SR-71 Blackbird

SR-71 Blackbird

infobox Aircraft
name = SR-71 "Blackbird"




caption =An SR-71B Trainer over the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California in 1994. Note second cockpit is raised for the instructor.
type = Strategic Reconnaissance
manufacturer = Lockheed Skunk Works
designer = Clarence "Kelly" Johnson
first flight = December 22 avyear|1964
introduced = avyear|1966
retired = avyear|1998
number built = 32
status =
unit cost =
primary user = United States Air Force
more users = NASA
developed from = Lockheed A-12
variants with their own articles =

The Lockheed SR-71 is an advanced, long-range, Mach 3 strategic reconnaissance aircraft developed from the Lockheed A-12 and YF-12A aircraft by the Lockheed Skunk Works. The SR-71 was unofficially named the Blackbird, and called the Habu by its crews. Clarence "Kelly" Johnson was responsible for many of the design's innovative concepts. A defensive feature of the aircraft was its high speed and operating altitude, whereby, if a surface-to-air missile launch were detected, standard evasive action was simply to accelerate. The SR-71 line was in service from 1964 to 1998, with 12 of the 32 aircraft being destroyed in accidents, though none were lost to enemy action. [ [http://www.sr-71.org/blackbird/losses.php Blackbird Losses] , sr-71.org.]

Development

Predecessors

The A-12 OXCART, designed for the CIA by Clarence Johnson at the Lockheed Skunk Works, [Rich Benjamin R. and Leo Janos. "Skunk Works". (Page 85, Simon and Schuster, New York, NY 1991) ] was the precursor of the SR-71. Lockheed used the name "Archangel" for this design, but many documents use Johnson's preferred name for the aircraft, "the Article". As the design evolved, the internal Lockheed designation progressed from A-1 to A-12 as configuration changes occurred, such as substantial design changes to reduce the radar cross-section.

The first flight, by an A-12 known as "Article 121", took place at Groom Lake, Nevada, on April 25, 1962 equipped with the less powerful Pratt & Whitney J75 engines due to protracted development of the intended Pratt & Whitney J58. The J58s were retrofitted as they became available, and became the standard power plant for all subsequent aircraft in the series (A-12, YF-12, M-21) as well as the follow-on SR-71 aircraft.

Eighteen A-12 family aircraft were built. One was a pilot trainer with a raised second cockpit for an Instructor-Pilot and 12 were reconnaissance A-12s to be flown operationally by CIA pilots. Three were YF-12A prototypes of the planned F-12B interceptor version, and two were the M-21 variant.

R-71

The Air Force ordered a reconnaissance version in December 1962.Landis and Jenkins 2005, pp. 56-57.] Originally named R-12,See the opening fly page in Paul Crickmore's book "SR-71, Secret Missions Exposed", which contains a copy of the original R-12 labeled plan view drawing of the vehicle.] it was later renamed SR-71. The SR-71 was longer and heavier than the A-12. Its fuselage was lengthened for additional fuel capacity to increase range. A second seat was added to the cockpit and the chines were reshaped. Reconnaissance equipment included signals intelligence sensors, a side-looking radar and a photo camera.

During the 1964 campaign, Republican presidential nominee Barry Goldwater continually criticized President Lyndon B. Johnson and his administration for falling behind the Soviet Union in the research and development of new weapons systems. Johnson decided to counter this criticism by releasing information on the hitherto highly classified A-12 program, and later the existence of the reconnaissance version.

The SR-71 designator is a continuation of the pre-1962 bomber series, which ended with the XB-70 Valkyrie. During the later period of its testing, the B-70 was proposed for the reconnaissance/strike role, with an "RS-70" designation. When it was clear that the Lockheed A-12 performance potential was much greater, USAF decided to pursue an RS-71 version of the A-12 rather than the RS-70. However, then-USAF Chief of Staff General Curtis LeMay preferred the SR (Strategic Reconnaissance) designation and wanted the RS-71 to be named SR-71. Before the Blackbird was to be announced by President Johnson on February 29 avyear|1964. LeMay lobbied to modify Johnson's speech to read SR-71 instead of RS-71. The media transcript given to the press at the time still had the earlier RS-71 designation in places, creating the myth that the president had misread the aircraft's designation. [ [http://www.designation-systems.net/usmilav/nonstandard-mds.html#_MDS_SR71 Non-Standard DOD Aircraft Designations] ]

This public disclosure of the program and its renaming came as a shock to everyone at the Skunk Works and to Air Force personnel involved in the program. All of the printed maintenance manuals, flight crew handbooks, training slides and materials were labeled "R-12"; while the June 18, 1965 Certificates of Completion issued by the Skunkworks to the first Air Force Flight Crews and their Wing Commander were labeled "R-12 Flight Crew Systems Indoctrination, Course VIII". Following Johnson's speech the name change was taken as an order from the Commander-in-Chief, and immediate reprinting began of new materials, including 29,000 blueprints, to be retitled "SR-71".

Design and operational details

A particularly difficult issue with flight at over Mach 3 is the high temperatures generated. As an aircraft moves through the air, the air in front of the aircraft compresses and this heats the air, and the heat conducts into the aircraft's airframe. To help with this, high temperature materials were needed and the airframe was substantially made of titanium, obtained from the USSR, at the height of the Cold War. Lockheed used all possible guises to prevent the Soviet government from knowing for what the titanium was to be used. In order to control costs, they used a more easily-worked alloy of titanium which softened at a lower temperature. Finished aircraft were painted a dark blue (almost black) to increase the emission of internal heat (since fuel was used as a heat sink for avionics cooling) and to act as camouflage against the sky.

The aircraft was designed to minimize its radar cross-section, an early attempt at stealth design. However, the radar signature minimization did not take into account the extremely hot particles in the exhaust which reflect radar extremely well. Ironically, the SR-71 was one of the largest targets on the Federal Aviation Administration's long-range radars, which were able to track the plane at several hundred miles.Fact|date=July 2008

Air inlets

The air inlets were a critical design feature to allow cruising speeds of over Mach 3.2, yet provide subsonic Mach 0.5 airflow into the turbojet engines. At the front of each inlet was a sharp, pointed movable cone called a "spike" that was locked in the full forward position on the ground or when in subsonic flight. During acceleration to high-speed cruise, the spike would unlock at Mach 1.6 and then begin a mechanical (internal jackscrew powered) travel to the rear. [ [http://www.sr-71.org/blackbird/manual/1/1-31.php SR-71 manual, Air Inlet System] ] It moved up to a maximum of 26 inches (66 cm).

The original air inlet computer was an analog design which, based on pitot-static, pitch, roll, yaw, and angle-of-attack inputs, would determine how much movement was required. By moving, the spike tip would withdraw the shock wave, riding on it closer to the inlet cowling until it just touched slightly inside the cowling lip. In this position shock-wave spillage causing turbulence over the outer nacelle and wing was minimized while the spike shock-wave then repeatedly reflected between the spike centerbody and the inlet inner cowl sides. In doing so, shock pressures were maintained while slowing the air until a Mach 1 shock wave formed in front of the engine compressor. [ [http://www.personal.psu.edu/cxc11/SR-71_Engines_J-58.ppt Penn State- turbo ramjet engines] ]

The backside of this "normal" shock wave was subsonic air for ingestion into the engine compressor. This capture of the Mach 1 shock wave within the inlet was called "Starting the Inlet". Tremendous pressures would be built up inside the inlet and in front of the compressor face. Bleed tubes and bypass doors were designed into the inlet and engine nacelles to handle some of this pressure and to position the final shock to allow the inlet to remain "started." It is commonly cited that a large amount of the thrust at higher mach numbers comes from the inlet. However, this is not entirely accurate. Air that is compressed by the inlet/shockwave interaction is diverted around the turbo machinery of the engine and directly into the afterburner where it is mixed and burned. This configuration is essentially a RAM jet and provides up to 70% of the aircraft's thrust at higher mach numbers.

