• Smithsonian
    Institution
  • Smithsonian
    Journeys
  • Smithsonian
    Store
  • Smithsonian
    Channel
  • goSmithsonian
    Visitors Guide
  • Smithsonian
    magazine

AirSpaceMag.com

  • Subscribe
  • Home
  • History of Flight
  • Flight Today
  • Military Aviation
  • Space Exploration
  • Need to Know
  • How Things Work
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Blogs
  • Flight Today

In the Museum

Dainty Monster

| | | Reddit | Digg | Stumble | Email | More
  • By Bettina Haymann Chavanne
  • Air & Space magazine, July 2007
View Full Image »
Pathfinder-Plus for hanging in the National Air and Space Museums Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center. Pathfinder-Plus for hanging in the National Air and Space Museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center.

Dane Penland

The heaviest object in the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia, is undoubtedly the space shuttle Enterprise. The prize for most unwieldy, however, goes to a 700-pound, 121-foot flying wing, Pathfinder-Plus, a January addition to the Hazy collection.

In August 1998, the solar/electric-powered, propeller-driven wing flew at a record 80,201 feet. (The highest altitude achieved by a propeller aircraft is 96,863 feet, reached in 2001 by Helios, a direct descendant of Pathfinder-Plus.)

NASA developed Pathfinder-Plus with AeroVironment, a California-based manufacturer of unmanned aerial vehicles led by inventor Paul MacCready. Ever since he was a boy growing up in Connecticut, MacCready has been fascinated with flight. He started AeroVironment in 1971 as a company devoted to building environmentally friendly aircraft. “MacCready’s creations are so innovative, clever, and unique,” says National Air and Space Museum curator Bob van der Linden. “And they work. The Pathfinder-Plus is a high-lift, low-speed airfoil. The potential for that kind of aircraft is tremendous. It could perform long-term reconnaissance or function like Landsat [Earth-observing satellites].”

Several of MacCready’s inventions are already in the Smithsonian’s collection: the human-powered Gossamer Condor and its successor, the Gossamer Albatross; the solar-powered Solar Challenger; and the Sunraycer solar race car. In 1985 the Smithsonian commissioned MacCready to build a remote-controlled flying model of a pterodactyl (a flying dinosaur), which later appeared in the IMAX movie On the Wing.

MacCready designed Pathfinder in 1983 to explore high-altitude, long-duration flight. It evolved into Pathfinder-Plus in 1998 with the substitution of more efficient solar cells and the addition of a center wing section with a high-altitude airfoil, which added more than 22 feet to the wingspan. Developed as part of NASA’s Environmental Research Aircraft and Sensor Technology project, the aircraft were technology demonstrators for flight at the low end of the speed regime. Despite having eight electric motors, Pathfinder-Plus didn’t go anywhere quickly: Its top speed is only 25 mph.

Navigating the ungainly wing into the Hazy Center was quite a feat. But perhaps the biggest triumph of logistics was in coordinating a crew from AeroVironment to arrive along with the two trailers that hauled Pathfinder-Plus. Reassembling the aircraft required the specialized knowledge of the AeroVironment team, says Robert Mawhinney, a museum specialist at the Paul E. Garber Preservation, Restoration and Storage Facility in Suitland, Maryland. Mawhinney has participated in most of the hanging installations at the Hazy Center, and says this one was the most complicated.

“The airplane is extremely fragile,” he says. “The leading edge is built from Styrofoam about the thickness of a coffee cup. It’s the kind of airplane you have to work on without touching or leaning on it.”

Pathfinder-Plus was reassembled directly beneath the place in the Hazy Center where it was to be hung—once it was assembled, it couldn’t be moved because it’s so flexible it might bend until reaching its breaking point. Still, “the engineers said it was possible to bend the entire airplane so the tips of the wings would touch without snapping,” says Mawhinney. “Hanging it was like hanging a wet noodle.” As Pathfinder-Plus was lifted into place, it was supported on the joints of the wings and its pylons—rigid structures along the wing where the engines are attached.

