So I know Mach 3 is the listed max speed but I think that's bunk. The XB70 Valkyrie could go that fast. Anyone care to speculate?
I had a conversation one evening with Brian Shul after the Reno Air Races with a group of other aviators where he acknowledged flying in the 3.5 range, but wouldn't say exactly where in the world he was or what the actual mach reading was, nor could he (or would he) say what the CIT reading was. He did say "We were fired at, but we were never hit." It was not clear whether he was speaking about that particular flight or about the program as a whole.
The real mystery, to me, is how they were able to drill the length of the probe up to the pressure sensors in the tip. What could drill through titanium? I suppose diamond, but what could drill a precise hole almost three feet long, inside the probe?
We have an SR-71 hanging in the Offutt Space Museum near Omaha. One of the pilots (there were only 85 I think) is a member of a local EAA chapter. He tells amazing stories.
If you ever pulled 2 gs in the Blackbird you will do structural damage to the wings, 1.5 was the max.
There was no GPS back then and ground navigation aids were worthless at altitude. They navigated by stars using a sextant.
INS has been around since the 50's. I'm willing to bet they had at least 2 onboard.
TACAN can be received at all altitudes as well as NDB.
Wow...and to think the ANS was created in the in the relative dark ages of electronics. Impressive.
INS has been around since the 50's. I'm willing to bet they had at least 2 onboard.
TACAN can be received at all altitudes as well as NDB.
OMEGA was around back then as well.
Any of the ground based stuff can be jammed or spoofed.
Celestial bodies, star tables, and trigonometry are immune to jamming.
I've done celestial navigation since back when it was the only way to get across an ocean, I can just imagine what my plotting sheet would look like for a 3 star running fix at Mach3. I would bet that hand done celestial at Mach 3 would be right around as accurate as my DR plot(which usually isn't too bad.)
Yeah, but we're talking a state of the art 1960 computer (!) performing the calculations, probably based on near simultaneous readings. Apparently it was up to the task.
It used an Astro-Inertial Navigation System (ANS). A glass porthole on top of the fuse that tracked up to 300 stars to determine its position. It interfaced with the autopilot as well. RSO was responsible for its operation.
300 stars? HO 249 only has 57, and there are only 41 prime navigation stars of which you'd need 7 to make a hemispheric trip, 11 to make an antipodean trip, in a day.
I didn't design the thing. That's out of Sled Driver page 69. Excellent book.