in Dryden Flight Research Center, North Edwards, CA 93523, USA
This position has already been corrected [?]
Flag photo:
Photo details:
- Viewed 1899 times
- Uploaded on May 18, 2007
-
©
All Rights Reserved
by stevenjssanders -
Extra information
- Taken on 2000/01/01 00:00:04
- Exposure: 0.056s (1/18)
- Focal Length: 7.45mm
- F/Stop: f/2.000
- ISO Speed: ISO100
- Exposure Bias: 0.09 EV
- No flash
Comments
Rockaliens, on January 2, 2009, said:
SR-71 Blackbird
stevenjssanders, on January 2, 2009, said:
That is not an SR. Sorry. It's a modified F-8.
jbjensensc, on September 1, said:
The aircraft in the photo above is indeed an F-8. The aircraft on static display in the Google Earth image is a YF-12/SR-71. The photo is not "hooked up" to the right place on the ground.
milano61, on October 14, said:
The first test of a Digital Fly By Wire system in an aircraft was in l972 on this modified F-8 Crusader at the Flight Research Center, Edwards, Calif. (now Dryden Flight Research Center). It was the forerunner of the fly-by-wire flight control systems now used on the space shuttles and on today's military and civil aircraft to make them safer, more maneuverable and more efficient. It was safer because of its redundancies and because, for military aircraft, wires were less vulnerable to battle damage than the hydraulic lines they replaced. It was more maneuverable because computers could command more frequent adjustments than a human pilot and designers could do away with features that made the plane more stable and thus harder to maneuver. For airliners, computerized flight control could also ensure a smoother ride than a human pilot alone could provide. Finally, digital fly-by-wire was more efficient because it was lighter and took up less volume than hydraulic controls and thus either reduced the fuel required to fly with the extra weight and/or permitted carrying more passengers or cargo. It also required less maintenance than older systems. Details provided by U. S. Govt.