Ben Rich, the Lockheed Skunkworks designer of the inlets, often referred to the engine compressors as "pumps to keep the inlets alive" and sized the inlets for Mach 3.2 cruise (where the aircraft was at its most efficient design point).Johnson 1985] The additional "thrust" refers to the reduction of engine energy required to compress the airflow. One unique characteristic of the SR-71 is that the faster it went, the more fuel-efficient it was in terms of pounds burned per nautical mile traveled. An incident related by Brian Shul, author of "Sled Driver: Flying the World's Fastest Jet", was that on one reconnaissance run he was fired upon several times. In accordance with procedure they accelerated and maintained the higher than normal velocity for some time; afterwards they discovered that this had reduced their fuel consumption.Shul 1994]

In the early years of the Blackbird programs the analog air inlet computers would not always keep up with rapidly-changing flight environmental inputs. If internal pressures became too great and the spike was incorrectly positioned the shock wave would suddenly blow out the front of the inlet, called an "Inlet Unstart." The flow of air through the engine compressor would immediately stop, thrust would drop, and exhaust gas temperatures would begin to rise. Due to the tremendous thrust of the remaining engine pushing the aircraft asymmetrically an unstart would cause the aircraft to yaw violently to one side. SAS, autopilot, and manual control inputs would fight the yawing, but often the extreme off-angle would reduce airflow in the opposite engine and cause it to begin "sympathetic stalls." The result would be rapid counter-yawing, often loud "banging" noises and a rough ride. The crews' pressure-suit helmets would sometimes bang on the cockpit canopies until the initial unstart motions subsided.

One of the standard counters to an inlet unstart was for the pilot to reach out and unstart both inlets; this drove both spikes out, stopped the yawing conditions and allowed the pilot to restart each inlet. Once restarted, with normal engine combustion, the plane could accelerate and climb to the planned cruise altitude.

The analog air inlet computer was later replaced by a digital one. Lockheed engineers developed control software for the engine inlets that would recapture the lost shock wave and re-light the engine before the pilot was even aware an unstart had occurred. The SR-71 machinists were responsible for the hundreds of precision adjustments of the forward air by-pass doors within the inlets. This helped control the shock wave, prevent unstarts, and increase performance.

Fuselage

To allow for thermal expansion at the high operational temperatures the fuselage panels were manufactured to fit only loosely on the ground. Proper alignment was only achieved when the airframe warmed up due to air resistance at high speeds, causing the airframe to expand several inches. Because of this, and the lack of a fuel sealing system that could handle the extreme temperatures, the aircraft would leak JP-7 jet fuel onto the runway before it took off. The aircraft would quickly make a short sprint, meant to warm up the airframe, and was then refueled in the air before departing on its mission. Cooling was carried out by cycling fuel behind the titanium surfaces at the front of the wings (chines). On landing after a mission the canopy temperature was over 300 °C (572 °F), too hot to approach. Non-fibrous asbestos with high heat tolerance was used in high-temperature areas.

tealth

There were a number of features in the SR-71 that were designed to reduce its radar signature. The first studies in radar stealth technology seemed to indicate that a shape with flattened, tapering sides would reflect most radar away from the place where the radar beams originated. To this end, the radar engineers suggested adding chines (see below) to the design and canting the vertical control surfaces inward. The plane also used special radar-absorbing materials which were incorporated into sawtooth shaped sections of the skin of the aircraft, as well as cesium-based fuel additives to reduce the exhaust plumes' visibility on radar.

The overall effectiveness of these designs is still debated; Ben Rich's team could show that the radar return was, in fact, reduced, but Kelly Johnson later conceded that Russian radar technology was advancing faster than the "anti-radar" technology Lockheed was using to counter it. [Hott, Bartholomew and Pollock, George E. "The Advent, Evolution, and New Horizons of United States Stealth Aircraft". [http://web.ics.purdue.edu/~gpollock/The%20Advent,%20Evolution,%20and%20New%20Horizons%20of%20United%20States%20Stealth%20Aircraft.htm Stealth Aircraft] , Access date: May 5, 2007.] The SR-71 made its debut years before Pyotr Ya. Ufimtsev's ground-breaking research made possible today's stealth technologies, and, despite Lockheed's best efforts, the SR-71 was still easy to track by radar and had a huge infrared signature when cruising at Mach 3.2 or more. It was visible on air traffic control radar for hundreds of miles, even when not using its transponder. [ [http://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/systems/sr-71.htm/ Global Security.org] ] SR-71s were evidently detected by radar, as missiles were often fired at them. The flight characteristics of the SR-71 made it almost invulnerable during its service life; not one was shot down, despite over 4,000 attempts to do so. ["SR71 Blackbird." PBS documentary, Aired: November 15, 2006.]

Chines

One of the Blackbird's interesting and unique features was its chines, sharp edges leading back to the left and right of the nose and along the sides of the fuselage.

The Blackbird was originally not going to have chines. At its "A-11" design stage, it looked similar to an enlarged F-104. Lockheed's aerodynamicists were concerned that these large surfaces would hurt the aircraft's aerodynamic performance. But the government agencies paying for the project wanted drastically reduced radar cross-section, and pushed Lockheed's aerodynamicists to try chines on a few wind-tunnel models near the end of the configuration design process. [ [http://www.amazon.com/dp/1857801385 Lockheed's SR-71 Blackbird Family] ]

The aerodynamicists discovered that the chines generated powerful vortices around themselves, generating much additional lift near the front of the aircraft, leading to surprising improvements in aerodynamic performance. ["AirPower" May 2002, p. 36.] The angle of incidence of the delta wings could then be reduced, allowing for greater stability and less high-speed drag, and more weight (fuel) could be carried, allowing for greater range. Landing speeds were also reduced, since the chines' vortices created turbulent flow over the wings at high angles of attack, making it harder for the wings to stall. (The Blackbird can, consequently, make high-alpha turns to the point where the Blackbird's unique engine air inlets stop ingesting enough air, which can cause the engines to flame out [ [http://www.dfrc.nasa.gov/Gallery/Movie/SR-71/HTML/EM-0025-02.html SR-71 Gallery] ] . Blackbird pilots were thus warned not to pull more than 3 g, so that angles of attack stay low enough for the engines to get enough air). The chines act like the leading edge extensions that increase the agility of modern fighters such as the F-5, F-16, F/A-18, MiG-29 and Su-27. The addition of chines also allowed designers to drop the planned canard foreplanes. (Many early design models of what became the Blackbird featured canards [ [http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/
]
] [ [http://www.amazon.com/dp/1857801385 Black Bird Canards, p. 19.] ] ["AirPower" May 2002, p. 33.] ).

When the Blackbird was being designed, no other airplane had featured chines, so Lockheed's engineers had to solve problems related to the differences in stability and balance caused by these then-unusual surfaces. Their solutions have since been extensively used. Chines are still an important part of the design of many of the newest stealth UAVs, such as the Dark Star, Bird of Prey, X-45 and X-47, since they allow for tail-less stability as well as for stealth.

