Originally posted by: Modelworks
Planes that take off have airfoil shaped wings designed so that air moves at a different rate over the top than the bottom to create lift. The shuttles are not designed like that, they are shaped for gliding and not providing lift.
Originally posted by: KillerCharlie
Originally posted by: Modelworks
Planes that take off have airfoil shaped wings designed so that air moves at a different rate over the top than the bottom to create lift. The shuttles are not designed like that, they are shaped for gliding and not providing lift.
Okay, not to be mean, but you're completely wrong.
Originally posted by: SonicIce
Can it take off like a normal plane using its rocket engines and fly around a bit and land again? Does it even have a fuel tank of its own?
Originally posted by: astroidea
Originally posted by: KillerCharlie
Originally posted by: Modelworks
Planes that take off have airfoil shaped wings designed so that air moves at a different rate over the top than the bottom to create lift. The shuttles are not designed like that, they are shaped for gliding and not providing lift.
Okay, not to be mean, but you're completely wrong.
You're not mean, but mornic pointing out someone is wrong without stating reasons.
Originally posted by: bsobel
Originally posted by: astroidea
Originally posted by: KillerCharlie
Originally posted by: Modelworks
Planes that take off have airfoil shaped wings designed so that air moves at a different rate over the top than the bottom to create lift. The shuttles are not designed like that, they are shaped for gliding and not providing lift.
Okay, not to be mean, but you're completely wrong.
You're not mean, but mornic pointing out someone is wrong without stating reasons.
It should be pretty obvious that wings provide lift, and there is no real difference between 'gliding' and 'providing lift'. Otherwise, what you have is a rock on a ballistic trajectory.... Whats missing is thrust to make the wings remotely useful. The shuttles only power is really inertia from launch...
Except for the shuttle's three main engines that each produce 400,000 lbs of thrust... of course with all that fuel and no SRBs you're not going very far.
Originally posted by: bsobel
Originally posted by: astroidea
Originally posted by: KillerCharlie
Originally posted by: Modelworks
Planes that take off have airfoil shaped wings designed so that air moves at a different rate over the top than the bottom to create lift. The shuttles are not designed like that, they are shaped for gliding and not providing lift.
Okay, not to be mean, but you're completely wrong.
You're not mean, but mornic pointing out someone is wrong without stating reasons.
It should be pretty obvious that wings provide lift, and there is no real difference between 'gliding' and 'providing lift'. Otherwise, what you have is a rock on a ballistic trajectory.... Whats missing is thrust to make the wings remotely useful. The shuttles only power is really inertia from launch...
Originally posted by: Modelworks
Originally posted by: bsobel
Originally posted by: astroidea
Originally posted by: KillerCharlie
Originally posted by: Modelworks
Planes that take off have airfoil shaped wings designed so that air moves at a different rate over the top than the bottom to create lift. The shuttles are not designed like that, they are shaped for gliding and not providing lift.
Okay, not to be mean, but you're completely wrong.
You're not mean, but mornic pointing out someone is wrong without stating reasons.
It should be pretty obvious that wings provide lift, and there is no real difference between 'gliding' and 'providing lift'. Otherwise, what you have is a rock on a ballistic trajectory.... Whats missing is thrust to make the wings remotely useful. The shuttles only power is really inertia from launch...
The difference between a glider and airfoil is big. Gliders do not provide lift, they rely on resistance against the surface. It is like someone dropping a sheet of paper versus one balled up. The paper isn't generating lift, its using the air resistance to slow it down as it falls.
Airfoil move air at one speed over the top and another below it, lower air pressure above the wing allows the higher air pressure below the wing to push the wing up, that is lift.
I'll stick with what a NASA engineer said " The shuttle is a rock in a controlled free-fall to the ground"
Originally posted by: Modelworks
The difference between a glider and airfoil is big. Gliders do not provide lift, they rely on resistance against the surface. It is like someone dropping a sheet of paper versus one balled up. The paper isn't generating lift, its using the air resistance to slow it down as it falls.
Airfoil move air at one speed over the top and another below it, lower air pressure above the wing allows the higher air pressure below the wing to push the wing up, that is lift.
I'll stick with what a NASA engineer said " The shuttle is a rock in a controlled free-fall to the ground"
Originally posted by: RedSquirrel
I've always wondered why they can't just create a giant solonoid, put the rocket in it (rebuild it in thick steel / possibly some lead for shielding the inside). Apply billions of volts for a few seconds to the solonoid, WHAM, in space.
They'd need doctors at the space station to rectify the whiplash of all people onboard though, and the aim better be good.![]()
But seriously, if done properly, would that concept work? Save on shitload of fuel. (probably brown out every single power plant in the contry in the process though)
Originally posted by: bsobel
Originally posted by: RedSquirrel
I've always wondered why they can't just create a giant solonoid, put the rocket in it (rebuild it in thick steel / possibly some lead for shielding the inside). Apply billions of volts for a few seconds to the solonoid, WHAM, in space.
They'd need doctors at the space station to rectify the whiplash of all people onboard though, and the aim better be good.![]()
But seriously, if done properly, would that concept work? Save on shitload of fuel. (probably brown out every single power plant in the contry in the process though)
Basically thats similar to using a railgun to launch payloads. It's a bit more tricky that simply 'rectifying' the whiplash, cause at launch velocity even with a launch tube 1000's of feet long you kill the crew. Its been discussed for hardened payloads, they have to be designed for the very intense acceleration and atmospheric heating (the shuttle has to dissipate heat mainly on reentry since launch isnt so fast as to cause much, railgun payloads are subject to intense atmospheric friction during the launch phase)
Originally posted by: Gibsons
Originally posted by: bsobel
Originally posted by: RedSquirrel
I've always wondered why they can't just create a giant solonoid, put the rocket in it (rebuild it in thick steel / possibly some lead for shielding the inside). Apply billions of volts for a few seconds to the solonoid, WHAM, in space.
They'd need doctors at the space station to rectify the whiplash of all people onboard though, and the aim better be good.![]()
But seriously, if done properly, would that concept work? Save on shitload of fuel. (probably brown out every single power plant in the contry in the process though)
Basically thats similar to using a railgun to launch payloads. It's a bit more tricky that simply 'rectifying' the whiplash, cause at launch velocity even with a launch tube 1000's of feet long you kill the crew. Its been discussed for hardened payloads, they have to be designed for the very intense acceleration and atmospheric heating (the shuttle has to dissipate heat mainly on reentry since launch isnt so fast as to cause much, railgun payloads are subject to intense atmospheric friction during the launch phase)
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Originally posted by: KillerCharlie
Originally posted by: Modelworks
The difference between a glider and airfoil is big. Gliders do not provide lift, they rely on resistance against the surface. It is like someone dropping a sheet of paper versus one balled up. The paper isn't generating lift, its using the air resistance to slow it down as it falls.
Airfoil move air at one speed over the top and another below it, lower air pressure above the wing allows the higher air pressure below the wing to push the wing up, that is lift.
I'll stick with what a NASA engineer said " The shuttle is a rock in a controlled free-fall to the ground"
"Gliders do not provide lift?" They provide lift in the exact same way any other airplane wing does. The orbiter is definitely creating lift during its decent. In the latter half of reentry it's acting just like any other glider.
did you even read his explanation? air resistance != lift