Mar 292018
 

A few years ago the cultural gatekeepers were all kinds of giddy over the book “Ready Player One.” Now it seems they are ready to hate the movie with the passion they imagine that straight white males hated Ghostbusters 2016. For example:

The Ready Player One backlash, explained

I haven’t read the book, but I’ve been bombarded with the summary: it’ the future, everything sucks, people spend their lives in virtual reality. Control over that reality will pass to whoever can win some big game; to win the player needs to be ridiculously well-versed in 1980’s nostalgia and video game nerd-dom. Seems like exactly the sort of thing for a Steven Spielberg movie. But now our cultural betters have decided that the whole premise of politically incorrect… because “Gamergate” has made gaming culture toxic.

If you’re like me, you’ve heard of Gamergate, but never really understood just WTF it was all about. As with many things these days, there seems to not be a universally agreed-upon definition. However, I recently saw this video that explains Gamergate:

Basically, Gamergate was the opening salvo in the fight back against the SJWs, though the SJW’s seem to have the upper hand in the propaganda. And consequently, if the SJWs hate “Ready Player One” for the same reason they’re bonkers about Gamergate, I think it just might be worth seeing.

 

 

 Posted by at 5:16 pm
Mar 292018
 

Here are two presumably wholly unrelated pieces of aerospace artwork. At least I *hope* they’re unrelated…

The first is an anonymous painting of a spaceplane. Doesn’t seem terribly realistic; most likely done for advertising purposes (I wonder if the “7-11” might indicate a relationship to the chain of the same name). The print arrived damaged, as you an see; the paper was thick and *really* brittle and really didn’t appreciate being rolled up. If anyone knows anything about it, feel free to comment.

 

The second is concept art from Bell Aerospace illustrating an amphibious troop carrier for the Marine Corps. The design of the assault vehicle is fairly ordinary as such things go, except for one detail: it could turn into a hovercraft and float across the surface of the water, rather than plowing through it. No further details provided, so I don’t know if the hover-skirts were deployable and retractable, or if they were simply dropped when the vehicle got to shore. The latter would certainly seem more economical.

I’ve uploaded the full rez scans to the 2018-03 APR Extras Dropbox folder, available to all current APR Patrons at the $4 level and above. If you are interested in this and a great many other “extras” and monthly aerospace history rewards, please sign up for the APR Patreon. Chances are good that $4/month is far cheaper than your espresso/booze budget!

patreon-200

 Posted by at 2:01 pm
Mar 292018
 

An old NASA video describing the HL-20 lifting body. In the 90’s NASA spent a lot of time and trouble trying to get an HL-20 built for a Personnel Launch System, a vehicle smaller than the Space Shuttle but capable of carrying as many passengers and riding a much smaller launch vehicle. For transporting passengers to and from the Space Station, it would have been much more economical and sensible than the Shuttle. And while the HL-20 was never built, the basic geometry has survived in the form of Sierra Nevada’s Dream Chaser, which *might* actually fly to space someday.

 

 Posted by at 12:01 am
Mar 282018
 

Solid rocket propellant is *typically* made by mixing liquid rubber with ammonium perchlorate (a dry, salt-like powder and an oxidizer) and powdered aluminum (the fuel). Small amounts of other materials (cyanoacrylates, iron oxide, etc.) can be added to give the propellant different properties. But regardless of the specific mix, the trick is the actual mixing process. Generally propellant mixers look like giant versions of kitchen mixers, and operate in the exact same way as the machine you might use to turn water and flour into bread dough. But here’s the thing: if something goes wrong while you mix the dough and *somehow* the mixing blades strike the side of the bowl, the likelihood of it thing blowing up your house are minimal. The forces and energies involved in mixing propellant has several times resulted in facilities blowing up or burning down. Failures have resulted from sparks, scrapes, foreign objects being banged between blade and bowl. In short, metal parts, electrical systems and moving parts are a little dangerous when mixing propellant.

Enter the Japanese. Specifically, enter Japanese WTFery.

Watch This Robotic Intestine Puke Rocket Fuel

Instead of a metal kitchen mixer, this device is a pneumatic “artificial intestine” that mixes things much more gently, and in a continuous process. With a standard mixer, you pour in a batch of materials, mix, then pour. This system could in principle be constantly fed materials, producing an unending stream of mixed goop. It has the safety advantage of having no moving mechanical metal components in contact with the ingredients, just a constantly flexing rubber tube.

