Mar 232011
 

The 747-8 has had its first flight. This is the biggest and most advanced 747 to date, borrowing some lessons learned from the 787. Go to the link to see some photos… it’s surprisingly colorful.

EDIT: here’s the best 3-view of the 747-8 I’ve got.

 Posted by at 11:41 pm
Mar 232011
 

George Monbiot is one of those screamingly left-wing European nuts straight out of central casting. He’s a professional protestor, offers a cash reward for the arrest and show trial of Tony Blair, attempted to personally arrest John Bolton, and seems to want all the most fascist, anti-freedom nuttery that the environmentalist movement dreams about. So, imagine my surprise at this:

Why Fukushima made me stop worrying and love nuclear power

As a result of the disaster at Fukushima, I am no longer nuclear-neutral. I now support the technology.

A crappy old plant with inadequate safety features was hit by a monster earthquake and a vast tsunami. The electricity supply failed, knocking out the cooling system. The reactors began to explode and melt down. The disaster exposed a familiar legacy of poor design and corner-cutting. Yet, as far as we know, no one has yet received a lethal dose of radiation.

I’m… shocked. Monbiot typically comes down on the moonbat side of just about every issue, but this time he has written a reasonable and logical article. 

Also: recent footage showing the Fukushima facility and those working to fix it.

[youtube dZ8DdBsXji4]

 Posted by at 9:20 pm
Mar 232011
 

The December 1, 1958, issue of Aviation Week magazine ran an article titled “Soviets Flight Testing Nuclear Bomber,” which included a simple 3-view drawing of the supposed nuclear powered supersonic craft. The article claimed that the aircraft was indeed flying, and had been seen by multiple observers.

Small problem: it didn’t exist. Aviation Week was wrong.

 The drawing that Aviation Week included was clearly a crude, close-but-not-quite-right representation of the Myasishchev M-50, NATO code-named “Bounder.” But the Bounder was not nuclear powered. While Myasishchev did design nuclear powered versions of the Bounder, they never built one, much less flew one. The incident, while little known to the general public today (go ahead… ask a hundred of your closest friends, family and co-workers if they’ve ever heard of the article), is infamous in aviation journalism. It was a case of stating the factually inaccurate as the factually certain. It is occasionally brought up as a cautionary tale to not believe everything you read, even if it comes from a seemingly authoritative source.

But a question has lingered for more than fifty years: where did Aviation Week get this story? Was it, as some sources claim, a hoax? Did the author of the article make it up out of whole cloth? If so, how did he know about the configuration of the Bounder, which was not publicly shown until 1963?

As it turns out, Aviation Week and the articles author did not invent the story. A month earlier, a secret briefing was held for officials (USAF and Atomic Energy Comission) of the Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Office by staff of General Electric, Atomic Products Division at the Evenbdale, Ohio, GE facility. The 11-hour session covered a range of topics, one of which was Soviet nuclear aircraft activity. The aircraft described is clearly the aircraft upon which the Aviation Week article was based on. Interestingly, one of the charts shows that the design was already code named Bounder.

How did Aviation Week gain access to this presentation? One possibility is that a copy of the presentation charts were simply handed over to the Av Week staff in order to “get the word out.” Av Week did, after all, also publish an editorial about the disturbing development of Soviet nuclear powered aircraft, and called for the development of Americas equivalent. However, while clearly similar, the drawing of the Bounder in the GE presentation materials differs in important ways from that contained in the Aviation Week article. It looks more like the Aviation Week article was going off of a good verbal description, or just a brief glance. I can’t imagine that the details would be changed on a whim. And as it turns out, the GE drawings of the Bounder were in some ways closer to the actual Bounder than the Aviation Week drawings of the Soviet atomic bomber. Additionally, the available pages are just the charts that would have been either handed out or slide-projected at the briefing; it’s unknown what the presenter actually said. As with any presentation, the charts are a horribly incomplete part of the story… they tend to be jsut illustrations and bullet points, while the narrative is given out verbally via prepared remarks and answers to questions. Did the presenter (one J. H. Guill) say that the nuclear powered Bounder had flown, as Aviation Week claimed? That is unknown, though one of the charts seems to indicate that.