“We did the best we could as far as simulating normal flight attitude,” Mawhinney says. “It’s a bit more U-shaped in actual flight, but it looks fairly realistic.”

 

The heaviest object in the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia, is undoubtedly the space shuttle Enterprise. The prize for most unwieldy, however, goes to a 700-pound, 121-foot flying wing, Pathfinder-Plus, a January addition to the Hazy collection.

In August 1998, the solar/electric-powered, propeller-driven wing flew at a record 80,201 feet. (The highest altitude achieved by a propeller aircraft is 96,863 feet, reached in 2001 by Helios, a direct descendant of Pathfinder-Plus.)

NASA developed Pathfinder-Plus with AeroVironment, a California-based manufacturer of unmanned aerial vehicles led by inventor Paul MacCready. Ever since he was a boy growing up in Connecticut, MacCready has been fascinated with flight. He started AeroVironment in 1971 as a company devoted to building environmentally friendly aircraft. “MacCready’s creations are so innovative, clever, and unique,” says National Air and Space Museum curator Bob van der Linden. “And they work. The Pathfinder-Plus is a high-lift, low-speed airfoil. The potential for that kind of aircraft is tremendous. It could perform long-term reconnaissance or function like Landsat [Earth-observing satellites].”

Several of MacCready’s inventions are already in the Smithsonian’s collection: the human-powered Gossamer Condor and its successor, the Gossamer Albatross; the solar-powered Solar Challenger; and the Sunraycer solar race car. In 1985 the Smithsonian commissioned MacCready to build a remote-controlled flying model of a pterodactyl (a flying dinosaur), which later appeared in the IMAX movie On the Wing.

MacCready designed Pathfinder in 1983 to explore high-altitude, long-duration flight. It evolved into Pathfinder-Plus in 1998 with the substitution of more efficient solar cells and the addition of a center wing section with a high-altitude airfoil, which added more than 22 feet to the wingspan. Developed as part of NASA’s Environmental Research Aircraft and Sensor Technology project, the aircraft were technology demonstrators for flight at the low end of the speed regime. Despite having eight electric motors, Pathfinder-Plus didn’t go anywhere quickly: Its top speed is only 25 mph.

Navigating the ungainly wing into the Hazy Center was quite a feat. But perhaps the biggest triumph of logistics was in coordinating a crew from AeroVironment to arrive along with the two trailers that hauled Pathfinder-Plus. Reassembling the aircraft required the specialized knowledge of the AeroVironment team, says Robert Mawhinney, a museum specialist at the Paul E. Garber Preservation, Restoration and Storage Facility in Suitland, Maryland. Mawhinney has participated in most of the hanging installations at the Hazy Center, and says this one was the most complicated.

“The airplane is extremely fragile,” he says. “The leading edge is built from Styrofoam about the thickness of a coffee cup. It’s the kind of airplane you have to work on without touching or leaning on it.”

Pathfinder-Plus was reassembled directly beneath the place in the Hazy Center where it was to be hung—once it was assembled, it couldn’t be moved because it’s so flexible it might bend until reaching its breaking point. Still, “the engineers said it was possible to bend the entire airplane so the tips of the wings would touch without snapping,” says Mawhinney. “Hanging it was like hanging a wet noodle.” As Pathfinder-Plus was lifted into place, it was supported on the joints of the wings and its pylons—rigid structures along the wing where the engines are attached.

“We did the best we could as far as simulating normal flight attitude,” Mawhinney says. “It’s a bit more U-shaped in actual flight, but it looks fairly realistic.”

 


| | | Reddit | Digg | Stumble | Email | More
 
Comments

Post a Comment


Name: (required)

Email: (required)

Comment:

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.



