|
Entered service |
1966 |
|
Crew |
2 men |
|
Dimensions and weight |
|
Length |
32.74 m |
|
Wing span |
16.94
m |
|
Height |
5.64 m |
|
Weight (empty) |
30.6 t |
|
Weight (maximum take off) |
78 t |
|
Engines and performance |
|
Engines |
2 x Pratt & Whitney J58 |
|
Traction (dry / with afterburning) |
2 x 145 kN |
|
Maximum speed |
3 661 km/h |
|
Service ceiling |
25.9 km |
|
Range |
5 230 km unrefueled |
|
Until its
first retirement at the end of 1989, and then the planned
reactivation of two in the mid 1990s but followed by the
announcement of continuing full retirement in April 1998, the SR-71
was the world's fastest and highest-flying conventional aircraft. It
was a truly extraordinary machine, designed for the strategic
reconnaissance role with a mass of sensors including ASARs-1
(advanced synthetic aperture radar system) or the Itek camera that
could scan to the horizon on each side of the flightpath, and two
pre-programmable high-resolution cameras. The Lockheed SR-71 was
originally developed as a replacement to the
U-2.
The 'stealthy' airframe was
designed for a crew of two (pilot and systems operator) and minimum
drag, and was therefore evolved with a very slender fuselage and
thin wings of delta planform blended into the fuselage by large
chines that generated additional lift, prevented the pitching down
of the nose at higher speeds, and provided additional volume for
sensors and fuel.
The airframe was built largely of titanium and
stainless steel to deal with the high temperatures created by air
friction at the SR-71's Mach 3+ cruising speed at heights over 21
336 m. Power was provided by the two special
continuous-bleed turbojets which at high speed provided only a small
part of the motive power in the form of direct jet thrust from the
nozzles (18%), the greater part of the power being provided by inlet
suction (54%) and thrust from the special outlets at the rear of the
multiple-flow nacelles (28%).
Nicknamed Blackbird for its special
overall color scheme that helped dissipate heat and absorb enemy
radar emissions, the SR-71 was developed via three YF-121-A
interceptors which reached only the experimental stage, from 15 A-12
(including one trainer) Mach 3.6 reconnaissance aircraft ordered for
the CIA (and, in the case of two A-12 (M)s, as launching platforms
for D-21 hypersonic cruise reconnaissance drones) and first flown
from Groom Lake in March 1962. The SR-71A entered service in 1966
and 30 aircraft were built, while training was carried out on a
conversion type comprising one SR-71B and one similar SR-71C
converted from SR-71 standard.
|
Video of the Lockheed SR-71
reconnaissance aircraft |
|
|