Martin-Marietta X-24

Martin X-24
Ilustracja
Dane podstawowe
Państwo

 Stany Zjednoczone

Typ

samolot eksperymentalny

Załoga

1 pilot

Historia
Data oblotu

X-24A 19 marca 1970,
X-24B 1 sierpnia 1973

Dane techniczne
Napęd

1 czterokomorowy silnik rakietowy Thiokol XLR11-RM-13

Ciąg

35,6 kN

Wymiary
Rozpiętość

5,84 m

Długość

11,43 m

Masa
Startowa

5896 kg

Osiągi
Prędkość maks.

1873 km/h

Pułap

16 000 m

Zasięg

15 minut lotu z napędem

Rzuty
Rzuty samolotu

Martin Marrietta X-24samolot doświadczalny z jednym silnikiem odrzutowym, opracowany przez USAF-NASA w ramach programu PILOT (ang. PIloted LOw-speed Test aircraft – pilotowany samolot do prób przy małych prędkościach) i koncepcji "Lifting Bodies" do badania właściwości lotnych bezskrzydłowego kadłubopłatu. Model X-24A oblatano 19 marca 1970, model zmodyfikowany X-24B 1 sierpnia 1973 r. Projekt X-24C nie został zrealizowany. Samolot został wyniesiony przez maszynę B-52, po czym wzniósł się samodzielnie za pomocą silnika rakietowego na dużą wysokość i wylądował lotem ślizgowym.

Model X-24B

Bibliografia

Nowicki Jacek, Zięcina Krzysztof: Samoloty kosmiczne. Warszawa: Wydawnictwa Naukowo-Techniczne, 1989, s. 42-50. ISBN 83-204-1004-5.

Media użyte na tej stronie

Flag of the United States.svg
The flag of Navassa Island is simply the United States flag. It does not have a "local" flag or "unofficial" flag; it is an uninhabited island. The version with a profile view was based on Flags of the World and as a fictional design has no status warranting a place on any Wiki. It was made up by a random person with no connection to the island, it has never flown on the island, and it has never received any sort of recognition or validation by any authority. The person quoted on that page has no authority to bestow a flag, "unofficial" or otherwise, on the island.
Martin X-24A 3-view.svg
3-view drawing of Martin Marietta X-24A experimental aircraft
X24B.jpg
The X-24 was one of a group of lifting bodies flown by the NASA Flight Research Center (now Dryden Flight Research Center), Edwards, California, in a joint program with the U.S. Air Force at Edwards Air Force Base from 1963 to 1975. The lifting bodies were used to demonstrate the ability of pilots to maneuver and safely land wingless vehicles designed to fly back to Earth from space and be landed like an airplane at a predetermined site.

Lifting bodies’ aerodynamic lift, essential to flight in the atmosphere, was obtained from their shape. The addition of fins and control surfaces allowed the pilots to stabilize and control the vehicles and regulate their flight paths.

Built by Martin Aircraft Company, Maryland, for the U.S. Air Force, the X-24A was a bulbous vehicle shaped like a teardrop with three vertical fins at the rear for directional control. It weighed 6,270 pounds, was 24.5 feet long and 11.5 feet wide (measuring just the fuselage, not the distance between the tips of the outboard fins). Its first unpowered glide flight was on April 17, 1969, with Air Force Maj. Jerauld Gentry at the controls. Gentry also piloted its first powered flight on March 19, 1970.

The X-24A was flown 28 times in the program that, like the HL-10, validated the concept that a Space Shuttle vehicle could be landed unpowered. The fastest speed achieved by the X-24A was 1,036 miles per hour (mph--Mach 1.6). Its maximum altitude was 71,400 feet. It was powered by an XLR-11 rocket engine with a maximum theoretical vacuum thrust of 8,480 pounds.

The X-24A was later modified into the X-24B. The bulbous shape of the X-24A was converted into a "flying flatiron" shape with a rounded top, flat bottom, and double delta platform that ended in a pointed nose. The X-24B demonstrated that accurate unpowered reentry vehicle landings were operationally feasible. Top speed achieved by the X-24B was 1,164 mph and the highest altitude it reached was 74,130 feet. The vehicle is on display at the Air Force Museum, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. The pilot on the last powered flight of the X-24B was Bill Dana, who also flew the last X-15 flight about seven years earlier.

The X-24A shape was later borrowed for the X-38 Crew Return Vehicle (CRV) technology demonstrator for the International Space Station. The X-24B is on public display at the Air Force Museum, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio.