Wednesday, February 28, 2018

That's a big plane . . .


Stratolaunch, the hybrid aircraft made up of two new fuselages and wings, plus six engines from old Boeing 747's, is conducting taxi tests prior to its first flight later this year.  It's enormous, designed to hang a satellite launch rocket from beneath its center wing, and lift it to 30-40,000 feet before dropping it, to get it through the thickest layers of atmosphere and give it a "head start" to orbit.

The six-engine, 385-foot-wide aircraft, nicknamed Roc, is the world’s largest airplane as measured by wingspan. It’s designed to carry up rockets for high-altitude launches in midflight.

Stratolaunch has said orbital launches could begin in the 2019-2020 time frame if the test program goes well.

Last weekend’s tests built on an initial round of low-speed runway tests in December, and were aimed at evaluating updates made to the plane’s steering and primary braking systems, Vulcan spokeswoman Alex Moji said in an email.

“We are excited to report all objectives of this test were achieved – the aircraft reached a runway speed of 40 knots (46 mph),” she said. “The data collected will be used to evaluate and update our flight simulator for crew training.”

There's more at the link.

Here's what the behemoth looks like during taxi tests.  Compare it to the size of the pickup trucks nearby.





That's BIG!




Peter

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Is that dual cockpits? Wonder how confusing it is to switch between them?

Weredragon

jabrwok said...

I'd worry about the lack of a linkage between the tails. That design looks like it's begging to be twisted apart by wind shear.

Uncle Lar said...

You made me go look.
The Huges H-4, aka the Spruce Goose, only had a wingspan of 321 feet, so this is a tad bigger.
Bet you if Howard had been at the stick that taxi run would have turned into a short hop.

Alphonse said...

Burt Rutan, and his brother Dick, already did this on a (much) smaller scale, quite a few years ago. This is just the same idea super-sized. It worked back then, no reason wny it won't work now.

And, once it does, expect to see a version with some sort of enclosed center fuselage to carry huge individual items and incredible amounts of freight.

Rob said...

Anyone have any ideas on when it takes it's first test flight? That would be something to see.

Sherm said...

Hmm. An upgraded P-82 Mustang.

Anonymous said...

Unusual to see anything in this day and age that size without advertising on it! Beautiful.

Mauser said...

Seeing them all the time, 747 engines aren't all THAT big. If you want big, get the engines off a 777.

Antibubba said...

I expected it to be bigger.