Advertisement


Most Popular

  • Viewed
  • Emailed
  • Commented
  • Topics
  1. The Navy Gets a Panther
  2. Area 51: Origins
  3. Bush Pilot Hall of Fame
  4. Where Have All the Shuttle Engineers Gone?
  5. Inside a Flying Fortress
  6. Alaska’s Crash Epidemic
  7. Earth-Like Planets Could be Right Next Door
  8. The Plane With No Name
  9. Driving the Space Shuttle
  10. Panthers At Sea
  1. Where Have All the Shuttle Engineers Gone?
  2. Area 51: Origins
  3. The Galileo Project
  4. Inside a Flying Fortress
  5. The Navy Gets a Panther
  6. The Soplata Airplane Sanctuary
  7. When Pigs Could Fly
  1. Earth-Like Planets Could be Right Next Door
  2. Bush Pilot Hall of Fame
  3. The Navy Gets a Panther
  4. Refueling Angel Thunder
  5. The Rocket Ships
  6. Did Ron Howard exaggerate the reentry scene in the movie Apollo 13?
  7. Wings & Waves Airshow
  8. The Making of Air Force One
  9. Hush Kits
  10. The 727 that Vanished
  1. Fighters
  2. Bombers
  3. Cold War Era
  4. Vietnam War
  5. 21st Century Aviation
  6. Airplane Restoration
  7. Aerospace Inventions
  8. 20th Century Aviation
  9. Golden Age of Flight
  10. Experimental Aircraft
  11. Military Aviators

View All Most Popular »

Advertisement


Follow Us

Air & Space Magazine
@airspacemag
Follow Air & Space Magazine on Twitter

Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian.com, including daily newsletters and special offers.

Popular Videos

  • Newest
  • Most Viewed

Flightseeing on Mount McKinley

(01:46)

A New Way to Navigate

(02:01)

X-47B Carrier Launch

(01:25)

SpaceShipTwo Fires Up

(02:58)

View All Newest Videos »

The Mach-2 Bomber That Never Was

(01:21)

SpaceShipTwo Fires Up

(02:58)

X-47B Carrier Launch

(01:25)

A New Way to Navigate

(02:01)

View All Videos »

In the Magazine

July 2013

  • Where Have All the Shuttle Engineers Gone?
  • Panthers At Sea
  • Earth-Like Planets Could be Right Next Door
  • Alaska and the Airplane
  • The Pilots of Mount McKinley

View Table of Contents »

Snapshot

There's No Upside-Down

An astronaut takes a walk out in space last week.

Reader Scrapbook

Discovery's Tail-Cone Fitting

Check out our scrapbook of readers' aviation and space pictures. Then add your own.


Smithsonian Store

In the Cockpit and In the Cockpit II

Current and retired curators from our National Air and Space Museum contribute the insightful text and striking images... $48.99

Smithsonian Journeys

Smithsonian at Chautauqua: The Elegant Universe

Join us in western New York and explore the mysteries of the cosmos with experts (Jun 22 - 29, 2013)




View full archiveRecent Issues


  • Jul 2013


  • May 2013


  • Mar 2013

Newsletter

Sign up for regular email updates from Air & Space magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

Subscribe Now

About Us

Air & Space/Smithsonian magazine has been delighting aerospace enthusiasts with the best writing about their favorite subject since April 1986. As an adjunct of the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum, Air & Space matches the grand scope of the Museum, encompassing every era of aviation and space exploration. With stories that range from the Wright Brothers to the design of NASA's next lunar lander, Air & Space emphasizes the human stories as well as the technology of aviation and spaceflight.

Explore our Brands

  • goSmithsonian.com
  • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
  • Smithsonian Student Travel
  • Smithsonian Catalogue
  • Smithsonian Journeys
  • Smithsonian Channel
  • About Air & Space
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscribe
  • RSS
  • Topics
  • Member Services
  • Copyright
  • Site Map
  • Privacy Policy
  • Ad Choices

Smithsonian Institution