Oct 132012
 

A piece of NASA-Langley artwork describing the future of aeropropulsion… the scramjet engine. The provenance on the art is hazy at best… found in the uncatalogued collection of a former Langley engineer, it probably dates to the mid 1960’s. The aircraft illustrated here has been seen from the early 1960s up into the late 1980s, so that at best brackets the art. The aircraft has been used as a hypersonic transport and as the first stage of a space launch system. As shown here, the model used was *probably* a wind tunnel model repainted and repurposed as a display model… none of the diagrams I’ve seen of it have included the “hump” on the underside of the aft expansion ramp. Most likely that’s the connection point for the support “sting” for tunnel use. Alternatively, it *could* represent a fairing for a rather sizable rocket engine, though that seems unlikely… during scramjet operation the hump would not only mess with exhaust flowfields, it would also be subjected toa whole lot of thermal unpleasantness.

 Posted by at 10:27 pm
Oct 122012
 

The Khodynka aviation museum in Moscow had been left to rot after the fall of the USSR. That was bad. But it now seems that that situation has been dealt with… by sending heavy construction equipment onto the grounds to convert the aircraft to scrap metal. Feh.

Here’s a video of the state of the place in 2009:


Abandoned military aircraft museum by cxpiter

And here’s a Russian-language article from today providing photos of the destruction in process… tellingly, this was done under the cover of darkness.

На Ходынском поле уничтожают экспонаты музея авиации

An English translation of the article, almost readable, can be had via Google Translate:

At Khodynka destroy artifacts Aviation Museum

And the inevitable YouTube video:

[youtube ufnTwtpkBnU]

 Posted by at 9:44 am
Oct 112012
 

There is a forthcoming “space combat” video game for PC that I wish to extract the model of one of the spaceships from, and import into a CAD program. Is such a task generally feasible? Or are the models generally locked in in some way to prevent or inhibit that sort of thing?

 Posted by at 11:38 pm