Fuel

SR-71 development began using a coal slurry powerplant, but Johnson determined that the coal particles damaged engine components. He then began researching a liquid hydrogen powerplant, but the tanks required to store cryogenic hydrogen did not suit the Blackbird's form factor.

The focus then became somewhat more conventional, though still specialized in many ways. Originally developed for the A-12 plane in the late 1950s, the JP-7 jet fuel had a relatively high flash point (140 °F, 60 °C) to cope with the heat. In fact, the fuel was used as a coolant and hydraulic fluid in the aircraft before being burned. The fuel also contained fluorocarbons to increase its lubricity, an oxidizing agent to enable it to burn in the engines, and even a cesium compound, A-50, which disguised the exhaust's radar signature.

JP-7 is very slippery and extremely difficult to light in any conventional way. The slipperiness was a disadvantage on the ground, since the aircraft leaked fuel when not flying, but at least JP-7 was not a fire hazard. When the engines of the aircraft were started, puffs of triethylborane (TEB), which ignites on contact with air, were injected into the engines to produce temperatures high enough to initially ignite the JP-7. The TEB produced a characteristic puff of greenish flame that could often be seen as the engines were ignited. TEB was also used to ignite the afterburners. The aircraft had only 20 fluid ounce (600 ml) of TEB on board for each engine, enough for at least 16 injections (a counter advised the pilot of the number of TEB injections remaining), but this was more than enough for the requirements of any missions it was likely to carry out.

Life support

Crews flying the SR-71 at 80,000 feet (24,400 m) faced two main survival problems: 1) With a standard pressure demand oxygen mask, human lungs can not absorb enough of 100% oxygen above 43,000 feet (13,100 m) to sustain consciousness and life, and 2) the instant heat rise pulse on the body when exposed to a Mach 3.2 air flow during ejection would be about 450 degrees F (230 °C). To solve these problems, the David Clark Company was hired to produce protective full pressure suits for all of the crew members of the A-12, YF-12, MD-21 and SR-71 aircraft. These suits were later adopted for use on the Space Shuttle during ascent.

In addition, at Mach 3.2 cruise the external heat rise due to the compression of air on the vehicle would even heat up the inside of the windshield to 250 degrees F (120 °C) and cooling of the crew members was vital. This was achieved by cooling the air with an air conditioner. The air conditioner dumped the heat from the cockpit into the fuel prior to combustion via a heat exchanger.

After a high altitude bailout, an oxygen supply would keep the suit pressurized. The crew member would then free-fall to 15,000 feet before the main parachute was opened, allowing the high heat rise to bleed off as the crew member slowed down and descended. To demonstrate this full pressure suit capability, crew members would wear one of these suits and undergo an altitude chamber explosive decompression to 78,000 feet (23,800 m) or higher while chamber heaters would rapidly turn on to 450 degrees F (230 °C) and then be turned down at the rate experienced during a real life free-fall.

Since the cabin altitude of the SR-71 stayed at 27,000-29,000 feet (8,200-8,800 m) during flight, crews flying a low-subsonic flight (such as a ferry mission) would wear either their full pressure suit or standard USAF hard hat helmets, pressure demand oxygen masks and nomex flying suits.

Titanium structures and skin

Before the Blackbird, titanium could only be found in aircraft in high-temperature exhaust fairings and other small parts directly related to supporting, cooling, or shaping high-temperature areas. The decision to build the Blackbird's structure using 85% titanium and 15% composite materials was a first in the aircraft industry. The advances made by Lockheed in learning to deal with this material have been used in subsequent high-speed aircraft such as most modern fighters.

Titanium was difficult to work with, expensive and scarce. In fact, much of the titanium bought by Lockheed to make Blackbirds had to be imported from the Soviet Union. Initially, 80% of the titanium delivered to Lockheed had to be rejected due to metallurgical contamination.

One example of the difficulties of working with titanium is the fact that welds made at certain times of the year seemed to be more durable than welds made at other times. It was eventually found that the water supplied to the manufacturing plant came from one reservoir in the summer and another reservoir in the winter; the slight differences in the impurities in the water from these different reservoirs led to differences in the durability of the welds, since water was used to cool the titanium welds.

Studies of the aircraft's titanium skin revealed that the metal was actually growing stronger over time due to the intense heating due to compression of the air caused by the rapid flight of the vehicle.

Major portions of the upper and lower inboard wing skin of the SR-71 were actually corrugated, not smooth. The thermal expansion stresses of a smooth skin would have resulted in the aircraft skin splitting or curling. By making the surface corrugated, the skin was allowed to expand vertically as well as horizontally without overstressing, which also increased longitudinal strength. Despite the fact that it worked, aerodynamicists were initially against the concept and accused the design engineers of trying to make a 1920s era Ford Trimotor — known for its corrugated aluminum skin — go Mach 3.

The red stripes found on some SR-71s are there to prevent maintenance workers from damaging the skin of the aircraft. The curved skin near the center of the fuselage is thin and delicate. There is no support underneath with exception of the structural ribs, which are spaced several feet apart.

Engines

The Pratt & Whitney J58-P4 engines used in the Blackbird were the only military engines ever designed to operate continuously on afterburner, and actually became more efficient as the aircraft went faster. Each J58 engine could produce 32,500 lbf (145 kN) of static thrust. Conventional jet engines cannot operate continuously on afterburner and lose efficiency as airspeed increases.

The J58 was unique in that it was a hybrid jet engine. It could operate as a regular turbojet at low speeds, but at high speeds it became a ramjet. The engine can be thought of as a turbojet engine inside a ramjet engine. At lower speeds, the turbojet provided most of the compression and most of the energy from fuel combustion. At higher speeds, the turbojet throttled back and just sat in the middle of the engine as air bypassed around it, having been compressed by the shock cones and only burning fuel in the afterburner.

In detail, air was initially compressed (and thus also heated) by the shock cones, which generated shock waves that slowed the air down to subsonic speeds relative to the engine. The air then passed through four compressor stages and was split by moveable vanes: some of the air entered the compressor fans ("core-flow" air), while the rest of the air went straight to the afterburner (via six bypass tubes). The air traveling on through the turbojet was further compressed (and thus further heated), and then fuel was added to it in the combustion chamber: it then reached the maximum temperature anywhere in the Blackbird, just under the temperature where the turbine blades would start to soften. After passing through the turbine (and thus being cooled somewhat), the core-flow air went through the afterburner and met with any bypass air.

At around Mach 3, the increased heating from the shock cone compression, plus the heating from the compressor fans, was already enough to get the core air to high temperatures, and little fuel could be added in the combustion chamber without the turbine blades melting. This meant the whole compressor-combustor-turbine set-up in the core of the engine provided less power, and the Blackbird flew predominantly on air bypassed straight to the afterburners, forming a large ramjet effect. No other aircraft does this. (This shows how the temperature tolerance of the turbine blades in a jet engine determine how much fuel can be burned, and thus to a great extent determine how much thrust a jet engine can provide.)

Performance at low speeds was anemic. Even passing the speed of sound required the aircraft to dive. The reason was that the size of the turbojets was traded to reduce weight but to still allow the SR-71 to reach speeds where the ramjet effect became prominent and efficient; then, the aircraft came alive, so to speak, and rapidly accelerated to Mach 3.2. The efficiency was then good due to high compression and low drag through the engine, and this permitted large distances to be covered at high speed.

