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X-20 Abandoned Space Shuttle 

Dark Skies
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The X-20 Dyna-Soar might be the greatest space bomber that never came to be.
This single-pilot reusable space plane was envisioned to reach the Earth’s orbit and glide across long distances until it landed unpowered on a runway. This would have resulted in an aircraft that could have been able to engage in an intercontinental nuclear strike mission or fly undetected in reconnaissance missions.
The Dyna-Soar was conceived after decades of research by pioneers in liquid propeller rockets and hypersonic flight - much of it initiated by Germany during World War II. These men dreamt of a plane that could take off from Germany and bomb the United States in a matter of hours. Years later, with the German scientists now on their side, the U.S Air Force expected to use the Dyno-Soar as a weapon against the Soviets.
During the plane’s development, astronaut Neil Armstrong became a key figure in figuring out how pilots could eject the glider if the rocket ever exploded.
The project was far more advanced than other human spaceflight missions of the time. Still, despite its promise, the project was brought down by politics. The Dyno-Soar never had one specific objective, and no other benefits could be found for military purposes, at least publicly. Hints of the design lessons learned from the X-20 can be glimpsed in DARPA’s secretive X-37 that is orbiting the Earth today...
- As images and footage of actual events are not always available, Dark Skies sometimes utilizes similar historical images and footage for dramatic effect. I do my best to keep it as visually accurate as possible. All content on Dark Skies is researched, produced, and presented in historical context for educational purposes. We are history enthusiasts and are not always experts in some areas, so please don't hesitate to reach out to us with corrections, additional information, or new ideas. -

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21 окт 2020

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Комментарии : 1 тыс.   
@g-man7731
@g-man7731 3 года назад
Space dinosaurs that drop bombs now that is terrifying
@750suzuki7
@750suzuki7 3 года назад
thoughts of bombs dropping space dinosaurs keeps me awake at night
@NuclearTopSpot
@NuclearTopSpot 3 года назад
he looks calm and ready to drop bombs
@dadillen5902
@dadillen5902 3 года назад
@Social Outcast Ten pounds of dino poo could do (yes I said poo and do in the same sentence) a lot of damage at 25,000 mph.
@albirdburger
@albirdburger 3 года назад
I see a b movie franchise
@potatogamer4200
@potatogamer4200 3 года назад
The right dyna-soar in the wrong place can make all the bombing in the world
@snailsaredumb9412
@snailsaredumb9412 3 года назад
We too often forget that these were classified at one point. What kind of craft do we have now that's classified to this day
@ericb4127
@ericb4127 3 года назад
I'll give you 2 clues. "Prey" and "cloak" ;)
@snailsaredumb9412
@snailsaredumb9412 3 года назад
@@ericb4127 what does this even mean? I'm not well versed in uapology
@ericb4127
@ericb4127 3 года назад
@@snailsaredumb9412 I was making reference to a klingon bird of prey from star trek
@snailsaredumb9412
@snailsaredumb9412 3 года назад
@@ericb4127 ah, alrighty
@mydogbrian4814
@mydogbrian4814 3 года назад
- The X-20 DynaSoar was never a classified; secret program. It was after all an " X " program. - However the technology incorporated in making it work certainly was.
@randall1959
@randall1959 3 года назад
It hasn't been abandoned. It's evolved into the X37-B
@Karl_Kampfwagen
@Karl_Kampfwagen 3 года назад
I live a few miles from NASA Moffett Field... And I swear, on my life, that I have seen this craft, or one extremely similar, touch down on Moffett's tarmac as I drove home from work. It made no sound, came in fast, and was approaching with the steepest angle I've seen. My coworker and I were flabbergasted. We knew what we saw, but we knew that we also had no idea what we just saw... A glider makes a lot of sense
@luka5208
@luka5208 3 года назад
Maybe it was this?: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XCOR_Aerospace#Lynx_rocketplane www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-xcor-astronauts-20181230-story.html
@AngleSideSideThm
@AngleSideSideThm 3 года назад
It's possible that this or another glide test vehicle was dropped by another aircraft for testing.
@Karl_Kampfwagen
@Karl_Kampfwagen 3 года назад
@@luka5208 Similar enough, but it was ALL BLACK, no markings visible, and was in the 35-55 ft long ballpark. I was driving on freeway as it slipped down low and touched down on Moffett Airfield tarmac. Small. Fast. Quiet. Steep upward nose approach. That's all I know and can say. And it was in the year 2012 if that helps. Almost want to bike over and just plane-spot since I'm close enough
@sbvera13
@sbvera13 3 года назад
@@Karl_Kampfwagen maybe? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_X-37
@dgafbrapman688
@dgafbrapman688 3 года назад
@@Karl_Kampfwagen quiet means it was gliding, steep descent means autonomous control, all black means atmosphere reentry shielding. Just a research vehicle.
@alexo.418
@alexo.418 3 года назад
I’m thinking the Virgin Galactic space ship was built after the Dyna-Soar concept. They both have similarities in design.
@WildBillCox13
@WildBillCox13 3 года назад
Form defines function in some cases.
@kdrapertrucker
@kdrapertrucker 3 года назад
Except dynasoar Rode a rocket like a space capsule instead of being launched from a mothership.
@kdrapertrucker
@kdrapertrucker 3 года назад
Bert RUTAN, the designer of spaceship one was a young engineer on the X-15 rocket plane high speed research project. So I'd bet a lot of that early experience factored into the design.
@rifleshooterchannel208
@rifleshooterchannel208 3 года назад
The Dyna-Soar isn’t owned by someone with a rape island though, that’s a significant difference.
@reggiep75
@reggiep75 3 года назад
@@WildBillCox13 - Exactly like the Russian Buran and the Space Shuttle.. Why bother making something different when it's been proven that someone else's design works and they've done the work for you, hence you copy and furnish how you like. EVERY nation in the Cold War copied the others (even allies) yet the West is very shy about telling the truth when they looked, photographed and copied Soviet/Russian projects that worried the West. Thankfully, the truth has came out about various projects. As for these crafts, if something works... it works. So use the design unless you have to get a licencing deal for it.
@StevePlegge
@StevePlegge 3 года назад
"Almost escape velocity". No. Almost orbital velocity.
@seanwaddell2659
@seanwaddell2659 3 года назад
They were different booster configurations, one of which reached almost escape velocity. Some of them were as you said sub-orbital, some were orbital, and I've seen a configuration that could've done a TLI, not sure if that was in the project though.
@allangibson8494
@allangibson8494 3 года назад
The Saturn I was originally designed as an orbital booster for the X-20.
@StevePlegge
@StevePlegge 3 года назад
The whole point of this was that the X-20 was suborbital. 'Almost escape velocity" makes absolutely no sense.
@mydogbrian4814
@mydogbrian4814 3 года назад
- Yes, one gets you into orbit. While the other gets you to the moon & beyond.
@mydogbrian4814
@mydogbrian4814 3 года назад
@@StevePlegge No it was "orbital"! - That why it needed a Titan- 3 & later the Saturn-1, the biggest rockets we had at the time to put it in orbit. - The mixing of several different vehicles in the presentation (Nazi German Sänger suborbital rocket bomber ect) leads to the confusion.
@texleeger8973
@texleeger8973 2 года назад
I was a kid when the Dyna Soar program was initiated, developed, and then killed. My Boy Scouts Boy's Life magazine sometimes had news of the program but the space plane's initial strategic bomber mission was not part of a kids' magazine's agenda. It was all just another exciting race to space vehicle along with the program I truly adored, NASA's Project Mercury.
@IvorMektin1701
@IvorMektin1701 3 года назад
My dad worked on it. I have a small plate of René 41 metal somewhere around here. He said what he did was classified so I don't know details.... I'd assume heat shield stuff.
@tommasoviani8949
@tommasoviani8949 3 года назад
Cool!
@marcbrasse747
@marcbrasse747 3 года назад
You shouldn't have confessed to that. The CIA is underway to pick it up, including YOU! Putin's neo KGB cronies might however still beat them! :-)
@VoltageLP
@VoltageLP 3 года назад
@@marcbrasse747 you can buy Rene 41 off ebay now, it's readilly available in sheets and even in wire spools for hot wire cutters.
@f.w.1318
@f.w.1318 3 года назад
Carbon fiber Kevlar composites do a far better job than an alloy steel, plus they are one fourth to one third the weight, the cost is questionable
@marcbrasse747
@marcbrasse747 3 года назад
@@VoltageLP Ah bugger. My interpretation of the situation was much more adventurous! :-)
@CritterFritter
@CritterFritter 3 года назад
DynaSoar, X-15 and similar craft were illustrated in my favorite books at the library when I was a little boy. It was a great time to be a kid 👍
@normal_media
@normal_media 11 месяцев назад
I was so mesmerized as a kid over the x-15 and Apollo stuff. It led me to have a great career in the Space program until some very aggressive a-holes wanted various departments for themselves and their friends, that folks like me were pushed out of the program. Yes, some of it political which is against the law. People who hate you just because you vote a certain way. Its detrimental to the mission really. Leave that crap at home.
@hinzuzufugen7358
@hinzuzufugen7358 Год назад
Excellent. In a children's science book from the Seventies, I saw a conceptual image of a military one-seater "space glider", which appeared somehow utopian, around 1980. It's amazing to see that the concept was from the late Fifties. Too much ahead of its time! It would have been even more interesting to see whether it influenced the Space Shuttle.
@rhondohslade
@rhondohslade 3 года назад
I well remember hearing and reading about the DynaSoar when I was young, about 6 or 7 years old. I always wondered what happened to it. Now I know. Thank you for this video!
@chesspiece81
@chesspiece81 3 года назад
Dark Guy I just discovered your channels last week and I'm loving it so far. I thought Simon Whistler was the only one running several excellent channels but I guess I was wrong.
@MuscarV2
@MuscarV2 3 года назад
What made you think that? That's an incredibly dumb thing to think and doesn't make any sense at all. There are hundreds, probably thousands of people that does that. You're astoundingly stupid.
@pistonsoup3749
@pistonsoup3749 3 года назад
😂😂 you need some fresh air bud
@amig-2143
@amig-2143 3 года назад
Nice! The Dyna-Soar would have been so cool!
@markplott4820
@markplott4820 3 года назад
Boeing Lenticular Reentry Vehicle is cooler.
@Karlengler1
@Karlengler1 3 года назад
Excellent topic. When I was young, I was interested in the Dynasoar and was sad to see that it was cancelled.
@beachboy0505
@beachboy0505 3 года назад
But they made the Space Shuttle based on the R&D. Neil Armstrong made a huge contribution, great man 👨 Brilliant video and relevant
@normal_media
@normal_media 11 месяцев назад
Neil. American hero in so many ways.
@Area51UFOGynaecology
@Area51UFOGynaecology 3 года назад
this is actually incredible, a space warship from the early 60s
@augustovasconcellos7173
@augustovasconcellos7173 Год назад
Not even the only one. Or even the most impressive serious proposal, for that matter. Look up what the USAF wanted to do to Project Orion.
@normal_media
@normal_media 11 месяцев назад
If its a secret program and ran correctly, you won;t know this much about it.
@WildBillCox13
@WildBillCox13 3 года назад
A fine coverage of my favorite what-if space project. It's lack of clear objective was an artifact of the times. Once we were able to formulate concrete goals, the USAF and CIA had moved to newer toys. As a moment in time, however, it was by far the best.
@benjaminbarrera214
@benjaminbarrera214 3 года назад
Best at what? Missiles were much more efficient at delivering nuclear warheads. The plan was to have a bomber version ready by 1974, it would have been horribly obsolete by then. The video claims it could have been used as a space taxi, but a taxi to where? We were supposed to have a space station in the 70s but that didn't happen either.
@Califoryan
@Califoryan 3 года назад
I enjoy all these videos. Thank you for making them.
@nicholasmazzarella2720
@nicholasmazzarella2720 3 года назад
Dark Great video. Thanks for the superb info and narration. Can't wait to see the next video.
@catjudo1
@catjudo1 3 года назад
Sinclair Petroleum would have made a great sponsor for something called Dyna-Soar. I don't know why the program was cancelled since the animation was so good.
@olsonspeed
@olsonspeed 3 года назад
The X-20 mockup was displayed at the NASA pavilion, 1992 Worlds Fair in Seattle, I saw it there many times. It was a shortsighted mistake to have abandoned such a promising project so close to completion. The Dyna Soar remains my favorite spacecraft, it could have been a extremely useful vehicle.
@WALTERBROADDUS
@WALTERBROADDUS 3 года назад
You say useful? How?
@olsonspeed
@olsonspeed 3 года назад
@@WALTERBROADDUS As a crew transport a resupply vehicle capable of carrying a pilot and four passengers.
@WALTERBROADDUS
@WALTERBROADDUS 3 года назад
@@olsonspeed There was nothing to transport to or supply.
@olsonspeed
@olsonspeed 3 года назад
@@WALTERBROADDUS Manned Orbiting Lab, Sky Lab.
@WALTERBROADDUS
@WALTERBROADDUS 3 года назад
@@olsonspeed we don't need men for photos. Spy satellites made your concept obsolete. That is why this and MOL got dropped.
@AndrewTubbiolo
@AndrewTubbiolo 3 года назад
The X-20 was never going to go anywhere near escape velocity. Escape velocity is 11.2 km/sec. It was always an orbital system with a velocity of 7.8 km/sec.
@MW-bi1pi
@MW-bi1pi 3 года назад
In the 1969 movie "Marooned", the proposed rescue vehicle was a pretty good mock-up of the X-20... It looked really good and may have contained some actual shots of the Dyna-Soar.
@keithstudly6071
@keithstudly6071 2 года назад
That was a MOVIE? I always thought David Janssen really did rescue the Ironman mission crew! Oh I feel so bad for Mariette Hartley. Her husband was commander of that mission. So sad....
@bobwilson758
@bobwilson758 Год назад
Roger … Blow hatch -
@charlesyoung7436
@charlesyoung7436 Год назад
That film, in which a Soviet cosmonaut helps to save one of the American astronauts, was actually used to push for and ultimately implement the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project in 1975.
@softdorothy
@softdorothy Год назад
The craft in the film looked more like the PRIME or the X-24A.
@michaelpyles1090
@michaelpyles1090 3 года назад
remember "the six million dollar man" "i am breaking i cant hold her i am breaking up .steve austin a man barely alive we can rebuild him . i remember that show like it was yesterday .and how hot was Jammie Summers
@thephilster6860
@thephilster6860 3 года назад
To quote Mad Magazine: "We can make him stronger, better, faster." "Sometimes doctor, faster isn't better." Anyway, that was a different aircraft, a lifting body. I can't remember the name, but I do know that, remarkably, the pilot survived.
@TheIndyspace
@TheIndyspace 3 года назад
@@thephilster6860 the HL-10 was shown in the drop from the B-52, the M2-F2 was the one shown being rolled up in the crash scene, being piloted by Bruce Peterson...2 different lifting bodies being shown in the opening sequence.
@deadfreightwest5956
@deadfreightwest5956 3 года назад
$6 million won't even get you to K Street in Washington DC via an Uber cab.
@bigd1119
@bigd1119 3 года назад
Technically
@casinodelonge
@casinodelonge 3 года назад
@@TheIndyspace I thought part of that crash sequence was actually a race car?
@ijhsa7452
@ijhsa7452 3 года назад
When the nazis decide to abandon a project because of overcomplexity and cost Me :damn thats complex
@ChrisCVW
@ChrisCVW 3 года назад
Innit? They absolutely loved them some war losingly expensive and complicated projects.
@dgafbrapman688
@dgafbrapman688 3 года назад
@@ChrisCVW the nazis didnt lose the war, they moved to russia and the us
@atsonaga5520
@atsonaga5520 3 года назад
@@dgafbrapman688 true mostly to America
@dgafbrapman688
@dgafbrapman688 3 года назад
@@atsonaga5520 yeah i bet we brought a bunch up from south america also
@hazonku
@hazonku 3 года назад
@@dgafbrapman688 Don't forget Argentina.
@FandersonUfo
@FandersonUfo 3 года назад
I'll never forgive McNamara for cancelling the coolest space craft of the 60s
@joeyjamison5772
@joeyjamison5772 3 года назад
America will never forgive McNamara for a number of stupid things he did. This was just 1.
