it likely means they have already built and are flying it, hermeus have just built a engine which can make the transition. Love this channel keep up the great work 👍

  • @puirYorick
    @puirYorick Год назад +3

    I’m curious about the challenge of maintaining aircraft integrity while opening the weapons bays at mission speeds then achieving a safe deployment of any weapons package without compromising speed or stealth.🧐

    • @rayanaltowayan9558
      @rayanaltowayan9558 Год назад +1

      What a brilliant question

    • @puirYorick
      @puirYorick Год назад

      @@rayanaltowayan9558 We already know that radar stealth is compromised at sub- and low supersonic speeds in 5th generation fighters once the weapons bay is opened. At hypersonic speeds, just safely opening the bay then safely *and* successfully separating a weapon is a massive challenge for aircraft structural integrity let alone any hint of stealth.
      To use an example from fiction, it's akin to teleportation of living people from the surface of a planet to a ship passing by at high warp speeds. Two fantastically complex technologies each need to work flawlessly in conjunction while mutually compromising one of their safe operational parameters at the same moment. In films, the writers "just arm wave it" into being successful as my Calculus Professor once said. However a real engineering solution is need IRL.

  • @ronaldmasterbud1551
    @ronaldmasterbud1551 Год назад

    Everyone seems to Forget that in The Mid / Late 80's Arojet ( in Folsom Ca. ) Developed A Scramjet Engine for Boing Avation For there Mach 5 Pasenger Jet. It Was Designed to Run on Hydrogen, and was a Compound Jet Engine Turbojet @ Subsonic through Mach 1.25 Then Pure Ramjet Through Mach 5+. I Used to Listen to It Running For Almost A Decade. The First 4'ish Years of Development They Ran It All The Time, Even After Boing Canceled the Project, They Continued Developing The Scramjet For Future Possible Projects. They Had to Build A Special Test Cell That Feed Supersonic " Clean " Laminar air into the Motor. You Could Always Tell The Difference Between The Scramjet and The Testing of The Way More Common Solid & Liquid Rocket Motors. The Closest Thing That I Could Describe the Sound As, Was That Horrible T.V. Show Air Wolf. When They Would Hit the Turbo Button on the Helicopter, and Fly Supersonic.

  • @WasabiSniffer
    @WasabiSniffer Год назад +13

    The first rule of Project Mayhem is we don’t ask questions

    • @Hooyahfish
      @Hooyahfish Год назад

      Lol. I came here looking for this comment.

    • @dudepool7530
      @dudepool7530 Год назад

      Wait... what was the first rule again? 🤣

    • @Gunni1972
      @Gunni1972 Год назад

      @@dudepool7530 Ask the Marketing and PR-team. We have no Infos to share.

  • @InquisMalleus
    @InquisMalleus Год назад +3

    Here's a minor issue with a hypersonic plane - the SR-71 had a small radar signature on its own. Just flying along, it didn't really show up on radar. That, of course, didn't particularly matter, because no matter how small the plane's radar signature was, the turbulence showed up on radar multiple times the size of the plane. You would have a tiny little plane radar signature, but a radar-visible turbulence wake the size of a small naval destroyer - not exactly the most stealthy there. And then there was also the thermal signature, which is pretty much impossible to hide - because how can you hide an IR signature of something at 2000C? You can't. That's why all the innovations in stealth on a Blackbird were ultimately useless to the plane - the radar and infrared signatures of the turbulence and the infrared signature of the plane itself couldn't be hidden.
    An SR-71 would have to sit on the base for an hour after a flight with the crew in it so the plane's hull could cool down enough that they could leave. Otherwise, their boots and gloves would melt just touching the surfaces of the plane.

  • @Churchill250267
    @Churchill250267 Год назад +5

    The “SR-72” might be capable of hypersonic speeds but it’ll have to slow down to refuel.

  • @irjake
    @irjake Год назад +1

    1st rule: You don't ask questions about Project Mayhem. 2nd rule: You don't ask questions about Project Mayhem

  • @bigboypants988
    @bigboypants988 Год назад

    On an unrelated subject.... It's refreshing to see a host that doesn't feel the need to show some obnoxiously large microphone in frame. along with the implied insecurities. Bravo.

  • @5uwkn4
    @5uwkn4 Год назад +7

    4:23 The SR-71 was not towed into the air

  • @fireblade8998
    @fireblade8998 Год назад +6

    I knew blaze boy would keep bringing the good videos over the holidays.

