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Sunday, 05 June 2022 09:59

The technology to fly a Boeing 720 remotely-controlled existed in 1984

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The technology to fly a Boeing 720 remotely-controlled existed in 1984 NASA

In 1984 NASA Dryden Flight Research Center and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) teamed up in a unique flight experiment called the Controlled Impact Demonstration (CID), to test the impact of a Boeing 720 aircraft using standard fuel with an additive designed to suppress the fire. 

The additive FM-9, a high molecular-weight long-chain polymer, when blended with Jet-A fuel had demonstrated the capability to inhibit ignition and flame propagation of the released fuel in simulated impact tests.

The technology to fly a Boeing 720 remotely-controlled existed in 1984 The technology to fly a Boeing 720 remotely-controlled existed in 1984

The 14 flights had 9 takeoffs, 13 landings, and around 69 approaches, to about 150 feet above the prepared crash site, under remote control. These flights were used to introduce AMK one step at a time into some of the fuel tanks and engines while monitoring the performance of the engines. On the final flight (No. 15) with no crew, all fuel tanks were filled with a total of 76,000 pounds of AMK and all engines ran from start-up to impact (the flight time was 9 minutes) on the modified Jet-A.

The CID impact was spectacular with a large fireball enveloping and burning the B-720 aircraft. From the standpoint of AMK, the test was a major setback, but for NASA Langley, the data collected on crashworthiness was deemed successful and just as important.

Read 307 times Last modified on Sunday, 05 June 2022 10:11

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