Fairing Well: Aerodynamic Truck Research at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center - From Shoebox to Bat Truck and Beyond, Drag, Mack, Kenworth, Peterbilt, International, Fuel Efficiency, Cabover

Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Technology, Engineering, Automotive, Aeronautics & Astronautics
Cover of the book Fairing Well: Aerodynamic Truck Research at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center - From Shoebox to Bat Truck and Beyond, Drag, Mack, Kenworth, Peterbilt, International, Fuel Efficiency, Cabover by Progressive Management, Progressive Management
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Progressive Management ISBN: 9781311105943
Publisher: Progressive Management Publication: May 3, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Progressive Management
ISBN: 9781311105943
Publisher: Progressive Management
Publication: May 3, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Professionally converted for accurate flowing-text e-book format reproduction, this NASA report reviews research conducted by NASA on the aerodynamic efficiency of long-haul trucks. It may seem to be only a matter of fuel prices, drag coefficients, and vehicle modifications, but a nuanced examination of the subject reveals cultural influences on a technological development that might otherwise appear logical and straightforward. There are two principal objectives to this monograph. The first is to bring long overdue attention to research done at NASA Dryden on truck aerodynamics, work not usually associated with the agency but results from which had and continue to have a direct benefit to the U.S. economy. The second is to use this case as on opportunity to tease apart some of the strands of the social fabric in technology's construction and adaptation, something not regularly done with NASA's technical work. If we genuinely seek to understand ourselves, we can ill afford superficial attention to technological choices we — or others—make regarding its use, rejection, adoption, or adaptation. It's important to know who makes what decisions: the results can be surprising.

A reflection on NASA's interest in aerodynamically efficient trucks turns out to be more than just an account of fairings and base drag and surface roughness. This history is also about technological choices, cultural values, and how Americans define themselves. And since technology is a reflection of human choices and values this comes as no real surprise.

While regularly riding his bicycle from his home in North Edwards to the NASA Flight Research Center (today's Dryden Flight Research Center) on Edwards Air Force Base, Edwin J. "Ed" Saltzman noticed the push and pull of tractor-trailers as they passed him. Saltzman's route took him along a section of Highway 58 in Southern California's High Desert before veering off toward the base. The Dryden Flight Research Center is one of several tenants of the U. S. Air Force at Edwards. Highway 58 was, and is frequented by trucks coming from Arizona, Nevada, or Northern California that seek to avoid the greater Los Angeles area. As these tractor-trailers came upon Saltzman he first felt the bow wave of air pushing him away from the road and toward the sagebrush and tumbleweeds. But as the trucks swept past, their wakes had the opposite effect, tending to draw him toward the road, even causing rider and bicycle to lean into the lane. Anyone who's ridden a bicycle next to fast-moving traffic has felt some of this, although the full effect is available only to those bold enough to mingle with over-the-road tractor-trailers at highway speeds.

Saltzman came to the High Desert in 1951 to work as an engineer for the NACA, just four years after a human first successfully exceeded the speed of sound. He cut his aeronautical engineering teeth on the X-1 rocket planes that were still being used to explore the transonic and supersonic realms. In 1953, as the X-1 program wound down and the first Mach 2 flight took place, he began working on "Project 1226," later known as the X-15. The flight portion of the X-15 program lasted from 1959 to 1968, but it was preceded by years of engineering work to which Saltzman contributed. As he had on the X-1 program, he worked as an aerodynamicist focusing on questions of lift-to-drag ratios (L/D). While the NACA's X-1 and D-558-2 aircraft featured blunt afterbodies because of their rocket motors, the X-15 dwarfed both in terms of the rocket nozzle area and the resulting drag the aft end generated. Even before the X-15 program ended, Saltzman transferred to the XB-70 program, working on the Mach 3 experimental bomber that never saw production but which NASA used to explore high-speed atmospheric flight.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Professionally converted for accurate flowing-text e-book format reproduction, this NASA report reviews research conducted by NASA on the aerodynamic efficiency of long-haul trucks. It may seem to be only a matter of fuel prices, drag coefficients, and vehicle modifications, but a nuanced examination of the subject reveals cultural influences on a technological development that might otherwise appear logical and straightforward. There are two principal objectives to this monograph. The first is to bring long overdue attention to research done at NASA Dryden on truck aerodynamics, work not usually associated with the agency but results from which had and continue to have a direct benefit to the U.S. economy. The second is to use this case as on opportunity to tease apart some of the strands of the social fabric in technology's construction and adaptation, something not regularly done with NASA's technical work. If we genuinely seek to understand ourselves, we can ill afford superficial attention to technological choices we — or others—make regarding its use, rejection, adoption, or adaptation. It's important to know who makes what decisions: the results can be surprising.

A reflection on NASA's interest in aerodynamically efficient trucks turns out to be more than just an account of fairings and base drag and surface roughness. This history is also about technological choices, cultural values, and how Americans define themselves. And since technology is a reflection of human choices and values this comes as no real surprise.