@FandersonUfo
@FandersonUfo 3 года назад
@@joeyjamison5772 - true enough sir - like enlisting low IQ GIs for Vietnam - but for me cancelling Dynasoar when it was just months away from it's first test flight stands out
@HBC423
@HBC423 3 года назад
What they didn’t cancel is either cool or terrifying... maybe one day we’ll know what kind of secret shit they have going on nowadays
@aritakalo8011
@aritakalo8011 3 года назад
Well it was cool, but unnecessary. The bombing mission was taken over by ICBMs becoming more reliable, accurate and faster to launch and recon mission was taken over by combination of spy satellites and SR-71. I would think it not surprising that it was cancelled in 1963. They same year the early CIA version of SR-71, A-12 started flying. Meaning it was cancelled, when it came clear the high super sonic spy plane concept turned out to work in practice. Where as Dynasoar was still in experimental preparatory phase. Basically it was shown one could fly fast enough with more conventional non rocket boosted high altitude supersonic recon plane to make the last use of Dynasoar, fast dash recon, redundant. Satellites had more endurance and could cover whole globe and should one need fast reacting recon, one would send SR-71. Governments can't spend money just because it is cool, if the mission can be achieved by better means.
@FandersonUfo
@FandersonUfo 3 года назад
@@aritakalo8011 - I won't debate the impeccable logic of your remarks at all but I would have liked to have seen the bird fly just once
@dennisleas8996
@dennisleas8996 3 года назад
Wonderful video on a really cool project. I'm a dinosaur myself and remember the Dyna-Soar. A small correction. Around 6:45 you mention that the Titan I, Titan II, and X-15 all used the same rocket engine. Not exactly the case: Titan I used two LR-87-3 powered by LOX and RP-1. Titan II used two LR-87-5 and these burned N2O4 and Aerozine 50. The LR-87 engine family was made by Aerojet and had variants powered by LOX/RP-1, N2O4/Aerozine 50 and LOX/LH2. The X-15 (final models) used the XLR-99, sometimes called the LR-99, powered by LOX and ammonia. It was altogether different than LR-87 of any variety.
@dougball328
@dougball328 3 года назад
They weren't even in the same thrust class - about 4 : 1 in favor of the LR-87. And the XLR-99 was made by Reaction Motors of Thiokol. I wish I had seen your comment. It would have saved me a lot of typing! As for me, I, too, am a bit of a dyna-sore these days!
@FloridaManMatty
@FloridaManMatty 3 года назад
Since Dark Skies is doing such excellent episodes about mind bending “might have been” black projects, I would love to see someone finally do an overview of the Convair Kingfish and Project Isinglass! Kingfish gave the Lockheed A-12 a run for its money on paper and was, according to many aviation historians, an arguably better design that ultimately lost out due to lower projected cost and Kelly Johnson’s proven track record of producing airplanes that met or exceeded specs on time and under budget. Even 60 years later, Kingfish looks like it’s from 60 years in the future!
@MrMontanaNights
@MrMontanaNights 3 года назад
You forgot to mention A-12's longer range and higher operating altitude, in addition to the lower cost and the Skunkworks proven track record. Oh, and Convair likely exaggeration of the smaller RCS. According to Johnson anyways. But then, he wasn't exactly an unbiased opinion was he? On the other hand, the A-12 had it's own issues, including an exhaust system that didn't meet expectations and produced much more radar reflectiveness than anticipated. In anycase, the Kingfish would indeed make an interesting episode.
@Scdny
@Scdny 3 года назад
Very interesting! The X-20 program progressed a lot further than I had previously read.
@williamkillingsworth2619
@williamkillingsworth2619 3 года назад
I like that you slowed down your speech so you don’t sound so panicked
@FloridaManMatty
@FloridaManMatty 3 года назад
I really love the Johnny Quest-style animation!!
@usedcarsokinawa
@usedcarsokinawa Год назад
Dark Skies vids are fantastic!
@humancattoy7767
@humancattoy7767 3 года назад
The Dyna-Soar was way ahead of it's time.
@XxIkeWittxX
@XxIkeWittxX 3 года назад
"There was hope that the Dyna-Soar would drop atomic bombs from low earth orbit" Hope?
@TheIndyspace
@TheIndyspace 3 года назад
Yep. "Nuke the entire site from orbit, it's the only way to be sure..."
@RoadRunnerLaser
@RoadRunnerLaser 3 года назад
Nothing can be dropped from orbit. Anything “dropped” remains in orbit. It must be de-orbited which requires significant delta-V. Something in LEO will eventually return but the orbital decay and its subsequent impact point will be somewhat unpredictable.
@deadfreightwest5956
@deadfreightwest5956 3 года назад
"I'm not saying we wouldn't get our hair mussed!"
@space__idklmao
@space__idklmao 3 года назад
@@RoadRunnerLaser they mean a guided-missile sort of thing with a solid-fuelled deorbiting pack.
@RoadRunnerLaser
@RoadRunnerLaser 3 года назад
@@space__idklmao- It still wouldn’t really be practical. If it can de-orbit and target a location on the ground (slowing to a velocity that will not destroy it on re-entry), the chances are that it has the means to be launched ballistically from the ground. We have intercontinental ballistic missiles. We don’t have orbital missiles. The real advantage to an orbital missile is that it is harder to track and target but orbits are predictable, so once it has been tracked and its ephemeris has been established, it is easy to know when somewhere is safely beyond its cross-track range even if it cannot be targeted directly. It’s not a sound proposal from the outset.
@jeffk412
@jeffk412 3 года назад
I've said it before, gonna say it again. Great content and presentation! Love the voice over style! Who is the voice over artist? same person who drives this channel? Great stuff!
@JoseMunoz-gg2cn
@JoseMunoz-gg2cn 3 года назад
Why this SIR needs to speek at SUPERSONIC SPEEDS!! Great JOB THOUGTH.
@chr0min0id
@chr0min0id 3 года назад
Ah yes, my favorite spaceplane: *T H E D I N O S A U R*
@jaykay4137
@jaykay4137 3 года назад
If the dinosaurs had a space program, they'd still exist today
@SuperMagnetizer
@SuperMagnetizer 3 года назад
Dyna-soar = Dynamic soaring.
@Sk1erDev
@Sk1erDev 3 года назад
I really like how he can precisely pronounce the names of individuals that require a non English exclusive tongue to say
@WiliiamNoTell
@WiliiamNoTell 3 года назад
I despise the cpu voice.
@meistarkus
@meistarkus 3 года назад
Although his german pronunciation is better than most english natives, it's way off, of what it should sound like.
@WiliiamNoTell
@WiliiamNoTell 3 года назад
@@meistarkus I'll take it over a computer voice any day
@Olkv3D
@Olkv3D 3 года назад
@@meistarkus I am a doughnut.
@joeyr7294
@joeyr7294 3 года назад
I often wonder how long he practices his pronunciation before each video.
@Charlesputnam-bn9zy
@Charlesputnam-bn9zy 3 года назад
What I like about this channel is that there are no posts that compare one site unfavorably with another.
@dgossman
@dgossman 3 года назад
Nice job summarizing publicly available information on the project. My Dad was an AF engineer on the project.
@cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647
@cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647 3 года назад
Lucky dawg you sweet
@firefightergoggie
@firefightergoggie 3 года назад
Now tell me that Neil Armstrong isn't one serious badass!
@jocax188723
@jocax188723 3 года назад
I’d be careful mentioning DynaSoar, it usually acts as a summon beacon for Vintage Space and Amy Shira Teitel.
@moonshiner5412
@moonshiner5412 3 года назад
I seem to remember something about a lifting body back in the early 60's. I got a membership in an organization that developed stuff about the space program. They created models, cards about space craft, stickers, and books. I built models of the X-15, Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo rockets. I seem to remember another model that I built for the lifting body but can't remember what it was called. I don't think it was Dyna-Soar but the images shown about other lifting bodies looked familiar. I went on to become a Software Engineer that worked with communications satellites. I worked on a couple of programs that totally amazed me with the capabilities. You never know what the government has up its proverbial sleeve!
@Abandonedmachine
@Abandonedmachine 3 года назад
I'm loving the Boards of Canada-esque music here. Goes well with the documentary footage.
@WiliiamNoTell
@WiliiamNoTell 3 года назад
The precursor to the Boeing X-37. Thank you for not using a computer voice!
@deadfreightwest5956
@deadfreightwest5956 3 года назад
Are you sure about that?
@benjaminbarrera214
@benjaminbarrera214 3 года назад
X-37 is a Boeing vehicle but it's more fair to say it's a descendant of Rockwell's space shuttle and North American Aviation's X-15. NAA was later bought by Rockwell, which means Rockwell's space shuttle engineers formerly wore NAA badges! Experience from the X-15 was used to design the space shuttle, and this in turn was passed on to the X-37.
@sphinxrising1129
@sphinxrising1129 3 года назад
Computer voice would be better than trying to talk like Jack Webb. Just the facts, lol
@ethanclupper7034
@ethanclupper7034 3 года назад
Yall complaining about the speed of his voice, or his voice in general but he does get the info needed across in a short amount of time
@KJ-kn8pg
@KJ-kn8pg 3 года назад
Yeah that's very true, I won't be watching an 30 minute video or an hour documentary... This is fast and got most of the info. If anyone would want deep details he can watch the long documentarys.
@kralle98
@kralle98 3 года назад
@@KJ-kn8pg but 30-60min documentaries are awesome, and this dude talks too fast and it hurts to listen to
@paulcurtis9852
@paulcurtis9852 3 года назад
@@kralle98 I change all his videos to 80% speed and he then sounds almost normal!
@KJ-kn8pg
@KJ-kn8pg 3 года назад
@@kralle98 then that's up to you... If you got plenty of time if you are young and you are interested, ofc but there are people that got small amount of time so that's good for them. When you will grow up and go to college for example you will have limited time too and then everything will be better if it's faster!
@WALTERBROADDUS
@WALTERBROADDUS 3 года назад
Kids in the slow class....😏
@benjaminsmith7024
@benjaminsmith7024 3 года назад
Most quality driven RU-vid Channel with the best Educational material on Science and Military Facts. Love your work man 🤙🇦🇺
@lukecreamer8426
@lukecreamer8426 3 года назад
Hearing you reference the X-37 in this video, I was hoping to find a video on it from your channel. Maybe something to look forward to in the near future?
@johnasbury7511
@johnasbury7511 3 года назад
The x20 wasn't abandoned. It became the military unmanned shuttle
@Aengus42
@Aengus42 3 года назад
It's one of those ideas I miss, even though it never happened.
@simonacuthbert1
@simonacuthbert1 3 года назад
Well produced, compelling viewing as ever.
@brroney
@brroney 3 года назад
Great presentation!
@mresch8
@mresch8 3 года назад
The stuff one can think up and attempt, when you have unlimited funds and unlimited man power..
@lilbill1777
@lilbill1777 3 года назад
Yeah its incredible and this is just what we know about when Trump had the pentagon audited for the first time ever they came up with 20 Trillion yes that a T for Trillion in funds they couldn't explain how they spent just think about what we don't know about
@caboose8001
@caboose8001 3 года назад
@@lilbill1777 You'll thank them in a couple of years, just like how the many past classified projects of the US.
@RoadRunnerLaser
@RoadRunnerLaser 3 года назад
Despite what NASA press agents have been saying for years, re-entry heating is not caused by friction but pressure. This is why re-entry vehicles have blunt noses and leading edges. It is to reduce the pressure. The heating is caused by the increased pressure in the hypersonic bow wave as air builds up in front of the vehicle and cannot get out of the way. If it were friction, the most heating would be seen where the air is travelling the fastest over the fuselage. This is not what is observed. The areas of greatest heating are seen where the air is travelling the slowest. Friction being the cause of re-entry heating is a myth which is taking far too long to die.
@RonaldReggae
@RonaldReggae 3 года назад
fascinating!
@benjaminbarrera214
@benjaminbarrera214 3 года назад
Friction is much easier for people to understand, just rub your hands together and you can feel the heat. Heating by compression, that's way too much science!
@RoadRunnerLaser
@RoadRunnerLaser 3 года назад
@@benjaminbarrera214 - Heating by compression is familiar enough to anyone who’s ever pumped up a bike tyre. This attitude of “lie to me as long as I understand it and don’t tell me the truth because it confuses me” really pisses me off. If people are so averse to being given factually accurate information, we might just as well dispense with science and put everything down to magic. How does an internal combustion engine work? Magic dragons. How does electricity work? Magic pixies. How does this medicine work? Magic spells. How is re-entry heating caused? Magic heat-rays.
@christophermichael.w.7577
@christophermichael.w.7577 2 года назад
I remember my brother having a model rocket of X19 or 20.We used to launch them on a 4 acre lot.The X20 was not practical because it would go up and glide down and we stopped using it because it went so far.
@RogueWraith909
@RogueWraith909 3 года назад
The X-33 was a similar design that was also cancelled. It was meant to replace the space shuttle but iirc it never flew at full scale, smaller scale models were flight tested though.
@146
@146 3 года назад
Me: Never ever ever understood why RU-vid have the playback speed setting.. Post surgery me trying to understand a single word RU-vid: Playback @ 75% 👌🏼
@billgaudette5524
@billgaudette5524 3 года назад
Me without surgery, doing exactly the same thing. Holy hell this guy speaks faster than any other channel I watch.
@johnleonatti8573
@johnleonatti8573 3 года назад
I graduated from Penn State in 1963 with a BS in aerospace engineering. My first job was with Boeing. They were doing a lot of hiring because the cold war was going on, as was the Viet Nam war, so I thought I'd have a long career at Boeing. (I was not drafted because I was married and was entering a "critical national security industry") Eleven months later, however, the military cancelled the Dyna-soar program that Boeing was counting on (I was working on Minuteman II ballistic missile), and I was out the door along with thousands of others. My introduction to the real world! LOL!
@3366larryandrews
@3366larryandrews 3 года назад
I worked for Boeing on military avionics products in the early 1980s. I met a retired Boeing employee who worked the electronics section at the Boeing Surplus store who was familiar with the Dyna-Soar program. He worked in Destructive Testing in the 1960s. He told me that Dyna-Soar pilots were training in a simulator that was using a moon globe fashioned from photos from Russian unmanned moon missions. That moon globe was later given to the World's Fair Pacific Science Center in Seattle and is still there today. Appears some thought of the Dyna-Soar as an interplanetary vehicle.
@SteveWright-oy8ky
@SteveWright-oy8ky Год назад
Some year back i viewed a video with still shots names and dated with the NASA logo titled < MOON BALL and the person posting it was ," GREEN MAGOOS ". The pics showed that very Moon Globe and was housed in a building with white washed windows. Around it was a heavy built square tube framed rail track for a camera dolly to roll on for simulations for the LEM Training Facility. Also a huge convex wall with exactly placed craters and surface features, also for the LEM training and simulations . The dates on the photos were 1963 and 1964 under the NASA logo . Wonder if you ever saw it ?
@douglasleathes9853
@douglasleathes9853 3 года назад
Really enjoy your content. Would be good to hear bout the X37
@snacklesskerbal2204
@snacklesskerbal2204 3 года назад
Escape velocity is an incorrect term, escape velocity is the speed at which you leave the Earth-Moon system's gravity entirely and enter interplanetary space.
@TheDwightMamba
@TheDwightMamba 3 года назад
Orbital velocity?
@calmiller3024
@calmiller3024 3 года назад
You are not entirely correct. Escape velocity is a speed that allows for an object's escape from Earth's or any other gravity well. Not necessarily in a vector towards interplanetary space. A velocity that allows an object to leave Earth and not fall back, 25,020 mph in the Earth's case. It can result in a sustainable orbit.
@mydogbrian4814
@mydogbrian4814 3 года назад
- Not to mention "escape viscosity"! (° hic°)...
@paulbaker9277
@paulbaker9277 3 года назад
You have good knowledge and very interesting subjects and I like your channel very much, but Please , lets relax a little & slow down just a bit .
@snailsaredumb9412
@snailsaredumb9412 3 года назад
I like the fact dark5 has multiple channels im still discovering
@foreverpinkf.7603
@foreverpinkf.7603 3 года назад
Never heard of that. Thank you.
