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View Full Version : Lockheed Martin officially introduces supersonic X-59 plane with NASA



Teh One Who Knocks
01-16-2024, 02:58 PM
By Aislinn Murphy | FOXBusiness


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Lockheed Martin officially introduced its experimental X-59 plane with NASA late last week.

The supersonic aircraft, which debuted Friday at a joint event in California, was built to produce a "quieter sonic thump" comparable to the closing of a car door as opposed to a sonic boom as it surpasses the speed of sound to reach up to Mach 1.4, the company and NASA said.

FOX Weather had earlier reported on Lockheed Martin and NASA’s plans to unveil the over 99-feet-long aircraft that has a 29-foot wing-span.

"The entire X-59 team leaned into the expertise of both legendary organizations, NASA and Lockheed Martin, to ensure success for this program. I am extremely proud of everyone who made this historic moment possible," Lockheed Martin executive Greg Ulmer said.

The Lockheed Martin-built X-59 needs to next undergo integrated systems, engine runs and taxi testing before it can take its first flight, the company and NASA said. They are targeting later in 2024 for that.

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The plane, once flight-tested, will begin supersonic flights above "populated areas" in the U.S. to "provide the U.S. and international regulators with statistically valid data required to help approve new rules that could allow quiet commercial supersonic flight over land," according to Lockheed Martin.

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NASA official Bob Pearce said NASA "seek[s] to open new commercial markets for U.S. companies and benefit travelers around the world" through "demonstrating the possibility of quiet commercial super sonic travel over land" with X-59.

It will use NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center in southern California as its home base, per NASA.

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Lockheed Martin and its Skunk Works unit has worked on the X-59 project for years, scoring a $247.5 million NASA contract to bring it to life and test it back in 2018, as previously reported by FOX Business.

The Maryland-based company builds both commercial and military aircraft.

In October, Lockheed Martin said it had generated nearly $48.7 billion in net sales over the course of the first three quarters of 2023, marking a 3.6% increase compared to the same period in the prior year. Its net earnings for the first nine months of the year were $5.05 billion.

FBD
01-16-2024, 03:02 PM
its too bad the cia doesnt let the military use flying saucers :lol: these things are obsolete

Godfather
01-19-2024, 03:48 AM
It's ugly :lol: The 22 and 35 are so sexy, this sort of surprises me but obviously totally different aircraft.

FBD
01-19-2024, 01:43 PM
I always loved the f-22, it was cool seeing a lot of the engines and stuff up close when I did that job at pratt & whitney. they had shit up all over the plant boasting like a mf about that plane. this was of course before the globalists in our government decided the USA didnt need all that air superiority, and made sure isreal got some of them before they cut production.

lost in melb.
01-20-2024, 07:36 AM
Strange that they testing something so small. There is no real world usage for such a slow, small plane.