FloridaPilot
Pattern Altitude
Inquiring minds want to know
The military did not build the SR-71, it was built for them by Lockheed.
How quickly can a satellite be maneuvered into an obscure position these days? That used to be a huge issue and often required Presidential approval. I suspect it isn't nearly the issue it used to be.Could one of the defense contractors build a "better" SR-71? Sure, technology has improved. Will it happen? No, there's no need, satellites do that job now.
I think they already have, it's been in orbit over a year now.
How quickly can a satellite be maneuvered into an obscure position these days? That used to be a huge issue and often required Presidential approval. I suspect it isn't nearly the issue it used to be.
Love how Hollywood did NOT know how to wear berets back then ! Those guys look like Italian pizza boys !This was one of my favorite movies of the SR-71 Black Bird. Daryl (1985):
Or Ben Rich.Can Kelly Johnson be reincarnated? Then they can.
Love how Hollywood did NOT know how to wear berets back then ! Those guys look like Italian pizza boys !
hey....that could change....and we could start winning.Only if it is finished under budget....
Or Ben Rich.
I have never heard the words "simple" and "F35" used in the same sentence without a negative qualifier being involved. That plane is the epitome of complexity and trying to be all things to all people.No they couldn't. They cannot even build a simple fighter plane(F35) or decide if the A-10 is a good plane these days.
I believe Ben Rich had something to say about that very thing as well. About how the planes themselves will stay relatively simple but the electronics and instrumentation would be the straw that broke the camels back.I have never heard the words "simple" and "F35" used in the same sentence without a negative qualifier being involved. That plane is the epitome of complexity and trying to be all things to all people.
and that's what happens when the requirements grow into a Swiss army knife....I believe Ben Rich had something to say about that very thing as well. About how the planes themselves will stay relatively simple but the electronics and instrumentation would be the straw that broke the camels back.
The F35 can be summed up in one phrase: Jack of all trades, Master of none.
So.....it ended up being what Sen Byrd wanted....Col Boyd of the Air Force always pushed for a light fighter. Finally the F-16 was built, what he had in mind, but by the time requirements and changes were made to it, different missions added, it wasn't what Col Boyd envisioned.
However, we don't have the need to do so because of satellites that can be re-positioned within hours to take pictures of just about any spot on Earth. Why deal with a very expensive aircraft and the skyrocketing cost of ongoing support in order to do what satellites already can? I'm sure if we had a need to drop a bomb/fire a missile from an aircraft at Mach 3+, we could do it. It just isn't needed.
FTFY. SR-71 deployment was neither instantaneous nor simple. Does anyone think we currently lack intel that they could provide? Today's problem is largely sifting through all the intel "we" have, not getting more.They could fly her over anywhere in the world [a dedicated tanker could drag her] in a few hours...
Actually, when you consider what they had to do to design her, in today's world it was "instantaneous" and very cost effective.FTFY. SR-71 deployment was neither instantaneous nor simple. Does anyone think we currently lack intel that they could provide? Today's problem is largely sifting through all the intel "we" have, not getting more.
Nauga,
data mining in a trash heap
You don't reposition the intelligence satellites. They stay in their respective sun-synchronous orbits. What you can do is retask where on the ground they are looking at any given time. Even so, they have their limitations. The real problem is that the SR's (and the U-2's) to some extent were primarily designed for looking down over a large enemy territory (Russia, China). While the SR did get used a bit in Viet Nam, that really wasn't the model. Now in the modern warfare, it's easy to through a relatively "disposable" UAV at the problem rather than trying to catch things at an "uninterceptalbe" stratospheric altitude.