Originally, the Blackbird's engines started up with the assistance of an external "start cart", a cart containing two Buick Wildcat V8 engines which was rolled underneath the aircraft. The two Buick engines powered a single, vertical driveshaft connecting to a single J58 engine. Once one engine was started, the cart was wheeled over to the other side of the aircraft to start the other engine. The operation was deafening. Eventually, a quieter, pneumatic start system was developed for use at Blackbird main operating bases, but the start carts remained in the inventory to support recovery team Blackbird starts at diversion landing sites not equipped to start J-58 engines.

Astro-Inertial Navigation System (ANS)

Blackbird precision navigation requirements for route accuracy, sensor pointing and target tracking preceded the development and fielding of the Global Positioning System (GPS) and its family of position-determining satellites. U-2 and A-12 Inertial Navigation Systems existed, but US Air Force planners wanted a system that would limit inertial position growth for longer missions envisioned for the R-12 / SR-71.

Nortronics, the electronics development organization of Northrop, had extensive astro-inertial experience, having provided an earlier generation system for the USAF Snark missile. With this background, Nortronics developed the Astro-Inertial Navigation System for the AGM-87 Skybolt missile, which was to be carried and launched from B-52H bombers. When the Skybolt Program was cancelled in December 1962, the assets Nortronics developed for the Skybolt Program were ordered to be adapted for the Blackbird program. A Nortronics "Skunkworks" type organization in Hawthorne, California completed the development and fielding of this system, sometimes referred to as the NAS-14 and/or the NAS-21.

The ANS primary alignment was done on the ground and was time consuming, but brought the inertial components to a high degree of level and accuracy for the start of a mission. A "blue light" source star tracker, which could detect and find stars during day or night, would then continuously track stars selected from the system's digital computer ephemeris as the changing aircraft position would bring them into view. Originally equipped with data on 56 selected stars, the system would correct inertial orientation errors with celestial observations. The resulting leveling accuracies obtained limited accelerometer errors and/or position growth.

Rapid ground alignments and air-start abilities were later developed and added to the ANS. Attitude and position inputs to on-board systems and flight controls included the Mission Data Recorder, Auto-Nav steering between loaded destination points, automatic pointing and/or control of cameras at control points and optical or SLR sighting of fix points (this mission data being tape loaded into the ANS prior to takeoff).

The ANS was located behind the RSO station and tracked stars through a round, quartz window seen in photos of the upper fuselage. Cooling in the Blackbird Mach 3.2+ cruising environment was a serious development challenge, resolved by Lockheed and Nortronics engineers during the early test phases. The ANS became a highly reliable and accurate self-contained navigation system.

Note: The original B-1A Offensive Avionics Request For Proposal (RFP) required the installation and integration of an NAS-14 system, but cost- cutting changes later deleted it from the B-1. Some U2-Rs did receive the NAS-21 system, but newer Inertial and GPS systems replaced them.

ensors and payloads

Original capabilities for the SR-71 included optical/infrared imagery systems, side-looking radar (SLR), electronic intelligence (ELINT) gathering systems, defensive systems (for countering missile and airborne fighter threats) and recorders for SLR, ELINT and maintenance data.

Imagery systems used on the Blackbird were diverse. At the simple end of the spectrum, SR-71s were equipped with a Fairchild tracking camera of modest resolution and an HRB Singer infrared-tracking IR camera, both of which ran during the entire mission to document where the aircraft flew and answer any post-flight "political" charges of overflight. Further advances included equipping Blackbirds with two of Itek's Operational Objective Cameras (OOC) that provided stereo imagery left and right of the flight track, or an Itek Optical Bar Camera (OBC) that replaced the OOCs and was carried in the nose in place of the SLR. The ultimate advance in imagery was the HYCON Technical Objective Camera (TEOC), that could look straight down or up to 45 degrees left or right of centerline. SR-71s were equipped with two of them, each with a six-inch resolution and the ability to show such details as the painted lines in parking lots from an altitude of 83,000 feet. In the later years of the SR-71 operation, usage of the infrared camera was discontinued.

Side-looking radar, built by Goodyear Aerospace in Arizona, was carried in the removable nose section (which could be loaded with the SLR antenna in the maintenance shop before installation on the Blackbird). It was eventually replaced by Loral's Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar System (ASARS-1) and built and supported by Goodyear. Both the first SLR and ASARS-1 were ground mapping imaging systems and could collect data in fixed swaths left or right of centerline or from a spot location where higher resolution was desired. As an example, in passing abeam of an open door aircraft hangar, ASARS-1 could provide meaningful data on the hangar's contents.

ELINT gathering systems, called the Electro Magnetic Reconnaissance System (EMR) built by AIL could be carried in both the left and right chine bays to provide a wide view of the electronic signal fields the Blackbird was flying through. Computer-loaded instructions looked for items of special intelligence interest.

Defensive systems built by several leading electronic countermeasures (ECM) companies included (and evolved over the years of the Blackbird's operational life) Systems A, A2, A2C, B, C, C2, E, G, H and M. Several of these different frequency/purpose payloads would be loaded for a particular mission to match the threat environment expected for that mission. They, their warning and active electronic capabilities, and the Blackbird's ability to accelerate and climb when under attack, resulted in the SR-71's long and proven survival track-record.

Recording systems captured SLR phase shift history data (for ground correlation after landing), ELINT-gathered data, and Maintenance Data Recorder (MDR) information for post-flight ground analysis of the aircraft and its systems' overall health (humorous stories accompanied some of the flight crews' discovery that the voice track in the MDR recorded interphone conversations between pilot and RSO and tanker aircraft crew members during refueling hook-ups).

In the later years of its operational life, a data-link system was added that would allow ASARS-1 and ELINT data from about 2,000 nm of track coverage to be downlinked if the SR-71 was within "contact" with a mutually-equipped ground station.

Operational history

The first flight of an SR-71 took place on December 22, 1964, at Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale, California. The first SR-71 to enter service was delivered to the 4200th (later, 9th) Strategic Reconnaissance Wing at Beale Air Force Base, California, in January 1966. The United States Air Force Strategic Air Command had SR-71 Blackbirds in service from 1966 through 1991.

SR-71s first arrived at the 9th SRW's Operating Location (OL-8) at Kadena Airbase, Okinawa on March 8, avyear|1968. These deployments were code named "Glowing Heat," while the program as a whole was code named "Senior Crown". Reconnaissance missions over North Vietnam were code named "Giant Scale".

On March 21 avyear|1968, Major (later General) Jerome F. O'Malley and Major Edward D. Payne flew the first operational SR-71 sortie in SR-71 serial number 61-7976 from Kadena AB, Okinawa. During its career, this aircraft (976) accumulated 2,981 flying hours and flew 942 total sorties (more than any other SR-71), including 257 operational missions, from Beale AFB; Palmdale, California; Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; and RAF Mildenhall, England. The aircraft was flown to the National Museum of the United States Air Force near Dayton, Ohio in March 1990. From the beginning of the Blackbird's reconnaissance missions over enemy territory (North Vietnam, Laos, etc.) in 1968, the SR-71s averaged approximately one sortie a week for nearly two years. By 1970, the SR-71s were averaging two sorties per week, and by 1972, they were flying nearly one sortie every day.

While deployed in Okinawa, the SR-71s and their aircrew members gained the nickname Habu (as did the A-12s preceding them) after a pit viper indigenous to Japan, which the Okinawans thought the plane resembled.

Operational highlights for the entire Blackbird family (YF-12, A-12, and SR-71) as of about 1990 included:
*3,551 Mission Sorties Flown
*17,300 Total Sorties Flown
*11,008 Mission Flight Hours
*53,490 Total Flight Hours
*2,752 hours Mach 3 Time (Missions)
*11,675 hours Mach 3 Time (Total)

Only one crew member, Jim Zwayer, a Lockheed flight-test reconnaissance and navigation systems specialist, was killed in a flight accident. The rest of the crew members ejected safely or evacuated their aircraft on the ground.

The highly-specialized and advanced tooling used in manufacturing the SR-71 was ordered to be destroyed in 1968 by then-Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara.Fact|date=September 2008 Destroying the tooling killed any chance of there being an F-12B, but also limited the SR-71 force to the 32 completed, the final SR-71 order having to be cancelled when the tooling was destroyed.

First retirement

In the 1970s, the SR-71 was placed under closer congressional scrutiny and, with budget concerns, the program was soon under attack. Both Congress and the USAF sought to focus on newer projects like the B-1 Lancer and upgrades to the B-52 Stratofortress, whose replacement was being developed. While the development and construction of reconnaissance satellites was costly, their upkeep was less than that of the nine SR-71s then in service.

The SR-71 had never gathered significant supporters within the Air Force, making it an easy target for cost-conscious politicians. Also, parts were no longer being manufactured for the aircraft, so other airframes had to be cannibalized in order to keep the fleet airworthy. The Air Force saw the SR-71 as a bargaining chip which could be sacrificed to ensure the survival of other priorities. A general misunderstanding of the nature of aerial reconnaissance and a lack of knowledge about the SR-71 in particular (due to its early secretive development and usage) was used by its detractors to discredit the aircraft. In 1988, Congress was convinced to allocate $160,000 to keep six SR-71s (along with a trainer model) in flyable storage that would allow the fleet to become airborne within 60 days. The USAF refused to spend the money. The decision to release the SR-71 from active duty came in 1989.

Interestingly, politics played a heavy role in the SR-71's demise: Air Force Chief of Staff, General Larry Welch, cancelled the program at his first opportunity, because his request to enter the SR-71 program when he was a junior officer had been summarily rejected. At the time of Welch's appointment to Air Force Chief of Staff in July of 1986, it was well known in the Air Force reconnaissance community that he would be targeting the SR-71 for cancellation.Fact|date=September 2008

Funds were redirected to the financially troubled B-1 Lancer and B-2 Spirit programs. Four months after the plane's retirement, General Norman Schwarzkopf, Jr., was told that the expedited reconnaissance which the SR-71 could have provided was unavailable during Operation Desert Storm.Remak 2001] However, it was noted by SR-71 supporters that the SR-71B trainer was just coming out of overhaul and that one SR-71 could have been made available in a few weeks, and a second one within two months. Since the plane was recently retired, all the support infrastructure was still in place and qualified crews were available. The decision was made by Washington not to bring the aircraft back.

Reactivation

Due to increasing unease about political conditions in the Middle East and North Korea, the U.S. Congress re-examined the SR-71 beginning in 1993. At a hearing of the Senate Committee on Armed Services, Senator J. James Exon (noting Senator John Glenn's disapproval of reactivating the SR-71) asked Admiral Richard C. Macke

Rear Admiral Thomas F. Hall addressed the question of why the SR-71 was retired, saying it was under "the belief that, given the time delay associated with mounting a mission, conducting a reconnaissance, retrieving the data, processing it, and getting it out to a field commander, that you had a problem in timeliness that was not going to meet the tactical requirements on the modern battlefield. And the determination was that if one could take advantage of technology and develop a system that could get that data back real time… that would be able to meet the unique requirements of the tactical commander." Hall stated that "the Advanced Airborne Reconnaissance System, which was going to be an unmanned UAV” would meet the requirements but was not affordable at the time. He said that they were “looking at alternative means of doing [the job of the SR-71] ."

Macke told the committee that they were “flying U-2s, RC-135s, [and] other strategic and tactical assets” to collect information in some areas.

Senator Robert Byrd and other Senators complained that the “better than” successor to the SR-71 had yet to be developed at the cost of the "good enough" serviceable aircraft. They maintained that, in a time of constrained military budgets, designing, building, and testing an aircraft with the same capabilities as the SR-71 would be impossible.Graham 1996]

Congress' disappointment with the lack of a suitable replacement for the Blackbird was cited concerning whether to continue funding imaging sensors on the U-2. Congressional conferees stated the "experience with the SR-71 serves as a reminder of the pitfalls of failing to keep existing systems up-to-date and capable in the hope of acquiring other capabilities."

It was agreed to add $100 million to the budget to return three SR-71s to service, but it was emphasized that this "would not prejudice support for long-endurance UAVs [such as the Global Hawk] ." The funding was later cut to $72.5 million. The Skunk Works was able to return the aircraft to service under budget, coming in at $72 million.Jenkins 2001]

Colonel Jay Murphy (USAF Retired) was made the Program Manager for Lockheed’s reactivation plans. Retired Air Force Colonels Don Emmons and Barry MacKean were put under government contract to remake the plane’s logistic and support structure. Still-active Air Force pilots and Reconnaissance Systems Officers (RSOs) who had worked with the aircraft were asked to volunteer to fly the reactivated planes. The aircraft was under the command and control of the 9th Reconnaissance Wing at Beale Air Force Base and flew out of a renovated hangar at Edwards Air Force Base. Modifications were made to provide a data-link with "near real-time" transmission of the Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar's imagery to sites on the ground.

econd retirement

The reactivation met much resistance: the Air Force had not budgeted for the aircraft, and UAV developers worried that their programs would suffer if money was shifted to support the SR-71s. Also, with the allocation requiring yearly reaffirmation by Congress, long-term planning for the SR-71 was difficult. In 1996, the Air Force claimed that specific funding had not been authorized, and moved to ground the program. Congress reauthorized the funds, but, in October 1997, President Bill Clinton used the line-item veto to cancel the $39 million allocated for the SR-71. In June 1998, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that the line-item veto was unconstitutional. All this left the SR-71's status uncertain until September 1998, when the Air Force called for the funds to be redistributed. The plane was permanently retired in avyear|1998. The Air Force quickly disposed of their SR-71s, leaving NASA with the two last flyable Blackbirds until 1999. [ [http://www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/news/FactSheets/FS-030-DFRC.html NASA/DFRC SR-71 Blackbird] , Accessed August 16, 2007.] All other Blackbirds have been moved to museums except for the two SR-71s and a few D-21 drones retained by the NASA Dryden Research Center.