    • @Uahmedtahaalnady
      @Uahmedtahaalnady Год назад

      😁the problem if it is fuel consuming ICBM >> how it will it return back from enemy territory ..& the capiltalistim ignorant propaganda narcists want to add a pilot to this equation ... yeah to ease its capture of course 😂
      tell the US propaganda to think about drones in deceiving taxpaying population .. rather than the "stealth myths" 👻

  • @chris-vn6sw
    @chris-vn6sw Год назад +2

    The SR1 speed was it’s home advantage ! A object passing through air creates a wake however stealthy..

  • @JohnMartin-bd8mh
    @JohnMartin-bd8mh Год назад +2

    The plane thermal images after a Mach 6 run will be hard to overcome even for todays stealth platforms.

  • @LostDisciple24
    @LostDisciple24 Год назад +4

    As someone who was in the AF and who "worked" at Area 51 "with" General Dynamics (among other companies), Project Mayhem is the modern version of the famed "Aurora bomber." I also got to see the B21 Raider (before it was called that) up close...though what was actually released is largely different. The most impressive that I saw up close was the 6th gen fighter (the code name changed often) that was originally planned to replace ALL fighters in our arsenal with this 6th gen fighter. I got to see some schematics that, as I was told, were supposed to replace the A10 Warthog. I do believe that was scrapped eventually.

    • @LostDisciple24
      @LostDisciple24 Год назад +1

      @Ianardo um, those aren't secrets. Everything I said is available to the public. As for you doubting me doing any of that...that is your problem.

  • @howhigh0521
    @howhigh0521 Год назад +12

    The first rule of project mayhem is you don’t talk about project mayhem😂

    • @Anenome5
      @Anenome5 Год назад +4

      His name was Simon Whistler. His name was Simon Whistler.

  • @chaycecole4466
    @chaycecole4466 11 месяцев назад

    Sadly, we just lost Brian Shul. He had such an amazing life from tragedy, recovery, to breaking records. He dedicated his life to motivating and inspiring anyone and everyone. Such a beautiful soul and legend gone has been lost.

  • @RDROff
    @RDROff Год назад +1

    Speed is a lot more fun to talk about, but efficiency/range is arguably far more important. "I have a need for speed" is a lot more sexier than "I have a need for unrefueled range."

  • @Dr.GeoDave
    @Dr.GeoDave Год назад +6

    While not air breathing, the X-15 was flown significantly faster than the SR-71.

    • @Gunni1972
      @Gunni1972 Год назад

      But it didn't Carry 5 times it's mass in a Bay. LOL, listen to the requirements.They are Physically IMPOSSIBLE.

  • @adasterdezaster2865
    @adasterdezaster2865 Год назад +6

    Man the plane that tows a SR-71 into the air must be hella fast. Come on Simon really?

  • @WWeronko
    @WWeronko Год назад +1

    4:11 "Scramjets have only been used in boost guide missiles." At the present there are no operational scramjets in boosted missiles or otherwise.

  • @nil981
    @nil981 Год назад +1

    Correction: hypersonic speed starts at mach 5 and goes up to mach 10.

  • @channelview8854
    @channelview8854 Год назад +5

    I never before heard anything about the SR-71 having to be towed to altitude by a "guide plane." In fact, I understood the J-58 functioned as a conventional jet at low speeds allowing takeoff and landing like any other plane. So...?

    • @everettputerbaugh3996
      @everettputerbaugh3996 Год назад

      The J-58 used the bypass air around the turbojet engine in order to use the strengthened afterburner as a ramjet. It had an annoying tendency to enter an "un-start state", requiring the pilot to constantly monitor the gauges.

    • @shmaknapublar
      @shmaknapublar Год назад

      @@everettputerbaugh3996 FYI - Most of the thrust created by the J-58 engine system as installed in the SR-71 occurred in the intake section at max cruise speed. At best the ejector nozzle added a little less than 30% of total thrust, around 17% from the engine exhaust and the rest from the intake physics. The Concorde was even better at harnessing intake thrust with a percentage in the high 60's.

  • @badluck5647
    @badluck5647 Год назад +20

    This is the first time Simon has mentioned Tom Cruise without giggling like a schoolgirl.

    • @mirzaahmed6589
      @mirzaahmed6589 Год назад +8

      Cruise. He's not Hispanic.

    • @GabeGettinRich
      @GabeGettinRich Год назад

      @@mirzaahmed6589 I love this response, cause it's exactly what i was gonna say.

    • @Denpachii
      @Denpachii Год назад +2

      @@mirzaahmed6589 Who knows these days. That pronoun thingy might pop up with him at some point.

    • @badluck5647
      @badluck5647 Год назад

      @@mirzaahmed6589 Everyone loves the grammar police 🙄

  • @WRuiz10768
    @WRuiz10768 Год назад +1

    There's no in-air refueling for "hypersonic" vehicles. The heat alone would "cook" the fuel if it touched the surfaces.

  • @pdxaviation
    @pdxaviation Год назад

    Damn it, Simon!!! I told myself I'd only watch a few before I went on to other things. Now it's about four hours later, and here I still am...

  • @pauljaworski9386
    @pauljaworski9386 Год назад +3

    Many speculate that the SR72 is gonna be a non pilot air craft. A drone. Then there's no worries about G-Forces or what ever.

  • @theangrymarmot8336
    @theangrymarmot8336 Год назад +4

    "The film was delayed 4 years due to the COVID 19 pandemic" - Correction : The film was delayed for 4 years to maximize profits and bring in the most money.

  • @atatoraman9257
    @atatoraman9257 Год назад

    The horsepower estimate noted at 10:49 is a little wrong. The estimation of the power of the engine should come from the multiplication of its thrust times the speed then it should be converted in to the proper unit of power. So its even more crazy how much power these engines would provide! Quick maths: 58,000 N of thrust * 3,400 m/s at top speed * 0.00134 (for converting from N*m/s to HP) = 264,000 HP ... This might also be per engine... For a sense of scale a 777 produces about 170,000 HP at its cruising speed and is in the Guinness world records book for that.

  • @turbot_
    @turbot_ Год назад +1

    The problem with VPNs is more and more apps are starting to refuse to work with them turned on. It's so frustrating.

  • @NonEuclideanTacoCannon
    @NonEuclideanTacoCannon Год назад +10

    I have never heard that the SR 71 had to be towed into the air, and I've read and watched an enormous amount of SR-71 content. You sure that's true?

    • @jdsd744
      @jdsd744 Год назад +1

      I agree. It has to be pumped full of jetfuel til the very last minute, but launches on its own power. The inefficient engines then seal gaps in the wing and the fluids stop leaking as the airframe heats under its own control.

    • @Raykahn
      @Raykahn Год назад +1

      There is video of it taking off on its own. Not sure where his research told him that the j58 required towing.

    • @rolfkarlstad4015
      @rolfkarlstad4015 Год назад +1

      as usual, he's almost without any sort of clue. Clearly he just relies on copy generated by someone else, maybe a crappy AI?

    • @robertf3479
      @robertf3479 Год назад +1

      I've watched the Blackbird launch from Kadena AFB on Okinawa back in the mid 1970s. It wasn't towed, it took off under its own power, the J-58 engines with full afterburner shook the ground miles away. The plane would take off conventionally then climb out at high speed to meet up with a KC-135 tanker to refuel.

    • @NonEuclideanTacoCannon
      @NonEuclideanTacoCannon Год назад

      Maybe he meant it figuratively and it came out wrong.

  • @solarfunction1847
    @solarfunction1847 Год назад +18

    Imagine Tungsten tipped guided missiles being dropped from this Hypersonic Bomber, just the shear impact forces of Tungsten travelling at over Mach 10 would be devastating not to mention cheap.

    • @kvngrxuge3397
      @kvngrxuge3397 Год назад +1

      + a depleted uranium core

    • @billma8
      @billma8 Год назад +1

      Rods from God. Also a really cool theoretical space warfare platform.

    • @solarfunction1847
      @solarfunction1847 Год назад +1

      @@billma8 Unfortunately too heavy for space deployment, better to have a smaller precise package to be launched from aircraft which would be much cheaper.

    • @Gunni1972
      @Gunni1972 Год назад

      @@billma8 Another Pipe dream. A Tungsten rod would simply smash through a lot of Materials without transferring the energy.(that's WHY you use it as Armor piercing ammo) If your goal is a tiny, but deep crater, yes. viable. If you think of it as an "Earthquake inducing Impact", go back to school.