@Asiandynamo
@Asiandynamo 3 года назад
Damn. I was waiting for Dinah Shore.
@mydogbrian4814
@mydogbrian4814 3 года назад
- Good one!
@SeverityOne
@SeverityOne 3 года назад
"3632 degrees Fahrenheit..." also known as 2000 degrees Celcius.
@Dr_Do-Little
@Dr_Do-Little 3 года назад
Was wondering where this incredibly precise number came from. 🤦‍♂️
@mydogbrian4814
@mydogbrian4814 3 года назад
- That's 2000° Calculus! ... "Hic"
@dougball328
@dougball328 3 года назад
Correction: The Titan I and II did not use the X-15's XLR-99 engine. That engine produced 58,000 pounds of thrust and was made by the Reaction Motors division of Thiokol. The Titan used the LR-87 engine made by Aerojet. It produced 215,000 pounds of thrust. The Titans had no need for the throttle capability of the X-15 engine.
@shamimal-mamunkhan1190
@shamimal-mamunkhan1190 3 года назад
Very very good to here you today .today's speech n pronounced was like documentary.keep it bro
@jodycrawford5539
@jodycrawford5539 3 года назад
That looks like the experimental plane that Steve Austin crashed in 1975. We can rebuild him
@cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647
@cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647 3 года назад
We can rebuild him, we have the tools the technologies to make him faster stronger, that is another episode of dark skies one a prototype of an early version of the space shuttle the pilot only lost his right eye.
@cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647
@cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647 3 года назад
@@anonmachina I'm female by the way I got laughed at one Christmas season at school why I wanted the GI Joe set it was the rescue the Mummy set? but look who laughing now females kicking who's ah ah now
@jodycrawford5539
@jodycrawford5539 3 года назад
@@anonmachina I watch it almost every day. It's flat and triangular 👍
@jodycrawford5539
@jodycrawford5539 3 года назад
@@anonmachina I also had that GI joe
@moshunit96
@moshunit96 3 года назад
Virgin Galactic must have saved some money using that design. Looks identical except they added movable wings.
@MrMontanaNights
@MrMontanaNights 3 года назад
Reminds me of the canceled X-33 VentureStar, though I suppose only due to it's lifting body nature and general appearance.. and being spaceplane that glided to land of course. The X-33 might be an interesting subject for the channel.
@jaredkennedy6576
@jaredkennedy6576 3 года назад
You can definitely see the influence of this design in the Scaled Composites ship.
@garymckee8857
@garymckee8857 3 года назад
The animation looks like a Johnny Quest cartoon.
@WiliiamNoTell
@WiliiamNoTell 3 года назад
Don't forget Clutch Cargo and paddlefoot
@BELCAN57
@BELCAN57 3 года назад
That's from the "Dyna-Soar" info movie made in the early 60's I think it's available on YT.
@Markle2k
@Markle2k 3 года назад
It wouldn't be unreasonable for Hanna-Barbera to have been contracted to do their inexpensive animation style for the Air Force.
@markplott4820
@markplott4820 3 года назад
Filmation.
@dadillen5902
@dadillen5902 3 года назад
They were made during the same era. The 60s.
@semiconductorwave7859
@semiconductorwave7859 3 года назад
If you put the playback speed on 0.75x, it’s actually pretty decent content.
@iamasmurf1122
@iamasmurf1122 3 года назад
Hahaha yeah sounds normal
@alwayscensored6871
@alwayscensored6871 3 года назад
I'm old enough to remember the Dynasoar. Every time they cancelled space ships destroyed more of my dreams.
@darindrossel5349
@darindrossel5349 3 года назад
I remember my father telling me about this project. He worked on the launch site at Vandenberg Air Force Base.
@c.l.7525
@c.l.7525 3 года назад
"Dyna-Soar". Get it? Get it? Its a play on the word "Dinosaur"! 🦕🦕
@julievorster5414
@julievorster5414 3 года назад
Still not sure what you mean? Explain
@c.l.7525
@c.l.7525 3 года назад
@@julievorster5414 Hey Julie!
@ChanukaST
@ChanukaST 3 года назад
Thank you captain obvious
@c.l.7525
@c.l.7525 3 года назад
@@julievorster5414 See, about 70 years ago there were "winged beasts" called "Dinosaurs". They came, they went...its all history now..l
@bryangrote8781
@bryangrote8781 3 года назад
We had so many incredibly advanced programs a half a century ago that were cancelled. Gotta wonder if some were not actually weren't cancelled and became "black programs" and what we might have now. USAF and USMC were not separate branches until they became so powerful that making them separate from Army and Navy made sense. Now we also have Space Force as a new branch. That should tell us something about what they aren't telling us.
@deadfreightwest5956
@deadfreightwest5956 3 года назад
Space Farce. It will rely on science, something its leader doesn't believe in. He will succeed just as he has with Covid-19.
@charlestaylor253
@charlestaylor253 Год назад
They'll never tell the people anything but what they think we should be allowed to hear... 🤬
@charlestaylor253
@charlestaylor253 Год назад
They'll never tell the people anything but what they think we should be allowed to hear... 🤬
@marksadler4457
@marksadler4457 2 года назад
Something else that probably killed its further development was the "Outer Space Treaty"(formally the Treaty on Principles Governing the Activities of States in the Exploration and Use of Outer Space, including the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies) *source for dates was Wikipedia "it was opened for signature in the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union on 27 January 1967, entering into force on 10 October 1967." Our unit was briefed/remined about this every year or so while I was in SAC (Strategic Air Command) before we had an inspection.
