Sue Hartigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Hi Steve:
I'm always being drug to air shows by my husband, and have see the plane
which you are talking about. But it isn't that big. It's a military
aircraft of some sort (Len being a pilot probably knows the name).
It can stay in one spot and hover, go straight up and down, both
vertically and horizontally, and of course fly straight ahead.
But the one you spoke of at the beginning, at 900 feet, is exactly the
length of the Titanic!!!!
Sue
>
> If you have a nuclear powered aircraft, which can deduce the effects of
> gravity and drag then you have moved the major obstacles that limit the size
> of most conventional aircraft, I have seen it silently hover and rotate on
> it own axis, so I would doubt that vertical take off and landing is possible
> with little effort.
> My only thought is it must have a enormous hanger, and what would happen if
> it got hit by lightening?
>
> Steve
--
Two rules in life:
1. Don't tell people everything you know.
2.
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