Dec 172018
 

Below are some renders of a number of 3D CAD models of launch vehicles. Most are currently extremely basic… accurate to size and shape, but lacking details. The intent on most of them is to use them for diagramming purposes… but the possibility exists of using them as the basis for 1/288 scale display models. To that end they would probably be designed for simplicity and low parts count rather than complexity and the ability to display them with stages separate.

As can be seen, a lot of them make the Saturn V seem fairly puny. From left to right: the Boeing MLLV in its most capable form, fully stretched with a dozen 260-inch solid rocket boosters; Aerojet Sea Dragon; Rockwell Star Raker; Boeing “Big Onion” SPS launcher; Martin T10RR-3C Nova/Post-Saturn booster; early Nova “Saturn C-8;” Saturn V; Soviet N-1; Block 1 SLS; Block 1b SLS; New Glenn (scale estimated because the dimensions given for lengths and diameters don’t match up with renderings of the New Glenn).

Keep in mind, *all* of these were or are seriously considered by aerospace engineers based on the requirements of the launch market as they were then understood. Today, the markets to support these, with the possible exception of the New Glenn, simply don’t exist. But back when the Apollo program was still growing, the rocket designers of the time were seemingly convinced that the market for stuff being put into space was only going to grow exponentially.

If you might be interested in any of these as a model kit, let me know.

 Posted by at 3:03 am
Dec 162018
 

From an engineering standpoint, flying cars are entirely feasible. From a *practical* standpoint, I’m less convinced; a flying car isn’t all that great as either an automobile or an aircraft. But I suppose a well-designed flying car could certainly find a market if the finances are right.

An important first step, though, is not crashing.

FAA investigating ‘flying car’ crash at Willow Run Airport

Apparently the Detroit Flying Cars WD-1 did a Spruce Goose… on a simple ground-hugging taxi run it got airborne. Unlike the Spruce Goose, it seems to have come down hard.

This is my first hearing of this particular effort. The design looks interesting. The body is more or less rectangular and “car like” in planform, with aft mounted telescoping wings and telescoping canards. Wings such as these have been proposed and occasionally built for decades. They provide the advantage of wings that can be compressed into a storable form, but with the limitation that basically nothing can be stored within them (i.e. no wing tanks), and of course they are somewhat weaker than “solid” wings. Further storage efficiency is had with the WD-1 by staggering the wings … the port wing is higher than the starboard wing. What that will do to cruise-flight characteristics, I don’t know, but I’d bet good money that it’d play hell with ground effect during takeoff and landing: that starboard wing is *real* close to the ground while the port wing is a foot or two higher.

I do wonder if a vehicle akin to this could be built that used *inflatable* wings. Not quite like the floppy rubber wings used on the Goodyear inflatoplanes, but a hybrid between the Inflatoplane and these telescopic wings. Say… instead of each wing panel being made of two sections, each roughly the width of the car, they were made of four or five sections, each less than *half* the width of the car. This would allow the wings to be stored at the same elevation, getting rid of the potential ground effect asymmetry issue. And the wings are deployed via the inflation of internal wing-length gas-bladder “spars.” The structural strength with then come from a combo of the inflatable spar and the rigid skin. For retraction, the spar is vacuumed and deflated and the outer wing panels drawn in via simple cables.

The Detroit Flying cars website is a bit lean on some details, so as far as I know that might be the process being used here, but I doubt it.

 Posted by at 1:51 pm
Dec 152018
 

Michigan couple: Priest, ‘bully’ coach ruined our son’s funeral

In short: a teenager killed himself, apparently due in part to bullying from his coach. So, the family asks the coach to stay away from the funeral. Guess whether or not he stayed away. Go on, guess.

And then the preacherman goes on a gleeful tirade about how suicides all go to Hell…you know, Because Reasons. Even after the kids father asks Reverend Sunshine to STFU, he continues to yammer on, then tried to prevent anyone from eulogizing the kid.

This funeral doesn’t sound like it was at all fun.

 

Here’s a thought: if I need to have a special license from the government to design, manufacture and sell fully automatic weapons to whoever I like, maybe anyone who wishes to distribute religion should go through the same process, including having to make sure that their records are available to inspection by government agents at their whim.

 Posted by at 8:44 pm
Dec 152018
 

Remember that line from *every* time gun control has been raised? Heh.

NJ State Police Refuse to Rule Out House-to-House Enforcement of High Capacity Magazine Ban

New Jersey has made standard capacity magazines illegal to own, and may be considering sending cops to the homes of gun owners to take their Constitutionally protected stuff.

 Posted by at 1:19 am
Dec 142018
 

A Hughes Helicopter magazine ad from 1967 showing the OH-6A in Navy service as a sub-hunter. I do not believe that this was a role that the small chopper was ever used for.However, the Hughes OH-6 proved to be a phenomenally successful design; more than 50 years after this ad, it is still being manufactured in updated form as the MD Helicopters MD500E.

 Posted by at 1:43 pm
Dec 142018
 

Banshee was relaxing on the arm of the couch next to me when Buttons, who didn’t see her, jumped up on my lap. Hissing, slapping and fleeing ensued. Below you can see Buttons receding into the distance while Banshee sulks, clearly unhappy that another cat came within her personal space.

 Posted by at 1:27 pm
Dec 142018
 

The Virgin Galactic SpaceShipTwo launched yesterday to more than 80 kilometers altitude, which by some measures put it into space. Of course, which in *space* it was nowhere near being in *orbit,* but it’s a step towards getting the SpaceShip suborbital tourist craft into operation. It should be noted that SpaceShipOne achieved this sort of performance *fourteen* *years* *ago.*

 Posted by at 1:11 pm
Dec 122018
 

The Shuttle-C of the late 80’s/early 90’s would have carried a whole lot more to orbit than the Shuttle Orbiter, but would not have been quite as capable of precise maneuvering as the Orbiter. Consequently, it might get close to a space station, but it would be unlikely to dock with it unless it was moved into position with secondary orbital maneuvering vehicles or grabbed with manipulator arms. This artwork depicts a Shuttle-C standing off some distance from a space station, with the cargo being shuttled over with an OMV.

The Shuttle-C was described and illustrated in US Launch Vehicle Projects #4.

 

 Posted by at 11:20 pm
Dec 122018
 

It’s always a little bit of a shock when, well after nightfall, you get a call from one of your neighbors telling you to “look out your window,” you do, and the house across the street is a raging inferno.

 

As it turns out this was a planned burn. The house was a dump; it hasn’t been lived in since before I moved out here in 2004. Still, it came as just a smidgen of a surprise. The wind was blowing like mad, sending smoke and embers across the street over my neighbors house. Fortunately the firefighters were right there (they had, after all, started the fire).

 Posted by at 10:37 pm
Dec 122018
 

I’m split right down the middle between “hey, that seems kinda cool” and “well that seems to be an item of limited practical value.”

Well, perhaps not *right*down the middle. Given that it suffers more damage than a tomater does, it would not seem to be a device capable of being used in practical combat. *Perhaps* if you were mugged you might be able to whip this out and spook the bejeebers out of your assailant, but a shot of bear spray or buckshot would do that somewhat more effectively.

 Posted by at 8:57 pm