R-71 timeline

Important dates pulled from many sources. [ [http://www.sr-71.org/blackbird/sr-71/ SR-71] ]

* December 24, 1957: First J58 engine run.
* May 1, 1960: Francis Gary Powers is shot down in a Lockheed U-2 over the Soviet Union.
* June 13, 1962: SR-71 mock-up reviewed by Air Force.
* July 30, 1962: J58 completes pre-flight testing.
* December 28, 1962: Lockheed signs contract to build six SR-71 aircraft.
* July 25, 1964: President Johnson makes public announcement of SR-71.
* October 29, 1964: SR-71 prototype (#61-7950) delivered to Palmdale.
* December 7, 1964: Beale AFB, CA announced as base for SR-71.
* December 22, 1964: First flight of the SR-71 with Lockheed test pilot Bob Gilliland at AF Plant #42.
* July 21, 1967: Jim Watkins and Dave Dempster fly first international sortie in SR-71A #61-7972 when the Astro-Inertial Navigation System ( ANS ) fails on a training mission and they accidentally fly into Mexican airspace.
* November 3, 1967: A-12 and SR-71 conduct a reconnaissance fly-off. Results were questionable.
* February 5, 1968: Lockheed ordered to destroy A-12, YF-12, and SR-71 tooling.
* March 8, 1968: First SR-71A (#61-7978) arrives at Kadena AB to replace A-12s.
* March 21, 1968: First SR-71 (#61-7976) operational mission flown from Kadena AB over Vietnam.
* May 29, 1968: CMSGT Bill Gornik begins the tie-cutting tradition of Habu crews neck-ties.
* December 3, 1975: First flight of SR-71A #61-7959 in "Big Tail" configuration.
* April 20, 1976: TDY operations started at RAF Mildenhall in SR-71A #17972.
* July 27, 1976 - July 28, 1976: SR-71A sets speed and altitude records (Altitude in Horizontal Flight: 85,068.997 ft. and Speed Over a Straight Course: 2,193.167 mph).
* August 1980: Honeywell starts conversion of AFICS to DAFICS.
* January 15, 1982: SR-71B #61-7956 flies its 1,000th sortie.
* April 21, 1989: #974 was lost due to an engine explosion after taking off from Kadena AB. This was the last Blackbird to be lost, it was the first SR-71 accident in 18 years, and it is also the longest accident-free streak of any USAF aircraft.
* November 22, 1989: Air Force SR-71 program officially terminated.
* January 21, 1990: Last SR-71 (#61-7962) left Kadena AB.
* January 26, 1990: SR-71 is decommissioned at Beale AFB, CA.
* March 6, 1990: Last SR-71 flight under SENIOR CROWN program, setting four world records.
* July 25, 1991: SR-71B #61-7956/NASA #831 officially delivered to NASA Dryden.
* October 1991: Marta Bohn-Mayer becomes first female SR-71 crew-member.
* September 28, 1994: Congress votes to allocate $100 million for reactivation of three SR-71s.
* April 26, 1995: First reactivated SR-71A (#61-7971) makes its first flight after restoration by Lockheed.
* June 28, 1995: First reactivated SR-71 returns to Air Force as Detachment 2.
* August 28, 1995: Second reactivated SR-71A (#61-7967) makes first flight after restoration.
* October 19, 1997: The last flight of SR-71B #61-7956 at Edwards AFB Open House.
* October 9, 1999: The last flight of the SR-71 (#61-7980/NASA 844).
* September 2002: Final resting places of #956, #971, and #980 are made known.
* December 15, 2003: SR-71 #972 goes on display at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia.

Records

The SR-71 remained the world's fastest and highest-flying operational manned aircraft throughout its career. From an altitude of 80,000 ft (24 km), it could survey 100,000 square miles per hour (72 square kilometers per second) of the Earth's surface. In addition, it was accurate enough to take a picture of a car's license plate from this altitude. [ [http://pacificcoastairmuseum.org/2002Site/aircraftPCAM/SR_71/SR71_History.asp SR-71 History] ] On July 28, 1976, an SR-71 broke the world record for its class: an absolute speed record of 1905.81 knots (2,193.17 mph, 3,529.56 km/h), and an "absolute altitude record" of 85,069 feet (25,929 m). [ [http://www.wvi.com/~sr71webmaster/spd_run001.html Altitude record] ] [ [http://records.fai.org/general_aviation/aircraft.asp?id=779 Record] ] Several aircraft exceeded this altitude in zoom climbs but not in sustained flight. [ [http://records.fai.org/general_aviation/current.asp?id1=21&id2=4 Records] ]

When the SR-71 was retired in 1990, one was flown from its birthplace at United States Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale, California, to go on exhibit at what is now the Smithsonian Institution's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center (an annex of the National Air & Space Museum) in Chantilly, Virginia. The Blackbird, piloted by Colonel Ed Yielding and Lt. Col. J. T. Vida, set a coast-to-coast speed record at an average 2,124 mph (3,418 km/h). The entire trip was reported as 68 minutes and 17 seconds. Three additional records were set within segments of the flight, including a new absolute top speed of 2,242 mph (3,608 km/h) measured between the radar gates set up in St. Louis and Cincinnati. These were accepted by the National Aeronautic Association (NAA), the recognized body for aviation records in the United States. [ Philadelphia Inquirer, March 7, 1990.] [New York Times, March 7, 1990.] An enthusiast site devoted to the Blackbird lists a record time of 64 minutes. [ [http://www.sr-71.org/blackbird/records.php Blackbird Records] ] The SR-71 also holds the record for flying from New York to London in 1 hour 54 minutes and 56.4 seconds, set on September 1, 1974. This equates to an average velocity of about Mach 2.68, including slowing down for in-flight refueling. Peak speeds during this flight were probably closer to the declassified top speed of Mach 3.2+. (For comparison, the best commercial Concorde flight time was 2 hours 52 minutes, and the Boeing 747 averages 6 hours 15 minutes.)

Variants

The SR-71A was the main production variant. The SR-71B was a trainer variant. [Landis and Jenkins 2005, p. 56-58.] Production of the SR-71 totaled 32 aircraft with 29 SR-71As, 2 SR-71Bs, and 1 SR-71C.

The SR-71C was a hybrid aircraft composed of the rear fuselage of the first YF-12A (S/N 60-6934) and the forward fuselage from a SR-71 static test unit. This Blackbird was seemingly not quite straight and had a yaw at supersonic speeds. [Landis and Jenkins 2005, p. 62.] It was nicknamed "The Bastard". The YF-12 had been wrecked in a 1966 landing accident.

Flight simulator

The Link Simulator Company's SR-71 Flight Simulator was developed during 1963 – 1965 under a deep "black" security blanket because it and the team Link assigned to it were given access to CIA OXCART and USAF R-12 / SR-71 clearances, the complete list of names of classified vendors supplying parts and software that had to be simulated, the total aircraft performance envelope data and a government-produced satellite photo montage of almost the entire continental United States to provide optical imagery for the RSO's portion of the Flight Simulator. This later capability was mounted on a separate, large, rectangular glass plate (approximately 6 feet by 12 feet in size) over which moved an optical sighting head that traveled at the scaled speed and direction of the Blackbird during its simulated flight. Realistic and accurate images were then displayed in the Optical View Sight and SLR RCD (Radar Correlator Display) in the RSO cockpit. Imagery was not provided to the pilot's simulator, which like the RSO simulator, had translucent window panels with varying degrees of lighting to change a simulated flight from daylight to night flying conditions.

Instructor positions were behind both the pilot's and the RSO's cockpits, with monitoring, malfunction and emergency problem controls provided. The simulator halves could be flown as separate cockpits with different training agendas or in a team mode, where intercom, instrument readings and air vehicle/sub-systems performance were integrated. Although most simulator flights were in a flight suit "shirt sleeve" environment, selected flights during a crew's checkout training were made with the crew wearing the complete David Clark Company's Full Pressure Suit.

