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SR-71 Blackbird: 20 things you need to know about the coolest warbird!!

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1. Even though it hasn’t flown in 15 years, it’s still the official record holder for fastest manned jet-powered aircraft.
Though a few pilots took it even faster over the years, 2,193.13 mph is the official record, set in July of 1976 to celebrate America’s bicentennial
2. And it set the record with only one engine.
As with other speed records, to be official speed, the plane needs to fly in both directions. On the run, one engine shut down at the start of the second run, and the pilot tried to get it relit. The pilot, then-Capt. Al Joersz, said, “By the time we’d gone through the checklist, we’d already passed the second gate [thus officially starting the run]. Still, we exited the gate at Mach 3.2.”
3. It’s even more powerful than you think.
Each of the Blackbird’s twin Pratt & Whitney J58 jet engines are capable of 34,000 pounds of thrust. Ostensibly, the plane has about the same power as an ocean liner.

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4. Those cones in front of the engines are essentially the throttle control.
They move around as part of a complex system to keep the same amount of air going into the engine at all times. They’re also one of the keys to stability when you’re going 2,000 mph.

5. You could start the jets with a couple of Buicks.
There were actually a few different ways to start the J58, but one of them was hooking a couple of Buick Wildcats together and using them to spin the engine until it got going.
6. It’s larger than it looks.
At over 105 feet long, it’s absolutely gigantic considering it carries almost no cargo.
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7. It’s so heavy that it needs a parachute and special tires to land.

Slowing down something that weights 170,000 pounds is no joke. A parachute helps during landing, which also requires special aluminum-reinforced tires made by BF Goodrich (that need replacing after 20 landings).
8. The SR-71 isn’t the only Blackbird.

The A-12 (shown) is an extremely similar predecessor that also flew above Mach 3, and was operated by the CIA.

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9. There was also a variant intended as an interceptor.
Though it never made it into full-scale production, the YF-12 evolved the A-12 into a much closer shape and led to the SR-71. The prototypes set several speed records before going on to careers at NASA.

10. The A-12’s design evaluation team was headed by the founder of Polaroid.
Dr. Edwin Land knew film, and this was a spy plane, after all. He was tasked with checking out the design of the A-12 and comparing it with other potential espionage aircrafts.


11. All A-12s and the first SR-71s were tested at Area 51.
They were built by Lockheed in Burbank, then trucked over to everyone’s favorite conspiracy theory HQ.

12. The SR-71 couldn’t be shot down.


Over the course of the plane’s service, more than 1,000 missiles were fired in an attempt to take it down. The evasive maneuver was just to hit the throttle and go faster than the missile. Needless to say, the SR-71 took it’s 1.000 batting average into retirement..
13. It could photograph an entire swath of North Korea in seven minutes.

Because there was no weapon that could shoot the Blackbird down, pilots turned their cameras on and flew freely over places like China, Vietnam, and North Korea…which it could cover in just seven minutes.


14. To even be allowed to work on the plane as a crew member, you had to be married.

You also had to be between 25 and 40 years old and “emotionally stable.” This wasn’t a normal plane or a normal job, and there was a need to be extra certain about everyone involved.

15. While the plane’s details and its missions were extremely sensitive, the plane itself wasn’t really a secret.

President Johnson announced the existence of a 2,000 mph plane publicly in February 1964 in part to counter election rival Barry Goldwater’s assertion that the USSR was pulling ahead in the technology race. He then told the world about the SR-71 in July, a full five months before it’s first test flight, and four months ahead of election night.

16. It was called the RS-71 until LBJ said the plane’s name wrong in his announcement.
Lockheed designers had to change the name, by hand, on 33,000 different drawings after he said SR-71 instead of RS-71. Some contend it was deliberate and was discussed ahead of time, others say it was a slip of the tongue. Regardless, the press materials that day used the RS-71 designation. This is the prototype, mid-construction…most likely around when the name change occurred.


17. The first official flight of the new SR-71 was on December 22nd 1964.

18. Over 60 pounds worth of black paint were used because black helps dissipate heat better than other colors.
When you’re cruising along at over Mach 3, the friction of the air builds up a lot of heat. Some parts of the plane would hit over 1,000 degrees at Mach 3, and the black paint helped cool things off by as much as 86 degrees.

19. The cockpit windows are covered in quartz.
The cockpit windows routinely hit temps of over 600 degrees (F), so the engineers needed something that could withstand that sort of abuse without distorting the pilot’s vision.

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20. The flight suit was just as complex as the rest of the plane.

It was pressurized via its own oxygen system, because otherwise at over 80,000 feet the pilots would’ve suffocated. Ejecting at 2,000 mph would subject pilots to 450 degree temperatures, so the cabin was air conditioned to just below freezing.






 
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@SvenSvensonov thought u would enjoy this

I do, but I don't like supporting rule breakers either:angry:. This is the members introduction section, not the "I can't post threads, so I'm using a loophole" section. Still, the SR-71 is awesome:usflag:.

This is the best spy plane though:

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More about the U-2's different configurations here - A handy guide to the U-2 spy plane
 
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12. The SR-71 couldn’t be shot down.

Over the course of the plane’s service, more than 1,000 missiles were fired in an attempt to take it down. The evasive maneuver was just to hit the throttle and go faster than the missile. Needless to say, the SR-71 took it’s 1.000 batting average into retirement..

Oh really?

Close Encounters With the SR-71 - A Viggen Pilot's Story [Archive] - Military Photos

SR-71, say hello to SAAB-37 - the aircraft that not only could, but did intercept SR-71.
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If hostilities between Sweden and the US every occurred, those SR-71s were touchable. It could be shot down, it just never was... Sweden was a US ally.

Sweden Stronk!!!
 
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The most important items---

Pilot had to wear a space suit

The fuel used is inert----you csn throw lit match on it and it wont ignite

During flight, the lenght of the air craft increased by 4-6 inches-due to heat---that is how the fuel tanks would seal themselves in flight. They left a puddle on the tarmac.

This aircraft still makes flights if needed.

I walked around one a t March air reserve base last year.

The rest of the world is so far behind in engine technology that no nation has come close to manufacturing a siimilar engine--------but the most most most important part is

This aircraft whole flight is on after burners
 
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