This is a silent compilation of ordinance and drop tank/whatnot separation tests---some of it is lousy video, none of it has sound---and a lot of it is silently terrifying.
Apparently, it's a lot harder to get things to fall off of airplanes that one would think.
In looking into it more, it seems to be the case that aerodynamic airflows at high speed, particular the special and sought after sort of airflow (that designers strive for) called "laminar flow", can cause all sorts of problems (thus, the engineering/science tags).
In the American B1-B bomber, flight testing apparently established that released bombs from the internal bomb bay would get caught up in the laminar flow along the bottom of the aircraft and "bump" and bobble along the underside of the fuselage until they spun off the tail section (nerve wracking much?). They had to add a "waffle iron" grid inside the bay that extends down into the airstream and disrupts it before release to get that to stop .
Although aircraft use "explosive" or "pyrotechnic" charges to get a positive release from an aircraft's pylons (no hydraulics, no need for electric power to a pylon), I now understand that the charge doesn't actually "blow" the object from the airplane...It just ensures the release.
10 Comments
eric3579says...Not electronica(is music genre) but is *fail test
siftbotsays...Adding video to channels (Fail) - requested by eric3579.
siftbotsays...Tags for this video have been changed from 'Ordinance, flight testing, no sound, test pilots' to 'ordnance, flight testing, no sound, test pilots, drop tanks, bombs, missiles' - edited by calvados
SFOGuysays...Oh, thank you for the correction...siftbot...am I thanking a bot? lol...uh, siftbot?
Tags for this video have been changed from 'Ordinance, flight testing, no sound, test pilots' to 'ordnance, flight testing, no sound, test pilots, drop tanks, bombs, missiles' - edited by calvados
siftbotsays...You're welcome.
Oh, thank you for the correction...siftbot...am I thanking a bot? lol...uh, siftbot?
Aziraphalesays...This is one of those things that never occurred to me but seems completely obvious now that I see it.
Sleddgesays...Test pilots have balls of steel
ForgedRealitysays...That would explain the need to nose down and then pitch up just after dropping payload.
SFOGuysays...To run away from the thing which is trying to kill you!
That would explain the need to nose down and then pitch up just after dropping payload.
aimpointsays...Pre-flight briefing:
"No matter what happens, just fly straight.
I don't care what you hear or feel, everything is normal."
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