Note, though, that the headline isn’t exactly right. Intestines do indeed move… uhhh, stuff… through peristaltic pumping. But the end process isn’t to “puke” it. It goes out the *other* end.

The thing seems to work. But being Japanese, I’m a little surprised that it doesn’t involve tentacles. Give it time, I suppose.

 

 

 

 Posted by at 11:34 pm
Mar 282018
 

A piece of late 1950’s promo art from Rocketdyne illustrating a spacecraft with a solar thermodynamic powerplant. This should not be assumed to be an actual design, but much more likely just more or less pure illustrative art.

The craft is shown with a great parabolic solar reflector, the sunlight heating an element at the focus. In an actual design, most likely a working fluid would be pumped through this and boiled, the resulting high pressure gas blowing past a turbogenerator and then into a heat exchanger or directly into a relatively vast radiator. The gas would be cooled back to liquid and recirculated. Note that no such radiator is in evidence. Sometimes early designs utilized radiators built onto the shadow side of the reflectors. The craft appears to be over Mars, based on the hints of canals that are kinda visible. The ship has a parabolic radio dish on a boom below; the upper boom would seem to hold a trough, likely a launching platform for a small probe rocket (another cliche in early spacecraft art). At the rear is a boom that appears to hold two banks of ion engines or some other electrical propulsion system. Oddly, the thrusters would seem to be held off well to the side of the craft, rather than actually firing through the centerline (unless that boom is supposed to be projected straight aft and mounted at one end of the bar holding the thrusters, thus putting the centerline of thrust back through the CG of the craft).

 Posted by at 12:41 pm
Mar 262018
 

As YouTube bans firearms demonstrations, Utah firm launching its own pro-gun video platform

The Utah Gun Exchange is a “Craigslist of the 2nd Amendment,” a place to sell guns & stuff, and YouTube cannot stand that, so the Utah Gun Exchange is getting kicked off YouTube. Consequently the UGE is creating their own video platform, UGEtube.com (it’s not up and running yet).

A lot of other companies getting booted from YouTube are doubtless looking at creating their own alternatives to YouTube. It will doubtless be one heck of a mess for a while… a hundred different channels with different formats and protocols, all competing. But it seems likely that as time goes by the various competitors will merge together. It is just barely possible that a few of the freedom-friendly YT alternates will succeed and take a chunk of YT’s market.

 Posted by at 11:04 pm
Mar 262018
 

36 Hours: From Leading Anti-Gun Violence Rally to Capital Murder Charges

Short form: one Reverend Glasgow recently led anti-gun protests. AND THEN…  shortly thereafter, wound up entangled in a *firearms* murder case, hauled off to the hoosegow. But here’s where the last line, the VERY LAST LINE, in the news story becomes even more interesting:

Reverend Kenneth Sharpton Glasgow is the brother of well known activist Reverend Al Sharpton. 

It’s just beyond shocking that murderers would want to strip firearms from the hands of the law abiding public. Who could *conceive* that criminals would want to disarm their victims?

 Posted by at 6:36 pm
Mar 252018
 

This is interesting:

High school in 1990 was effectively still “80’s” high school; as seen in the main still image, there is a girl featured who has *massive* 80’s hair. So this was basically my high school era, and it’s interesting to see how todays horrible little brats saw yesterdays horrible little brats. And I was gratified to see that a point commonly raised by olds like myself is also raised by the youngs: back in the day, before smart phones and social media, kids actually communicated with each other face to face. 1990 was just a few years away from the internet era, only a decade or so away from the beginning of the mobile & texting era; it’s amazing just how fast some important aspect of society have utterly changed. And while some changes are obviously good – better technology, with higher quality for less cost – some changes are bad. The deletion of actual socialization is bad. The replacement of girls 80’s hair with todays SJW bluhair is bad; not only is the fashion just vastly less appealing, what it *means* is even more less appealing. Back in the day, the big 80’s hair meant “this girl spends a whole lot of time and effort on her appearance, which means she’s out of your league,” while SJW hair today means “this girl has lost her got-dam mind and is not only unpleasant to be around but also likely legally dangerous to interact with: avoid at all costs.” 80’s hair indicated a challenge to conquer, the possibility of good and happy times. SJW hair indicates a threat warning.

Sigh. I won’t be utterly shocked if I find out someday that social media and social justice were memes implanted into western civilization by aliens, occult Nazi scientists or PO’ed ex-Soviet KGB agents as a way to crash the western birth rate and general vitality.

 

And here’s the full 45 minute video shot in 1990:

 

 

 Posted by at 9:34 pm