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FAR BEYOND DRIVEN

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Awesome on SR71


 
March 26, 2019  Topic: Technology  Region: Americas  Blog Brand: The Buzz  Tags: BlackbirdSR-71SR-72Spy PlanesU.S. Air Force

The SR-71 Spy Plane Was So Fast, It Outran Every Missile Fired at It

Speed has always been as powerful as stealth.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Until Lockheed Martin finally builds the SR-72 Mach-6 spy plane it announced in November 2013  and which reportedly appeared in plain view for the first time in July 2017 the iconic SR-71 Blackbird, capable of flying three times the speed of sound, remains the fastest warplane ever flown operationally.

So fast that no missiles fired at it had a chance of hitting.

When the U-2 spy plane was built in the 1950s, its designer Clarence Kelly Johnson already knew that it would be vulnerable to enemy defenses.

 

So to gather intelligence in foreign skies, in 1964 U.S. president Lyndon Johnson announced that the Lockheed Advance Development Projects, also known as the Skunk Works, would build another strategic reconnaissance aircraftone so fast that no other airplane could reach it.

The Blackbirds flight characteristics were incredible. It was able to fly at more than three and a half times the speed of sound at 88,000 feet. To give you an idea of what that altitude means, the SR-71 took photos from three times the height of Mount Everest and its pilots dressed in full pressure suits like astronauts.

 

During its more than three-decade career, which ended on Oct. 9, 1999, no SR-71 was lost to hostile action. But not for a lack of trying on the part of Americas enemies. Neither enemy fighters nor surface-to-air missiles were ever able to shoot down or damage an SR-71.

High speed was one factor. But the Blackbird was also hard to detected by radar, being the first aircraft to feature stealth technology. A special paint was used on the SR-71s wings, tail and fuselage. Containing iron ferrite, this paint absorbed radar energy instead of returning it to the sender.

 

With a Radar Cross Section equivalent to a small light aircraft, the SR-71 appeared on enemy radar screens too late for a missile computer to estimate its direction for a successful shoot-down. The Blackbird also masked its range and bearing by jamming enemy listening devices with sophisticated electronic countermeasures.

Not only were SAMs unable to catch the Blackbird, even the the fastest Soviet fighter jets lacked the necessary speed to intercept the SR-71. Soviet pilot Viktor Belenko, who defected to Japan in a MiG-25 on Dec. 6, 1976, confirmed this in his book MiG Pilot.

 

American reconnaissance planes, SR-71s, were prowling off the coast, staying outside Soviet airspace by photographing terrain hundreds of miles inland with side-angle cameras, Belenko wrote. They taunted and toyed with the MiG-25s sent up to intercept them, scooting up to altitudes the Soviet planes could not reach, and circling leisurely above them or dashing off at speeds the Russians could not match.

Continued Belenko:

 

[The Soviets] had a master plan to intercept an SR-71 by positioning a MiG-25 in front of it and one below it, and when the SR-71 passed they would fire missiles. But it never occurred. Soviet computers were very primitive, and there is no way that mission can be accomplished.

First of all, the SR-71 flies too high and too fast. The MiG-25 cannot reach it or catch it. Secondly the missiles are useless above 27,000 meters [88,000 feet], and as you know, the SR-71 cruises much higher. But even if we could reach it, our missiles lack the velocity to overtake the SR-71 if they are fired in a tail chase. And if they are fired head-on, the guidance systems cannot adjust quickly enough to the high closing speed.

 

Moreover, Belenkos missiles would have not worked because most air- to-air missiles are optimized to maneuver in the thicker air below around 30,000 feet in order to shoot down an enemy plane, former Blackbird pilot Col. Richard Graham explained in his book SR-71: The Complete Illustrated History of the Blackbird. Firing at the SR-71, cruising at 75,000 feet, the air is so thin that any maneuvering capability of the missile is practically nonexistent.

With the Mach-6 SR-72 a real possibility, speed is the new stealth is Lockheed Martins new slogan. But really, theres nothing new about it. Speed has worked to protect spy planes for the last 60 years.

 

This article by Dario Leone and David Cenciotti originally appeared at War is Boring in 2017.

https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/sr-71-spy-plane-was-so-fast-it-outran-every-missile-fired-it-49202

When I was Air Defense Command early 70's on a SAC base (we were tenant) SR 71 and U2 both would land at out base. Friggin awesome. U2 was a glider basically (think Gary Powers)  The SR71? I still have wet dreams over them. When they left the afterburner was closer to a greenish flame than the orangish of most AB's. Of course no mention of coming or goings but you are on base you see it. And remember it. 



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I was just reading about this today! Bad ass piece of hardware right there!

Mach 6, able to cruise at 88,000 feet!  THAT IS FAST!

The design reminds me of that movie Firefox with Clint Eastwood. Have you ever seen that movie?

 



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Probably the greatest plane ever designed in the US...

 

They are currently working on a SR-72 at Lockheed Martin Skunk Works...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 






-- Edited by Nuffan on Wednesday 27th of March 2019 06:31:33 PM

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Yup seen Firefox. No shit, see an SR71 (which most never will and if you do the base won't admit) your hair on back of your neck gonna stand up a week. Actually the whole time I was on that base was so friggin awesome. Between SR, U2 we had other awesome stuff! Loved the war games. We would have AF, Marines fly games. Marines showed up in Hueys playing leap frog down the runway, no shit!

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My favorite SR-71 story....

 

 

 

 



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Nuffan wrote:

Probably the greatest plane ever designed in the US...

 

They are currently working on a SR-72 at Lockheed Martin Skunk Works...

 

 

Wow, hadn't heard that. I was F106 fighter interceptors. 1956 I believe it was first on the line, Hughes Aircraft, which was pretty cool. Weapons system super revamped wicked like late 60 early 70. MA1. I know what they could do and did. Never talk about it in any of that detail.

Unreal, loved that fighter. Being ADC, 49th FIS, NORAD I KNOW

 

  9-11 was a bullshit story and knew it first I heard about it 10 min after. I know that we can do, it was a stand down, PERIOD. 

 

 

 

 






-- Edited by Nuffan on Wednesday 27th of March 2019 06:31:33 PM


 



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