While regularly riding his bicycle from his home in North Edwards to the NASA Flight Research Center (today's Dryden Flight Research Center) on Edwards Air Force Base, Edwin J. "Ed" Saltzman noticed the push and pull of tractor-trailers as they passed him. Saltzman's route took him along a section of Highway 58 in Southern California's High Desert before veering off toward the base. The Dryden Flight Research Center is one of several tenants of the U. S. Air Force at Edwards. Highway 58 was, and is frequented by trucks coming from Arizona, Nevada, or Northern California that seek to avoid the greater Los Angeles area. As these tractor-trailers came upon Saltzman he first felt the bow wave of air pushing him away from the road and toward the sagebrush and tumbleweeds. But as the trucks swept past, their wakes had the opposite effect, tending to draw him toward the road, even causing rider and bicycle to lean into the lane. Anyone who's ridden a bicycle next to fast-moving traffic has felt some of this, although the full effect is available only to those bold enough to mingle with over-the-road tractor-trailers at highway speeds.

Saltzman came to the High Desert in 1951 to work as an engineer for the NACA, just four years after a human first successfully exceeded the speed of sound. He cut his aeronautical engineering teeth on the X-1 rocket planes that were still being used to explore the transonic and supersonic realms. In 1953, as the X-1 program wound down and the first Mach 2 flight took place, he began working on "Project 1226," later known as the X-15. The flight portion of the X-15 program lasted from 1959 to 1968, but it was preceded by years of engineering work to which Saltzman contributed. As he had on the X-1 program, he worked as an aerodynamicist focusing on questions of lift-to-drag ratios (L/D). While the NACA's X-1 and D-558-2 aircraft featured blunt afterbodies because of their rocket motors, the X-15 dwarfed both in terms of the rocket nozzle area and the resulting drag the aft end generated. Even before the X-15 program ended, Saltzman transferred to the XB-70 program, working on the Mach 3 experimental bomber that never saw production but which NASA used to explore high-speed atmospheric flight.

More books from Progressive Management

Cover of the book Preparing for the Future: Developing an Adaptive Army in a Time of Peace, 1918-1941 - Between World War I and II, Fort Leavenworth Instruction, Large-Scale Maneuvers and Protective Mobilization Plan by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Security Cooperation: An Old Practice for New Times - National Security, Defense, Military Strategies, Africa Command AFRICOM, Southern Command SOUTHCOM, Section 1206 by Progressive Management
Cover of the book 21st Century FEMA Study Course: Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Management and Operations (IS-775) - NIMS, ICS, MAC Group, Joint Information System (JIS), Coordination by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Preparing for Upheaval in North Korea: Assuming North Korean Regime Collapse - Kim Family, Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), Songbun System, Juche Ideology, Pyongyang by Progressive Management
Cover of the book 2012 Smart Grid System Report to Congress: Smart Electric Meters, Renewables Integration, Electric Cars and Vehicles, Transmission Automation, Grants and Programs, Cyber Security, Energy Efficiency by Progressive Management
Cover of the book New Terrorism in France: Impact of Transnational Salafist Muslim Jihad Recruiting Wayward Youth With a Narrative of Renewed Identity, Social Media Radicalization and Lone Wolf Islamist Attacks by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Hammer Down: The Battle for the Watapur Valley, 2011 - War in Afghanistan Vanguard of Valor Series, Fight Against Taliban and al-Qaeda, Task Force Cacti by Progressive Management
Cover of the book NSA Secrets Declassified: Listening to the Rumrunners: Radio Intelligence during Prohibition, Cryptology, Elizebeth Friedman and USCG Thwart Rumrunners, Invisible Cryptologists: African-Americans by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Back to Basics: A Study of the Second Lebanon War and Operation CAST LEAD - Israeli IDF Incursions into Lebanon and Gaza 2006 and 2008 Against Hezbollah and Hamas, Tactics, Hard Lessons Learned by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Land-Based Air Power in Third World Crises: A Look at Different Types of Crises, Mayaguez Incident, Bay of Pigs, Yom Kippur War, Sub-Saharan Africa by Progressive Management
Cover of the book 21st Century Adult Cancer Sourcebook: Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) - Clinical Data for Patients, Families, and Physicians by Progressive Management
Cover of the book 21st Century U.S. Military Manuals: Military History Operations Field Manual - FM 1-20 (Value-Added Professional Format Series) by Progressive Management
Cover of the book The Paradox of Power: Sino-American Strategic Restraint in an Age of Vulnerability - China and the U.S., Chinese Nuclear Weapons, Space, Cyberspace, Strategic Power, Cyber Warfare by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Apollo and America's Moon Landing Program: NASA Engineers and the Age of Apollo - Stories of the Engineers Who Made the Moon Landing Possible (NASA SP-4104) by Progressive Management
Cover of the book The Cold War and Beyond: Chronology of the United States Air Force, 1947-1997 - Aviation and Space Milestones of the First Fifty Years of the USAF by Progressive Management
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy