Sat, Dec 21, 5:59 AM CST

Right Angle Rebellion

Photography Aviation posted on Jan 17, 2006
Open full image in new tab Zoom on image
Close

Hover over top left image to zoom.
Click anywhere to exit.


Members remain the original copyright holder in all their materials here at Renderosity. Use of any of their material inconsistent with the terms and conditions set forth is prohibited and is considered an infringement of the copyrights of the respective holders unless specially stated otherwise.

Description


Taken at the Marine Corps Air Station (MCAS) Miramar Airshow, October 2005. For more photos, visit http://www.warbird-photos.com ----------------------------------------------- The one that started the rebellion of right angles, the Lockheed F-117 Nighthawk... aka the Stealth Fighter. The F-117 is a unique aircraft, and for more than just obvious reasons. Aside from having nearly NO right angles on the entire plane as to direct radar beams in directions away from the source, it's unique engine system can produce very little heat. Many people don't realize that the landing gear on a F-117 is actually the exact same gear as on the Boeing F-15 Eagle fighters. In order to save some time and keep the F-117 near budget, they purchased the extra landing gear from McDonnell Douglas/Boeing at the time and incorperated it secretly into the F-117. When the F-117 was first tested to see if it would really be 'invisible' by radar, they placed a smaller F-117 perfect scale mockup out in the middle of a desert area. Once they turned on the radar, there was a massive size blip right where the F-117 was. They immediatly thought that the test had failed and that both the radar absorbant paint on the aircraft and it's no right angles were still not defelecting the beams away. But, upon looking at the F-117 out in the desert, they noticed something... a bird had landed on the F-117! That's right, the bird was giving off more of a radar ping than the F-117 was. Full size F-117s are said to only make the radar ping of about the size of a seagul's ping. If you were to take every single F-117 in existance, you could fit all their radar pings into a single B-52 Stratofortress's ping! When flying through United States airspace, ATC radar cannot pick up the F-117's signature. Obviously, that poses a severe hazard to commercial traffic. So, when an F-117 will be flying in civilian airspace, they place these odd shaped aluminum attachments onto the sides of the aircraft that will purposly reflect radar back and make the F-117 show up on ATC radar. In the photo above, you you look to the F-117's right side, you'll see one of the 'Warts' (as the F-117 crew call it) sticking outward. Shot with a Canon Rebel XT EOS 350D DSLR Camera (8mp). Lens was a Canon 100-400mm USM IS F4.5L Series.

Comments (7)


)

Dann-O

2:55AM | Tue, 17 January 2006

The weight o fthe ECM on a B-52 is probably more than a F-117. (Last I was told it was around 7 tons)

)

LouLouBell

2:57AM | Tue, 17 January 2006

Wow what a great shot, especially front on. I have been going to the Melbourne Airshow for the past 8 years but we never get planes as cool as this !!! Very Very Well Done!!!!

)

ysvry

3:23AM | Tue, 17 January 2006

great aircraft foto.

)

Svarg

3:32AM | Tue, 17 January 2006

I always thought these look like space craft. Nice capture!

)

jcv2

3:37PM | Tue, 17 January 2006

Impressive capture of this impressive aircraft! Incredible to see it! Excellent work! :)

)

marinaio

4:39PM | Thu, 19 January 2006

excellent photo, wery good

)

Celtic_Lass

5:20PM | Tue, 24 April 2007

Excellent POV


0 269 0

00
Days
:
18
Hrs
:
00
Mins
:
09
Secs
Premier Release Product
InStyle - Ginger Dress for G8/8.1 Females
3D Figure Asset Addons
Top-Selling Vendor Sale Item
$11.45 USD 50% Off
$5.73 USD

Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.