@tonyhenthorn3966
@tonyhenthorn3966 3 года назад
That wasn't a wasted effort like the video makes it sound. It led directly to the success of the Space Shuttle.
@darrylflorence2162
@darrylflorence2162 3 года назад
Don't forget Steve Austin didn't walk away from his landing.
@bigd1119
@bigd1119 3 года назад
He had a slight limp
@flybobbie1449
@flybobbie1449 3 года назад
Had a great tv career though after the crash.
@amramjose
@amramjose Год назад
As a kid in the 60s fascinated by the early space program, I was amazed at the drawings of the Dyna-Soar and couldn't believe it got cancelled, as NASA took over space flight.
@freesytunes
@freesytunes 3 года назад
My stepfather was a mathematician at Wright Patterson. He worked on the Dyna Soar project. I use to tell the kids at school about the project, and they all called me a liar! One day dad brought home a bunch of swag from the project. I took it to school for show and tell. Naturally I went from zero to hero. There was a model of Dyna Soar in the museum at Wright Patterson. But I haven't been there since 2004. For what ever reason, a lot of secret Government and Nasa work was done at Wright Patterson in those days.
@dougball328
@dougball328 3 года назад
To this day WPAFB is the home of the AFRL - Air Force Research Lab.
@treebuck
@treebuck 3 года назад
Only 4 F5D Skylancers were ever built and two remain today. The aircraft that Neil Armstrong flew (the one in this video) is on static display at the Armstrong Air and Space Museum in Wapakoneta, Ohio.
@ozzy7763
@ozzy7763 3 года назад
What if it wasn’t abandoned?
@oatlord
@oatlord 3 года назад
Wonder if that automated shuttle is an off shoot of this idea. Edit: literally what you just said as I hit enter.
@General5USA
@General5USA 3 года назад
The x-20 did fly and did make it into outer space in the 1970s and returned safely no bomber version was ever planned and the project was OFFICIALLY over in 1979. It flew perfectly! ....The End...
@brianmoore1164
@brianmoore1164 3 года назад
A possible idea for a future video would be the lifting body research craft. The fruits of lifting body research can be seen in multiple modern fighters.
@paulcurtis9852
@paulcurtis9852 3 года назад
80% playback speed makes his voice sound almost normal. Much more listenable! :)
@paulhsv1121
@paulhsv1121 3 года назад
With so many people making the same comment you’d think he would s-l-o-w d-o-w-n just a little. Hey, Flash Gordon, do you go though life just as fast?
@TheArozconpollo
@TheArozconpollo 3 года назад
So right, thanks for the tip. Great production too bad it's ruined by the narration.
@doylee469
@doylee469 3 года назад
His voice is part what makes these so great.
@clarkpeters8273
@clarkpeters8273 3 года назад
I really want to like this guy's videos, but he gets so many basic facts wrong that I can't trust what he says. For starters, the Titan 1 and 2 did not use the same engines as the X15. Not even close.
@Eddie42023
@Eddie42023 3 года назад
I don't even want to like them. They're intended to imply sinister intent and a sense of covering-up. The distorted information is part of that. NONE of which is part of the real stories of these things.
@shustyrackleford_710
@shustyrackleford_710 3 года назад
@@Eddie42023 says two people that have never produced youtube content
@garretbernard8174
@garretbernard8174 3 года назад
lmao then make a video of this quality covering the same topic, see how many views yours gets. nobody cares.
@shustyrackleford_710
@shustyrackleford_710 3 года назад
@@garretbernard8174 ahoy fellow sailor of the seas of reality!
@RoadRunnerLaser
@RoadRunnerLaser 3 года назад
@@garretbernard8174 - Ah... of course, view-count is a more important metric of accuracy than adherence to facts... /sarc
@i-a-g-r-e-e-----f-----jo--b
Great history, thanks! I always thought they named it after Dinah Shore.
@avnrulz8587
@avnrulz8587 3 года назад
Well, it now fits its name, Dinosaur.
@alantownsley6391
@alantownsley6391 3 года назад
I’mnothavinganyproblemswiththevoiceatall
@tapio83
@tapio83 3 года назад
Key is to play it at 0.75. Much easier listening
@Nedula007
@Nedula007 3 года назад
What's wrong lol
@cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647
@cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647 3 года назад
If the video was longer maybe he could be able to not be so in much of a hurry, folks
@jc-tc6ei
@jc-tc6ei 3 года назад
It is a great material for English learner to practice listening skills. 😂
@craiga2002
@craiga2002 3 года назад
IF you can keep up at that speed! ;-)
@jc-tc6ei
@jc-tc6ei 3 года назад
@@craiga2002 Yes, this is why I said this is a great material for practice English listening.
@matteodelurgio2018
@matteodelurgio2018 3 года назад
no mention of the SNC Dream Chaser? pretty much a reincarnation of X-20
@Floxflow
@Floxflow 3 года назад
Great content(always). But the voice over pace seems just a little bit too fast. It's good and precise though.
@rp6122
@rp6122 3 года назад
slow down before u give me a stroke
@MrCountrycuz
@MrCountrycuz 3 года назад
Dude you talk too damn fast!
@dontask8979
@dontask8979 3 года назад
You can play it slower
@haroldhenderson2824
@haroldhenderson2824 3 года назад
Dyna Soar was more like a dinosaur. Overweight, no clear usage and not worth feeding. Great video, good work.
@1Three8Fiver
@1Three8Fiver 3 года назад
Love this video, first made interesting to me by Amy Shira Teitel's Vintage Space...
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