Flight Testing Of Burt Rutan's X Prize Entry
evenprime writes "The X Prize website is reporting that
Burt Rutan's company Scaled Composites did some
flight testing on their SpaceShipOne/White Knight launch platform on May 19, 2003. Next up:
drop tests. There's also a nice
write-up at the BBC website."
1. Build nifty spacecraft for $20,000,000US
2. Maybe win $10,000,000US X-Prize
3. ???
4. Profit!
A programmer is a machine for converting coffee into code.
Seriously... you go, Burt - and all the other X-Prize teams, too.
On behalf of all of us cubicle-bound geeks looking at the stars, may you all show NASA what teams of dedicated engineers can do if given an environment in which... well, an environment in which dedicated engineers can do what dedicated engineers have always done in such an environment.
Am I the only one who wouldn't ride in the black armadillo because of this section:
So let me get this straight. You're going to fire this thing into space and then it's going to land and crush like a beer can? Pass.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
mmm...I don't fly in a airplane which is called X-Plane V7.0 BETA. Sounds pretty flakey to me.
It'll be about private industry until United Spacelines and American Spacelines start losing too much money, and the space-citizens of the United Space-states of Earth have to shell out billions of space-dollars to keep them afloat. I mean, in orbit.
Rutan amazes me.. I mean, he has an interest in aircraft, then goes out and designs builds tons of them, makes a business out of it, sets all sorts of records, and so on. All with sideburns! He rules!
-J
It's a hybrid: half rocket engine, half rubber band attached to a propeller.
IANARS, however, I do believe there are breaking methods that that I would prefer if I was going along for the ride.
134340: I am not a number. I am a free planet!
But ... but ... but ... according to your sig, you're a street walking cheetah, with a heart full of napalm. You're the runaway son of a nuclear A-bomb! Of course you'd do it! Else, you must retire your sig. No, I insist.
"After experiencing weightlessness at the top of its trajectory, the ship will extend its wings and tail and glide back to the runway that it left 90 minutes earlier."
Okay, so we have a plane with a "spaceship" under it, and we're going to go up real high and then fling it up into what's just barely "space," and watch it fall down. So you'll actually be in "space" for just a few minutes? No orbiting around and trying to see if you can find your house from up there? How much fun is this really, when the majority of your time is spent screaming your head off as you fall back to Earth? Maybe the inflight meal will be really good.
They meant to put flubber.
This is why I'm rooting for armadillo aerospace - if they win, the history videos of the future will show a fat, cheap looking rocket crashing head first into the ground then falling over. It's about time history got a little comic relief :o)
If I seem short sighted, it is because I stand on the shoulders of midgets
The stuff they put in solid rockets to keep them burning, you don't want to be inhaling that stuff.
Whereas nitrous oxide and burnin' rubber, well, shucks, that's better'n air!
Please donate your spare CPU cycles to help fight cancer and other diseases
Okay, so I'm sure it'd probably explode or something. But it'd look cool for a few moments.