In 1965, when the first Beale AFB Instructor Pilot/RSO crew (wearing civilian clothes only) visited the Flight Simulator during USAF checkout and acceptance trials at Link's upstate New York facilities, they were surprised to park in front of a busy, active grocery store and then be escorted quietly to a side door that led them into a hidden, rear portion of the building that was Link's highly classified "Skunkworks" type facility for the Blackbird program. Total secrecy was so complete that no one in the New York township site was aware of what was going on behind the busy checkout stands selling foodstuffs and beverages.

In 1965, the Flight Simulator was transferred to Beale AFB, California and the 9th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing's SAGE building, which provided vault level security for it plus the Wing Headquarters, Flight Mission Planning, and Intelligence Analysis / Exploitation of Blackbird mission products.

Besides SR-71 flight crew training and currency usage, the Flight Simulator was used several times by Lockheed and CIA operatives to analyze Groom Lake A-12 problems and accidents with similar assistance provided for SR-71 flights at Edwards AFB. Another unique feature was that an actual flight mission tape for the SR-71 ANS could be loaded into the Flight Simulator's digital computers, which had been designed and programmed by Link engineers to emulate the Nortronics ANS. During Category II testing at Edwards AFB, some types of ANS navigation errors could be duplicated in the Flight Simulator at Beale AFB, with Link engineers then often assisting in software fixes to the main ANS flight software programs.

At the conclusion of SR-71 flying at Beale AFB, the Flight Simulator (minus the RSO optical imagery system) was transferred to the NASA Dryden facility at Edwards AFB in support of NASA SR-71 flight operations. Upon completion of all USAF and NASA SR-71 operations at Edwards, the Flight Simulator was moved in July, 2006 to the Frontiers of Flight Museum on Love Field Airport in Dallas, Texas [ [http://www.flightmuseum.com Frontiers of Flight Museum] ] and, with support from the Museum and Link (now, L-3 Communications Simulation and Training Division), it is intended to be available for viewing by Museum visitors.

Myth and lore

The plane developed a small cult following, given its design, specifications and the aura of secrecy that surrounded it. Specifically, these groups cite that the aircraft's maximum speed is limited by the specific maximum temperature for the compressor inlet of 800 °F (427 °C). [ [http://www.sr-71.org/blackbird/manual/3/3-138.php Blackbird manual] ] [ [http://aerostories.free.fr/technique/J58/J58_01/page10.html Aerostories] ] Recent studies of inlets of this type have shown that current technology could allow for inlet speeds with a lower limit of Mach 6. [ [http://drum.umd.edu/dspace/bitstream/1903/2542/1/umi-umd-2426.pdf SR-71] ]

It is known that the J58 engines were most efficient at around Mach 3.2, [ [http://yarchive.net/air/sr71.html SR-71] ] and this was the Blackbird's typical cruising speed. The SR-71's Pratt & Whitney J58 engines never exceeded test bench values above Mach 3.6 in unclassified tests.

The SR-71 was the first operational aircraft designed around a stealthy shape and materials. The most visible marks of its low radar cross section (RCS) are its inwardly-canted vertical stabilizers and the fuselage chines. Comparably, a plane of the SR-71's size should generate a radar image the size of a flying barn, but its actual return is more like that of a single door. Though with a much smaller RCS than expected for a plane of its size, it was still easily detected, because the exhaust stream would return its own radar signature (even though a special cesium compound was added to the fuel to reduce this signature). Furthermore, this is no comparison to the later F-117, whose RCS is on the order of a small ball bearing. [Rich and Janos, 1994, p. 36.]

Swedish JA-37 Viggen fighter pilots, using the well-predictable flight patterns of SR-71 routine flights over the Baltic Sea, have managed to lock their missiles on the SR-71. ["Mach 14", vol 4, no 3, 1983, p. 5. ISSN 0280-8498.] ["Mach 25", vol 7, no 2, 1986, p. 28-29. ISSN 0280-8498.]

uccession

Much speculation exists regarding a replacement aircraft for the SR-71, most notably an aircraft identified as the Lockheed Aurora. This is due to limitations on the use of spy satellites which are governed by the laws of orbital mechanics. It may take 24 hours before a satellite is in proper orbit to photograph a particular target: far longer than the time requirements of a reconnaissance plane. Spy planes can provide the most current intelligence information and collect it when lighting conditions are optimum. The fly-over orbit of spy satellites may also be predicted and can allow the enemy to hide assets when they know the satellite is above: a drawback spy planes do not suffer. These factors have led many to doubt that the United States military has abandoned the concept of spy planes to complement reconnaissance satellites. [Siuru, William D. and Busick, John D. "Future Flight: The Next Generation of Aircraft Technology". Blue Ridge Summit, Pennsylvania: TAB Books, 1994. ISBN 0-83067-415-2.]

pecifications (SR-71A)

aircraft specifications
plane or copter?=plane
jet or prop?=jet
ref=SR-71.org [ [http://www.sr-71.org/blackbird/sr-71/ Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird page on sr-71.org] ]
crew=2
length main=107 ft 5 in
length alt=32.74 m
span main=55 ft 7 in
span alt=16.94 m
height main=18 ft 6 in
height alt=5.64 m
area main=1,800 ft2
area alt=170 m2
empty weight main=67,500 lb
empty weight alt=30,600 kg
loaded weight main=170,000 lb
loaded weight alt=77,000 kg
payload main=3,500 lb
payload alt=1,600 kg
payload more=of sensors
max takeoff weight main=172,000 lb
max takeoff weight alt=78,000 kg
more general=Wheel track: 16 ft 8 in (5.08 m)
*Wheel base: 37 ft 10 in (11.53 m)
*Aspect ratio: 1.7
engine (jet)=Pratt & Whitney J58-1
type of jet=continuous-bleed afterburning turbojets
number of jets=2
thrust main=32,500 lbf
thrust alt=145 kN
thrust original=
afterburning thrust main=
afterburning thrust alt=
max speed main=Mach 3.2+
max speed alt=2,200+ mph, 3,530+ km/h
max speed more=at 80,000 ft (24,000 m)
range main=2,900 nmi
range alt=5,400 km
range more=
combat radius main=
combat radius alt=
combat radius more=
ferry range main=3,200 nmi
ferry range alt=5,925 km
ferry range more=
ceiling main = 85,000 ft
ceiling alt=25,900 m
climb rate main=11,810 ft/min
climb rate alt=60 m/s
loading main=94 lb/ft2
loading alt=460 kg/m2
thrust/weight=0.382
more performance=

R-71 aircraft on display

Places to see a Blackbird on display include:
*Multiple variants:
**National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, near Dayton, Ohio (an SR-71A, YF-12A and M-21/D-21 drone)
**March Field Air Museum, Riverside, California (an SR-71A and a D-21 Drone)
*SR-71A variant:
**Air Force Armament Museum, Eglin Air Force Base, Florida
**Air Force Flight Test Center Museum, Edwards Air Force Base, California
**Air Force Plant 42 Production Flight Test Installation, Palmdale, California
**American Air Museum in Britain at the Imperial War Museum, Duxford, Cambridgeshire, England (the only example displayed outside the US)
**Barksdale Air Force Base, Bossier City, Louisiana
**Beale Air Force Base, Marysville, California
**Castle Air Museum, Atwater, California
**Evergreen Aviation Museum, McMinnville, Oregon
**Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center in Hutchinson, Kansas
**Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas
**March Field Air Museum, Riverside, California
**Museum of Aviation, Warner Robins, Georgia
**Pima Air & Space Museum, Tucson, Arizona
**Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center, at Washington Dulles International Airport in Chantilly, Virginia
**Strategic Air and Space Museum in Ashland, Nebraska
**Virginia Aviation Museum in Richmond, Virginia
*SR-71B variant:
**Kalamazoo Aviation History Museum, Kalamazoo, Michigan
*SR-71C variant:
**Hill Air Force Base Museum, Ogden, Utah

See Lockheed A-12, Lockheed YF-12 and Lockheed D-21/M-21 for other blackbirds on display.


=Other

Popular culture

In Manga Science (まんがサイエンス [http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/まんがサイエンス 1 Manga Science] ), a science teaching comic short series, volume 2 (2006), an SR-71 was used to demonstrate the heat generated in high speed flight.

In Jeremy Clarkson's nonfiction book "I Know You Got Soul", he devotes one chapter to the SR-71.

ee also

aircontent
related=
* Lockheed A-12
* Lockheed YF-12
* Lockheed D-21/M-21
similar aircraft=
* Bristol 188
* RSR (spyplane)
lists=
* List of military aircraft of the United States
* List of Lockheed aircraft
see also=
* LASRE Linear Aerospike SR-71 Experiment
* James Gilbert Baker
* Measurement and Signature Intelligence

References

Notes

Bibliography

* "A Bittersweet and Fancy Flight." "Philadelphia Inquirer", 7 March 1990, p. 1.
* Graham, Richard H. "SR-71 Revealed: The Inside Story". St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing Company, 1996. ISBN 978-0760301227.
* Hobson, Chris. "Vietnam Air Losses, USAF, USN, USMC, Fixed-Wing Aircraft Losses in Southeast Asia 1961–1973". North Branch, Minnesota: Specialty Press, 2001. ISBN 1-85780-1156.
* Jenkins, Dennis R. "Lockheed Secret Projects: Inside the Skunk Works". St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing Company, 2001. ISBN 978-0760309148.
* Johnson, C.L. "Kelly: More Than My Share of it All". Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books, 1985. ISBN 0-87474-491-1.
* Landis, Tony R. and Dennis R. Jenkins. "Lockheed Blackbirds", revised edition, Specialty Press, 2005. ISBN 1-58007-086-8.
* Remak, Jeannette and Joe Ventolo, Jr. "A-12 Blackbird Declassified". St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing Company, 2001. ISBN 0-76031-000-9.
* Rich, Ben R., and Leo Janos. "Skunk Works: A Personal Memoir of my years at Lockheed". New York: Little, Brown and Company, 1994. ISBN 0-316-74330-5.
* Shul, Brian and Sheila Kathleen O'Grady. "Sled Driver: Flying the World's Fastest Jet". Marysville, California: Gallery One, 1994. ISBN 0-929823-08-7.
* "Spy Plane Sets Speed Record, Then Retires (Associated Press)." "New York Times", 7 March 1990.

External links

* [http://www.sr-71.org SR-71.org web site]
* [http://gmaps.tommangan.us/blackbirds.html Blackbird Spotting, maps the location of every existing Blackbird]
* [http://aerostories.free.fr/technique/J58/J58_01/page8.html The heart of the SR-71: the J58 engine]
* [http://www.habu.org/ The Online Blackbird Museum]
* [http://www.check-six.com/Crash_Sites/SR-71_953_crash_site.htm Crash site of SR-71 #953 - Crashed on December 19, 1969]
* [http://www.blackbirds.net/sr71/index.html SR-71 page] and [http://www.blackbirds.net/u2/c_bennett/bbird-01.html First-hand account of SR-71 maintenance on Blackbirds.net]
* [http://www.wvi.com/~sr71webmaster/press_suit001.html The SR-71 Pilot Full Pressure Suit]
* [http://portal.aircraft-info.net/article12.html Aircraft-Info.net Lockheed SR-71 "Blackbird"]
* [http://www.area51zone.com/aircraft/sr71.shtml Interesting SR-71 Information and Stories on area51zone.com]
* [http://home.att.net/%7Ejbaugher/1961.html Summary of SR-71 Serial Numbers]
* [http://www1.dfrc.nasa.gov/Gallery/Photo/SR-71/index.html SR-71 Blackbird photographs] and [http://www.dfrc.nasa.gov/Gallery/Movie/SR-71/index.html videos at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center's web site]
* [http://web.ics.purdue.edu/~gpollock/The%20Advent,%20Evolution,%20and%20New%20Horizons%20of%20United%20States%20Stealth%20Aircraft.htm The Advent, Evolution, and New Horizons of United States Stealth Aircraft]
* [http://www.enginehistory.org/Convention/2005/Presentations/LawPete/ Peter Law's detailed technical presentations on SR-71 thermal and propulsion design features]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Blackbird (disambiguation) — Blackbird can refer to:Birds*Blackbird ( Turdus merula ), a species of bird of the thrush family indigenous to Europe and Asia *New World blackbirds, about 20 species of icterid birds that resemble the Blackbird including: **Red winged Blackbird… …   Wikipedia

  • Blackbird (online platform) — Blackbird was the codename for an online content authoring platform developed by Microsoft in the mid 90s based on the concept of distributed OLE (Object Linking and Embedding) and meant as an alternative to HTML. With scripting capability for… …   Wikipedia

  • Blackbird Leys — is a ward located on the south eastern outskirts of Oxford, England and is one of the largest council estates in Europe. According to the 2001 census, the ward had a population of 5,803. [cite web | url =… …   Wikipedia

  • Blackbird (Lied) — Blackbird The Beatles Veröffentlichung 22. November 1968 Genre(s) Popsong Autor(en) Lennon/McCartney Album The Beatles …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Blackbird (canción) — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda «Blackbird» Canción de The Beatles Álbum The Beatles Publicación 22 de noviembre de 1968 …   Wikipedia Español

  • BlackBird — Blackbird  англ. чёрный дрозд. Blackbird  браузер. Blackbird (программирование)  консоль языка JavaScript, для отладки скриптов. Lockheed SR 71 (BlackBird)  самолёт. Blackbird  песня группы The Beatles.… …   Википедия

  • Blackbird (álbum) — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Blackbird Álbum de Alter Bridge Publicación …   Wikipedia Español

  • Blackbird Hundred — is the name of an unincorporated subdivision of New Castle County, Delaware. Hundreds were once used as a basis for representation in the Delaware General Assembly, and while their names still appear on all real estate transactions, they… …   Wikipedia

  • Blackbird — (engl.: „Amsel“) bezeichnet: ein amerikanisches Militärflugzeug, siehe Lockheed SR 71 ein Lied der Beatles, siehe Blackbird (Lied) den Künstlernamen von Manuel Tur (* 1986), deutscher Musiker das zweite Studioalbum und dessen Titelsong der Hard… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Blackbird Island — ist der Name mehrerer Inseln in den Vereinigten Staaten: Blackbird Island (Michigan) Blackbird Island (Minnesota) Blackbird Island (Missouri) Blackbird Island (Wisconsin) Diese Seite ist eine Begriffsklärung zur Unterscheidung mehrerer mit …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Blackbird — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Blackbird puede referirse a: Blackbird, una canción de The Beatles El Lockheed SR 71 Blackbird, un avión de reconocimiento estratégico de largo alcance Nuevo navegador web basado en Firefox 3 de Mozilla, diseñado… …   Wikipedia Español

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”