The Thrill of Flying the SR-71 Blackbird

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rhmahoney

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Nice pilot reminiscence of flying this superb bird.


http://gizmodo.com/5511236/the-thrill-of-flying-the-sr+71-blackbird?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+gizmodo/full+(Gizmodo)&utm_content=Google+Reader
 
Oh yea, how cool is that plane.  I remember seeing it up close at Pima Air Museum.  Only one word for it.... AWESOME.
 
LA to Washington in 64 minutes. Now that is hauling butt. :eek: I am constantly amazed at how far we have come in such a short time. All this in less than a hundred years after Kitty Hawk.
 
It is particularly interesting to note that the SR-71 is an obsolete aircraft.  It began flying in the 60s and has been out of service for many years.  What do they have now that we are not aware of?
 
There was a SR-71 flying out of Edwards AFB in the mid-late 1990s when we lived in Rancho Mirage.  The sonic booms caused quite a stir the first few times they flew down the valley until they moved the flight path a bit east to avoid the cities around Palm Springs.
 
Advances in Satellite recon technology made most man recon flights obsolete. When you can real a license number or see a face clear enough to recognize
who it is, there is no need to send a plane into harms way. Plus the other side has better weapon technology and could easily shoot the plane down.

Dave
 
There is a neat Blackbird Museum at the SE corner of the Palmdale, CA airport, wedged in between the FAA center across the street and a great static display of aircraft designed or built at the Skunkworks or other facilities around the airport. When we stopped by in January, the Blackbird Museum was only open on weekends.
 
Thanks for the look back at an old period of time in my life. I worked for Lockheed during the 70's in Palmdale and often had the chance to be around the SR-71's and YF-12A's we were working on at the time. It was always an awesome experience to be around that aircraft even if most of the time was at late at night.
 
What do they have now that we are not aware of?

They have a better bird, than the SR71. Satelites are predictable - lack manuevorability, needed in real time intelligence. I doubt we would have retired the Blackbird, without a replacement.

The Aurora is alledged to be ballistic, with global range. I first learned the rumor of its existance in 1990. I can't confirm it anywhere, and have no actual knowledge.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aurora_(aircraft)

Ray, the eye in the sky, D  ;D

Edited to observe,
have no actual knowledge.
If I had actual knowledge, I guess I wouldn't be posting this, would I?  ::) 
 
I saw the "Bird" on display at the Air Force Museum in Akron, OH. What an awesome plane. 
 
Sure brings back memories. I was assigned to the SR-71 squadron for 5 years. I was part of the support team when the SR-71 set the speed record from New York to London, 1H 55M 42S and London to Los Angeles, 3H 47M 39S.

When the engines were in afterburner you could feel them as much as you could hear them. I was parked in a maintenance truck about 50 yards away one day when they were doing engine checks. About 30 seconds after they hit afterburner a coffee mug that was setting on the truck's engine doghouse shattered from the noise.

Lou,

I think you saw the SR on display at the Air Force Museum in Dayton, OH.
 
There's an SR-71 in Hutchinson, Kansas, of all places, at the Cosmosphere.  Worth a day if you come through that way.
 
Alaskansnowbirds said:
Lou,

I think you saw the SR on display at the Air Force Museum in Dayton, OH.

Thanks Don, that's what I said, Dacron Akron Dayton, Ohio. ;) :D :D
 
Wrong, gang, the SR-71 is still active and doing it's mission. This is from a friend, a USAF Col who was in my Belen church and now in N CA who's been with them since they left Kirtland AFB in Q. Chris sent this last month.

Sirs, Famiy and Friends

A litttle bit of what I have been doing out in the desert for the last few years.

Chris

(P.S. Joe, I think you may owe me aDiet Coke ;-))

Christopher and Barbara Boyer 19131 Tiger Tail Road Grass Valley, CA. 95949 HP:

> Subject: FW: U2 Story
> Date: Tue, 23 Mar 2010 03:43:06 -0700
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
>
>
> New York Times
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> March 22, 2010
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> By Christopher Drew
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> U-2 spy plane evades the day of retirement
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> The U-2 spy plane, the high-flying aircraft that was often at the heart of cold war suspense, is enjoying an encore.
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> Four years ago, the Pentagon was ready to start retiring the plane, which took its first test flight in 1955. But Congress blocked that, saying the plane was still useful.
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> And so it is. Because of updates in the use of its powerful sensors, it has become the most sought-after spy craft in a very different war in Afghanistan.
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> As it shifts from hunting for nuclear missiles to detecting roadside bombs, it is outshining even the unmanned drones in gathering a rich array of intelligence used to fight the Taliban.
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> All this is a remarkable change from the U-2's early days as a player in United States-Soviet espionage. Built to find Soviet missiles, it became famous when Francis Gary Powers was shot down in one while streaking across the Soviet Union in 1960, and again when another U-2 took the photographs that set off the Cuban missile crisis in 1962. Newer versions of the plane have gathered intelligence in every war since then and still monitor countries like North Korea.
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> Now the U-2 and its pilots, once isolated in their spacesuits at 70,000 feet, are in direct radio contact with the troops in Afghanistan. And instead of following a rote path, they are now shifted frequently in midflight to scout roads for convoys and aid soldiers in firefights.
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> In some ways, the U-2, which flew its first mission in 1956, is like an updated version of an Etch A Sketch in an era of high-tech computer games.
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> "It's like after all the years it's flown, the U-2 is in its prime again," said Lt. Col. Jason M. Brown, who commands an intelligence squadron that plans the missions and analyzes much of the data. "It can do things that nothing else can do."
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> One of those things, improbably enough, is that even from 13 miles up its sensors can detect small disturbances in the dirt, providing a new way to find makeshift mines that kill many soldiers.
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> In the weeks leading up to the recent offensive in Marja, military officials said, several of the 32 remaining U-2s found nearly 150 possible mines in roads and helicopter landing areas, enabling the Marines to blow them up before approaching the town.
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> Marine officers say they relied on photographs from the U-2's old film cameras, which take panoramic images at such a high resolution they can see insurgent footpaths, while the U-2's newer digital cameras beamed back frequent updates on 25 spots where the Marines thought they could be vulnerable.
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> In addition, the U-2's altitude, once a defense against antiaircraft missiles, enables it to scoop up signals from insurgent phone conversations that mountains would otherwise block.
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> As a result, Colonel Brown said, the U-2 is often able to collect information that suggests where to send the Predator and Reaper drones, which take video and also fire missiles. He said the most reliable intelligence comes when the U-2s and the drones are all concentrated over the same area, as is increasingly the case.
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> The U-2, a black jet with long, narrow wings to help it slip through the thin air, cuts an impressive figure as it rises rapidly into the sky. It flies at twice the height of a commercial jet, affording pilots views of such things as the earth's curvature.
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> But the plane, nicknamed the Dragon Lady, is difficult to fly, and missions are grueling and dangerous. The U-2s used in Afghanistan and Iraq commute each day from a base near the Persian Gulf, and the trip can last nine to 12 hours. Pilots eat meals squeezed through tubes and wear spacesuits because their blood would literally boil if they had to eject unprotected at such a high altitude.
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> As the number of flights increases, some of the plane's 60 pilots have suffered from the same disorienting illness, known as the bends, that afflicts deep-sea divers who ascend too quickly.
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> Relaxing recently in their clubhouse at Beale Air Force Base near Sacramento, Calif., the U-2's home base, several pilots said the most common problems are sharp joint pain or a temporary fogginess.
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> But in 2006, a U-2 pilot almost crashed after drifting in and out of consciousness during a flight over Afghanistan. The pilot, Kevin Henry, now a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel, said in an interview that he felt as if he were drunk, and he suffered some brain damage. At one point, he said, he came within five feet of smashing into the ground before miraculously finding a runway.
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> As a safety measure, U-2 pilots start breathing pure oxygen an hour before takeoff to reduce the nitrogen in their bodies and cut the risk of decompression sickness. Mr. Henry, who now instructs pilots on safety, thinks problems with his helmet seal kept him from breathing enough pure oxygen before his flight.
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> Lt. Col. Kelly N. West, the chief of aerospace medicine at Beale, said one other pilot had also been disqualified from flying the U-2. Since 2002, six pilots have transferred out on their own after suffering decompression illnesses.
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> Still, most of the pilots remain undeterred, and the Air Force is taking more precautions. Holding an oxygen mask to his nose, one pilot, Maj. Eric M. Shontz, hopped on an elliptical machine for 10 minutes before a practice flight at Beale to help dispel the nitrogen faster. Several assistants then made sure he stayed connected to an oxygen machine as they sealed his spacesuit and drove him to the plane.
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> Major Shontz and other U-2 pilots say the planes gradually became more integrated in the operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. But since the flights over Afghanistan began to surge in early 2009, the U-2s have become a much more fluid part of the daily battle plan.
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> Major Shontz said he was on the radio late last year with an officer as a rocket-propelled grenade exploded. "You could hear his voice talking faster and faster, and he's telling me that he needs air support," Major Shontz recalled. He said that a minute after he relayed the message, an A-10 gunship was sent to help.
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> Brig. Gen. H.D. Polumbo Jr., a top policy official with the Air Force, said recent decisions to give intelligence analysts more flexibility in figuring out how to use the U-2 each day had added to its revival.
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> Over beers at the clubhouse, decorated with scrolls honoring the heroes of their small fraternity, other U-2 pilots say they know their aircraft's reprieve will last only so long.
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> And the U-2's replacement sits right across the base - the Global Hawk, a remote-controlled drone that flies almost as high as the U-2 and typically stays aloft for 24 hours or more. The first few Global Hawks have been taking intelligence photos in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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> But a larger model that could also intercept communications has been delayed, and the Air Force is studying how to add sensors that can detect roadside bombs to other planes. So officials say it will most likely be 2013 at the earliest before the U-2 is phased into retirement.
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> "We've needed to be nimble to stay relevant," said Doug P. McMahon, a major who has flown the U-2 for three years. "But eventually it's bound to end."
>
 
Hi Bob,

unless I'm confused we are talking apples and oranges here. Your post is about the U-2 aircraft which indeed is still flying. But the thread was talking about the SR-71 aircraft which is now officially retired.

Jerry Ray
 

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