    • @kennethohnemus3192
      @kennethohnemus3192 Год назад

      And it would make a neat splash

  • @TedinLasVegas
    @TedinLasVegas Год назад +2

    The SR-71 pilot was not the fastest man on earth at Mach 3.5 when X-15 pilots hit Mach 6.7.

  • @More-Space-In-Ear
    @More-Space-In-Ear Год назад +2

    They basically showed the plane right under the noses of the powers of might with the words of..."show it in a film and they're think its CGI"...

  • @BravoCheesecake
    @BravoCheesecake Год назад +4

    A thought just came to me. So I imagine something like this would not be stealthy, but would be meant to bait and outrun inbound air defense missiles. After the air defenses have turned on their radars and bagan firing at the "bait" aircraft, B-21's would home in on the radiation sources and eliminate their targets. After this, stealth fighters such as NGAD would swoop in and take on any remaining fighter threats. Full air superiority is achieved.

    • @rudolphpyatt4833
      @rudolphpyatt4833 Год назад

      Hypersonic variant of the Iron Hand/Wild Weasel mission; interesting take!

  • @DanielDogeanu
    @DanielDogeanu Год назад +3

    If they pull it off, they could also revolutionize space travel!

  • @Redbikemaster
    @Redbikemaster Год назад +1

    I knew it! When I was in the theater and I saw the Skunk Works logo, I knew it had serious input.

  • @serdarcam99
    @serdarcam99 Год назад +2

    the fact you can fly hypersonically only on hight altidutes because any material we have right now will melt down so they have to slow down into supersonic regime to attack which can be intercepted rather easily hypersonic veichles more or less useless they need to introduce kinetic weapons that can drop from so high so it doesent matter material will soften or not when it hit the ground it would be carrying so much energy it will make any defence simply obsolete

  • @Gunni1972
    @Gunni1972 Год назад +6

    I hope this PR-Stunt will be a lesson to all the Financiers of such Projects. Have you ever tried to open a Payload bay at such speeds? and will, whatever it May drop on it's enemies (if it doesn't disintegrate in the process) be able to deal with the transition? Or will it just drop rocks, at almost meteorite speeds?

    • @physchir
      @physchir Год назад +6

      As with stealth, when they weapons bay open, all advantages are gone. Same I guess for hypersonic.... maybe slow to sonic range and accelerate back to hyper after weapons deploy? 🤔

    • @michiganengineer8621
      @michiganengineer8621 Год назад +4

      @@Powerflinch They tried something like that with the old Vigilante and also with the Valkyrie. I know at least once with the Vigilante, they had the "bomb" get trapped in the slipstream of the aircraft and follow it.

    • @tavi9598
      @tavi9598 Год назад +2

      It's mentioned that the engines are designed to transition from high and fast to low and stealthy, and vice versa. Presumably you are not opening a payload bay at Mach 10, but rather at a more reasonable speed. Then throttling up and away before any antiair defense systems can catch you.
      Then again, the SR-classification is for reconnaissance craft, so there may not be a payload bay either. There's a lot of spitballing going on about an aircraft nobody can confirm exists, nevermind what it's capable of.

    • @ivarwind
      @ivarwind Год назад +3

      I don't know, but maybe they've developed this advanced concept hitherto confined to the realm of science fiction, called "slowing down." It's theorized that it could also make landing easier.

    • @michiganengineer8621
      @michiganengineer8621 Год назад

      @@ivarwind The problem with slowing down TOO far from hyper-sonic speeds is you can't restart those engines without an outside boost. And even at high sub-sonic speed you don't want to open a belly bomb-bay. Not if you want to maintain control of your aircraft at least!

  • @bobingabout
    @bobingabout Год назад +9

    Every time you said "Project Mayhem", I couldn't help but think of the movie "Fight club".
    Project Mayhem is the code-name for the gang that goes around blowing things up in the later chapters of the movie.

    • @dannylo5875
      @dannylo5875 Год назад

      Like too secret fighter stuff, including jet fighters

    • @Bandanko
      @Bandanko Год назад +1

      @@kestrel2120 well it's project mayhem and the first rule is you dont ask questions

    • @dayshon124
      @dayshon124 Год назад

      This makes me think it's not even the main plane, but a testbed for the airframes perfection along what engine is powering it, like, it wasn't said but I feel the B1B And B1R aren't what the military were looking for so their doing more testing. It's not what your being told it's what's not said that should be looked at.