It seems not unlikely to me that someone at Aviation Week spoke to someone in attendance at the briefing, possibly an Air Force officer, who told them what had been said and described – perhaps with a  simple sketch – the design of the supposed Soviet atomic bomber. The Aviation Week sketch includes dimensions, something not shown in the presentation charts… but possibly given out verbally.

Another possibility, of course, is that the Air Force simply gave Aviation Week the article to publish, complete with a  slightly mutated bomber drawing. If the Air Force believeed that the Bounder drawing was accurate, they might not want to publicise it… a less-accurate public version of the drawing might confuse the Soviets as to the source the the Americans information.

In any case, it would hardly be the first – and certainly not the last – time that a news outlet was used for propaganda purposes. While arguably unfortunate, and in the end embarassing for Aviation Week (they were, after all, wrong), the evidence shows that Aviation Week itself was not hoaxing the public, but rather they themselves were working off of information that came from what should have been a reliable source.

But after all this, it turns out to be a matter of simply moving the goal posts. Where did GE get their – clearly partially right, clearly partially wrong – information?

 Posted by at 11:16 am
Mar 222011
 

The Ruby Pipeline (42-inch natural gas, from Wyoming to Oregon) is being installed a few miles south of here, on the south side of the Salt Creek Waterfowl Management Area (AKA the swamp). It’s stretching for miles in one direction… and stretching for miles in the other.

 Posted by at 10:01 pm
Mar 222011
 

This, I’m sure, will go over well, with naught but rational polite discourse:

God’s Wife Edited Out of the Bible — Almost

Short form: a fair deal of evidence – including bits of the Old Testament – point to the fertility goddess Asherah as having been worshipped alongside Yahweh as his wife by the ancient Israelites as recently as 586 BC. Of course, “bits of evidence” are not going to change major religions, but it’s interesting to speculate what might happen is, say, a really old copy of, say, the book of Genesis were dug up somewhere that had the original references to Asherah still in it, and she turned out to be Yahwehs equal.

THAT would be the time to break out the popcorn. After all, the second comment that pulls up on the article is this:

Be careful when reading baseless, misleading and confusing article that can lead someone’s soul to hell if belief is put into the article. Remember we are now at the latter day.

Translation:

 Posted by at 9:13 pm
Mar 222011
 

Zentih Star was the name of a little known program to develop a space-based anti-missile laser during the Reagan SDI days. Vaguely shaped like the Hubble space telescope, it was much bigger and heavier, and could not be hauled into orbit in the Shuttle. Since the Shuttle was the biggest launch vehicle the US had, something new was needed. While several launch vehicles were proposed specifically to launch the Zenith Star, another idea was to use the proposed Shuttle C. Shuttle C was an expendable all-cargo derivative of the shuttle… stame external tank, same boosters, same “boattail” of the orbiter, but no wings, no cockpit, no recovery systems and an extended cargo bay. The Shuttle C was a NASA-MSFC idea that Martin Marietta ran with; the artwork below is likely Martin.

 Posted by at 9:11 am
Mar 222011
 

Huh.

CAUGHT ON TAPE: Former SEIU Official Reveals Secret Plan To Destroy JP Morgan, Crash The Stock Market, And Redistribute Wealth In America

[youtube RvlvejSxBVQ]

Some people on the Right are screaming about  this as a clear case of treason (working to crash the economy) and that it should be prosecuted under the RICO statute and others. I dunno… sounds like your stock-standard far-Left Union thug dreaming out loud about bringing down the banks, redistributing wealth, impoverishing those who have invested in the stock market, and bringing about some Cloward-Piven communist utopian  fantasyland. Regardless of whether it’s legally actionable, it’s certainly an interesting look into the mindset of those who want to destroy society.

 Posted by at 8:12 am