Why We Miss the X-15
Not only was it the fastest. It may have been the best flight research program ever.
- By Linda Shiner
- AirSpaceMag.com, November 01, 2007
Inconel X, a ferociously strong nickel alloy, gives the X-15 its gun-metal black color. Inconel was chosen for the airplane's skin because it retained its strength up to 1,200 degrees Fahrenheit, a temperature the X-15 would routinely experience at high speeds.
Eric Long/NASM
(Page 5 of 5)
Lewis: There’s an interesting comparison with the Orbital Sciences Antonio Elias, drew from the X-15 dimensions. The wingspan was set by what the B-52 could carry. That’s another example of the X-15 legacy.
Hallion: One of the things the program engineers discovered when the X-15 returned from a mission is that occasionally you’d get dimpling on the structure. Aircraft experience structural loads because they’re generating lift and experiencing other forces. But when you heat the structure, it experiences a whole different kind of structural load. These thermal loads would occasionally buckle the skin near rivets or where there were plates joining. And this little buckle would act like an inlet. At hypersonic speeds, air would ram through that inlet, and damage could occur downstream. So if you look at the skin of the X-15, you’ll see some interesting things. On the leading edge of the wing, you’ll see things that look like little cap strips. Those cap strips were used to prevent hypersonic leakage into the structure, based on what people discovered from actual flight test results.
Looking at the X-15 here from the second floor [of the National Air and Space Museum] under the lights, you can see a sort of beer canning effect. You see that this vehicle really has been through it; it’s withstood that thermal hypersonic environment, and it has that gun-blued look to it. When people make models of the X-15, they make a neat, flat black model, but it’s really not. It’s a heat-treated metal.
You take a look at the gaps and voids [in the skin] of the X-15, which were designed to accommodate the anticipated thermal expansion of the material. Where the X-15 wing joins the fuselage, there’s a significant gap that starts at the leading edge of the wing and reaches back almost to the quarter chord. That’s an open slot all the way back to the spar. Now this is a very robust wing; it’s hard to relate this to the conventional rib and spar construction because the whole thing is almost solid. But the point that I’d make is we have gotten away from the notion of test as test. We use this terrible term "technology demonstrator." It is a term we should walk away from. Technology demonstration is what I do when I go into a high school science class; it’s where you have repeatable experiments through which nothing new is learned. We’re standing in front of the X-15, which is a vehicle of actual flight test. In flight test, you go out and you explore unknowns. You’re not demonstrating anything; you’re learning things. And if you’re going to learn things, you need to be able to study what you’ve accomplished. We have tantalizing bits of data from some of these programs where we don’t actually know what happened in the last seconds of a flight or the last seconds of an experiment. We don’t have the complete understanding that we would only gain if we were actually recovering something on the ground. We need to look at that artifact and study and figure out where we go next.
Lewis: Several years ago Donald Rumsfield got some bad press for using the term "unknown unknown," but engineers use that term all the time. There are unknown unknowns and known unknowns.
Engineers working on the X-15 program faced both types of unknowns. Towards the end of the program, there was experimentation with a variety of high-temperature ablative coatings. And there was a question, "What happens if the ablative coatings out-gas during the reentry and fog up the windows? How’s the pilot going to land?" They didn’t know how bad the effect would be. But the program was characterized by very clever engineering, and they found a very elegant solution. They simply put an iris over one of the windows. And the pilot flew with one window; when it fogged up, he opened the iris and looked out the other window—and that’s how he landed.
Hallion: And that’s another way that the X-15 made a contribution to future programs. The X-15 became a test bed for other systems and concepts. We learned with that spray-on ablator that that was not a good way to configure a reentry vehicle for a human presence in space. Now there may be some future time when we find that we can do that, but this countered what people thought at the time. There was the idea that you could build a really cheap, lightweight, conventional-material vehicle, maybe even out of aluminum, and you could spray it with this ablator, and you could fly it, and you could refurbish the ablator, and sha-zam! you’d be right back in business again. This demonstrated that you weren’t able to do that.
The X-15 so quickly demonstrated its utility that people started using it for things that it was not intended for. They used it to collect micrometeorites, to collect imaging from a near-space environment. You see this by looking at the pods, which were not original to the basic design but were added later in the flight test program.
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Comments (4)
I was priveledged to obain a summary of all the X-15 flights after the program was over. I seem to remember that the author(s)felt that the entire aerodynamic flight envelope had been explored. Having also gone out to very high Mach numbers, perhaps those responsible for such decisions did not feel that further expenditures were warranted, and that the funds were better used in other areas. It appears that they were wrong.
Posted by Bert A. Smith on October 22,2008 | 10:22 PM
In the long journey that has taken humankind from the earliest dream of flight to its ultimate realization, the X-15 will forever be one of the greatest flying machines ever to rise above the earth. It is more then simply a great flying machine, but rather it is an enduring testament to humankind's achievement and in particular the men and woman who shared in its conception, construction, and ultimately its flights to the edge of space that helped extend the boundaries of our imagination.
Posted by ZB on June 24,2009 | 08:47 PM
I had the wonderful experience of seeing one of the X-15s while working at North American Aviation's Main Plant in Inglewood. It was parked in a hangar next to the admin building on Imperial Highway.
I still remember how small it seemed. The letter box windows for the pilot and that surprisingly thick vertical stabilizer. If ever an inanimate object could be seen to live, that pioneer space vehicle appeared willing to accept any amount of awe, quietly, as it due.
It was a cold night for California, so near the sea in winter, that the surface felt cool. It was hard to imagine the temperature range that aircraft crossed in operation.
I too, feel the loss of momentum the teams at NAA and NASA lost.
We should never forget DynoSoar either.
We lost the U.S. Space Lab because the space shuttle was months too late to deliver fuel for the orbit control rockets.
Neither should the fiasco of politics running science that destroyed the US opportunity to fly a viable SST, nearly twice the size of Concorde, be forgotten. How many remember Boeing's win for the SST with their swing-wing. A swing wing that was too heavy to meet the space, passenger, and cargo requirements, and not admitted until they had spent all of the development money the congress had provided while trying to find a solution.
Then they had the gall to offer to build a fixed-wing aircraft based on Lockheed's design, if the congress would provide the funds. End of SST. Thank you 'Scoop' Jackson.
Posted by Wayne L. White on September 1,2009 | 12:22 PM
Scram technology is still limited today. At the end, X-15 was trying to extend endurance. What if? It seems that after burners, J58 type, could have been adapted at the time and the pontoon tanks filled with JP7. The finding from Sr 71 flights at Mach 3 that the ram effect is more fuel efficient at that speed may have been applicable to a hybrid rocket/air breathing afterburner configuration.
Posted by GET on August 27,2010 | 01:40 PM