    • @dudepool7530
      @dudepool7530 Год назад

      Someone call Tyler, we got some balls to cut off.

    • @petersaczko6192
      @petersaczko6192 Год назад +2

      SR-71 Blackbird
      SR-72 Robert Paulson

  • @WayneTheSeine
    @WayneTheSeine Год назад +2

    I suspect this one is already in service. I may have heard one, a couple of years ago while fishing. The sonic boom was beyond belief and peeled thorugh the forest nearby. It was on an east to west trajectory. Keep in mind, I am old enough to have lived through the era of sonic booms being common place. This was so far beyond that type of closing envelope.

  • @dennismurithi3978
    @dennismurithi3978 Год назад +1

    Simon is a real British person, he can't forget tea

  • @itsOnMARS2023
    @itsOnMARS2023 Год назад +12

    I wonder how loud the sonic booms will be when this absolute monster of a machine reaches the skies!

    • @errorbyte7657
      @errorbyte7657 Год назад +12

      The same as any other sonic boom

    • @TheOriginalFaxon
      @TheOriginalFaxon Год назад +4

      @@errorbyte7657 That's not how sonic shockwaves work though. A bullet traveling just above mach 1 makes a different shockwave than the same bullet traveling at mach 3, and a different sound when it goes by at those speeds. both sonic shockwaves are VASTLY different than the sonic shockwave produced by any military jet out there. There is currently research into how to make a supersonic passenger jet with a sonic boom that sounds more like a sonic car door slamming somewhere down the block, or thunder in the distance. I've no idea where you got this idea, but it has zero basis in reality.

    • @bmw328igearhead
      @bmw328igearhead Год назад +1

      @@xisusformerlyderucci9444 mmmm yeah, go back to the engineering jargon video you just came from... the joke's old...

    • @dudepool7530
      @dudepool7530 Год назад

      @@xisusformerlyderucci9444 if that tech is legitimate, then why aren't we talking about the Concord coming back?

    • @Birdie0909
      @Birdie0909 Год назад

      @@TheOriginalFaxon Isn't it something about the size of the object breaking the speed of sound makes different sound waves, but the actual loudness of boom is around the same (110db according to NASA) They just sound different?

  • @randybentley2633
    @randybentley2633 Год назад +5

    It sounds like this aircraft, with its potential to have a bomber focus, should be called the Son of Valkyrie and not Blackbird. The Blackbird had its heyday, but the XB-70 never did.

  • @Bandanko
    @Bandanko Год назад +2

    the first rule of project mayhem is you do not ask questions - they seriously named this after a fight club quote?! :O

  • @MathiasHeinel
    @MathiasHeinel Год назад +1

    So this is a strongly souped up XB-70?
    They shure took their time!

  • @hermitcrabbot
    @hermitcrabbot Год назад +6

    Any news on the next-generation 'rotary detonation' engine powered hypersonic jet?

  • @pauld6967
    @pauld6967 Год назад +4

    I only have two comments on this one:
    1) Well done Simon and team. Another good video.
    2) I always go with Clarence "Kelly" Johnson's definition for a hypersonic aircraft: Mach 5.

    • @Gunni1972
      @Gunni1972 Год назад

      But with AA-Missiles already twice as fast. WHAT'S THE POINT OF IT?

  • @bleachorange
    @bleachorange Год назад +1

    All of these speed records, milestones, and firsts would be for air breathing engines. The x 57 dynosaur was truly a marvel of engineering and basically has every one of those records that you could want for something that never actually achieved orbit.

  • @lewdawg1985
    @lewdawg1985 Год назад +1

    2 things: SR-71 never needed to be towed. & it tumbled end over end over 80k feet? What aircraft could tumble end over end? I think someone got some things mixed up when writing the script & the proofreaders had hangovers...

  • @angryroostercreations5194
    @angryroostercreations5194 Год назад +4

    I wonder if a bomb can be deployed at hypersonic speeds? If the weapons are stored in an internal bomb bay, what would happen when you open those doors at mach 10? would it cause the craft to burn up and break apart?

    • @jackhemsworth7515
      @jackhemsworth7515 Год назад +1

      if the friction on the missile casing gets so hot the internals combust, yes, that can happen.

    • @Gunni1972
      @Gunni1972 Год назад

      @@jackhemsworth7515 Have you ever seen Aerodynamic Bomb bays? The inflow would be hitting the back wall with such a tremendous force, it would act like a drag chute, if not outright tear off the back of the plane, or warp the airframe to a point, where a safe landing is not possible anymore.

    • @yupyup4209
      @yupyup4209 9 месяцев назад

      I imagine they would have to be deployed high up in near space where there is less air friction

  • @honeybadger4198
    @honeybadger4198 Год назад +4

    fastest manned flight on record is actually the x-15...while it wasnt capable of taking off by itself it still holds the record for fastest MANNED flight in the earth's atmosphere

  • @Tewhill357
    @Tewhill357 Год назад +1

    Every time I hear 'Dark Star', I hear Rick Moranis saying, "Lonestar!".

  • @eddean6663
    @eddean6663 Год назад +2

    Turbojet J-79 with upgraded parts. They were mostly coated steel attached to a scramjet.

  • @jay-t1030
    @jay-t1030 Год назад +21

    American citizens: “Can we just have healthcare and a living wage”
    American Government: “Best I can do is a hyper sonic bomber”

    • @christophergoodman404
      @christophergoodman404 Год назад

      Best we can do is send 100 billion to the most corrupt country in Europe

    • @randallvickers8509
      @randallvickers8509 Год назад +3

      Can we just get a job

    • @getnohappy
      @getnohappy Год назад +3

      While a fun meme, it's actually really frustrating as the US healthcare system is the most inefficient in the Western world. If it changed to almost any European system you'd get cheaper healthcare and a healthier working population without cutting the military industrial complex ^^ they might actually get more cash if insurance money wasn't going to the Cayman islands and millions of working hours weren't lost to preventable health issues

    • @badluck5647
      @badluck5647 Год назад +4

      America has to spend more on the military to pay for the defense of the freeloaders in Europe.

    • @geridamas935
      @geridamas935 Год назад

      Living wage is on businesses, not the government. Rent and property costs are on the government.

  • @laulaja-7186
    @laulaja-7186 9 месяцев назад

    3:15 "Declassified and then quietly reclassified" That's a neat trick. Like collecting the proverbial down feathers and putting them back in the pillow case...
    Does the existence of this video then mean Simon is now in need of a lawyer same as Julian Assange?

  • @toddabbott781
    @toddabbott781 Год назад

    You forgot the F-117. Also if the US puts a defensive laser system into a fighter jet or bomber it will make it near impossible to shoot down. An old B-52 could slowly fly right over Russia to any target and drop its payload with little chance of being shot down. Its laser system could take out any incoming missiles and could take out any jet long before it could fire its guns. It can fire shot after shot and likely take out a missile every second, so it would be near impossible to overwhelm. With say a 150kw laser it might have a 20 mile range at those altitudes.
    Now think of 20 B-1 bombers with one of their 3 bomb bays loaded with a 150kw Helios system with a small laser turret that could deploy out the bottom. Then throw in 16 cruise missiles or nuclear bombs, 2 MOAB, 56 Mk-82 (500 pound) JDAMS, or maybe 96 GBU-53/B glide bombs filling the other 2 bomb bays. Have them fly in a diamond grid 1 mile apart at 40-60,000 feet. That is 20 lasers protecting the bomber group with overlapping protection. Nothing could touch them. Think of the damage they could do. Think of 1,920 glide bombs hitting every tank these bombers come within 45 miles of. Heck with a clear sky and low humidity those lasers could hit surface to air missiles and radar systems on the ground as well as trucks and MLRS vehicles. This one bomber group could crush Russia's forces in one flyover and Russia could do nothing to stop them.
    And you wonder how many years before these systems could be ready... Well the US is about to start receiving Stryker prototypes with a 50kw Guardian laser defense system as part of their directed energy-capable SHORAD program. They have 2 Navy Missile Destroyers testing 60kw Helios systems, the airborne laser weapon for the Air Force and a 300-kilowatt-class laser under development for the Army’s indirect fires protection capability, or IFPC, as part of a team with Dynetics - Lockheed is scaling its laser technology into an offering it calls DEIMOS, and the Dynetics and Lockheed team is slated to deliver an IFPC high-energy laser technology demonstrator in fiscal 2022; four prototypes are due at the end of FY24. So lasers are a thing for the US military and they are coming fast. They have tested an 30kw LaWS in a 747 as well as on a missile destroyer back in 2014. By 2030 there should be multiple ground, sea, and air based systems in the US arsenal.

  • @davidhunter9974
    @davidhunter9974 Год назад +3

    Could it be that the SR72/Darkstar or project Mayhem is the aircraft many people have been talking about for years now to be the Aurora?🤔 I’ve watched and read multiple videos and articles talking about its existence and people from different parts of the world having seeing sightings of a black triangular object..

    • @bremnersghost948
      @bremnersghost948 Год назад +1

      Could well be, Check out Professor Simon Holland.

    • @Laminar-Flow
      @Laminar-Flow Год назад

      No, it would likely be a predecessor if they are putting out public contract requests
      They likely are flying the next ‘Aurora’ now

    • @davidhunter9974
      @davidhunter9974 Год назад

      @@Laminar-Flow That’s a possibility

  • @eaphantom9214
    @eaphantom9214 Год назад +4

    Is this what Tom Cruise was flying in the recent Top Gun film?

    • @pigeonpoo1823
      @pigeonpoo1823 Год назад +2

      During the end credits, a certain Lockheed gets a special mention for the Dark Star.........

    • @eaphantom9214
      @eaphantom9214 Год назад

      @@pigeonpoo1823 Is that so... 😏
      I see...

  • @caseycatob5069
    @caseycatob5069 Месяц назад

    I have a very very very strong feeling one of these aircraft flew over my city, I live in Phoenix, AZ, and I saw a strange blue light with a LOT of altitude, I watched it cross the sky, horizon to horizon, in about 5 minutes, now that’s f*cking FAST. I zoomed in and saw no marking lights, no definitive shape, but just 2 pulsating blue lights, which were actually just the engines, it was followed by the Pulsating Sounds that other project aurora sightings had stated they’d heard. It’s a very very real possibility this plane is in the skies already.

  • @Flies2FLL
    @Flies2FLL Год назад +1

    Atmospheric heating is interesting. Did you know that at mach 0.80, or about 480 knots, the speed that most airliners fly at, the atmospheric heating due to air drag is about 80 fahrenheit degrees? It may be -56 degrees at that altitude, but the surfaces of the plane where the wind hits the most will be about 24 degrees F because of the frictional heating. Obviously this is at the most frictional point; temperature varies so much that this is a non-issue.

  • @rickj6348
    @rickj6348 Год назад +9

    The 737MAX LEAP engine is NOT one of the largest aircraft engines, Simon. Look at the 777 Pratt & Whitney PW4000, or Rolls-Royce Trent 800 engines, or the 787 GEnx or Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 engine for the largest engines.

    • @eretareodjugo
      @eretareodjugo Год назад +2

      The new GE 9x and Rolls Royce Ultra fan are the largest

    • @mh3594
      @mh3594 Год назад +1

      I think the ge might be a tad bigger

    • @NnH_Kairyu
      @NnH_Kairyu Год назад +2

      Well, technically he can say "One of the largest", if you're referencing "within the top 20 out of 200 engine types".

    • @runandsnipe
      @runandsnipe Год назад

      Touch grass

    • @rickj6348
      @rickj6348 Год назад

      True enough however the 777x hasn't been certified yet, so the GE 9x isn't being used commercially, and the Ultra Fan is still in pre-production.
      But you are correct, they will be the largest.🙂

  • @DFSJR1203
    @DFSJR1203 Год назад +5

    I would have designed the engine very simply, 2 afterburning engines, 2 scramjet engines. Yes a bit more weight, but the speed would still be there in the end. Easier than building a new engine to try to do both jobs and also way cheaper. Who am I kidding the military is working with Lockheed so money is no problem, until it does not work..

    • @JohnnyWednesday
      @JohnnyWednesday Год назад

      The jet engine is dead weight in scram mode - so the more parts you can share between the two engines? the less dead weight you carry.

  • @philloliver9966
    @philloliver9966 Год назад

    I love the way Simon pronounces Mach as "Mack". 😆

  • @godslayer1415
    @godslayer1415 Год назад +2

    SR71 fuel tanks leaked like a sieve before high temps expanded the titanium making them liquid tight - all calculated on slide rules...