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I was actually being facetious, but do realize that the actual capabilities are not in the public domain. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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You reckon there is one up there at all times? Nope. I reckon there's likely more stuff up there, several generations newer. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile Several generations? How many, three, four? If there are other newer vehicles in orbit, why would we fly X-37's? What is the age of the X-37? There are two active X-37's flying. I expect this one is going to need an overhaul after its long trip. I was actually being facetious, but do realize that the actual capabilities are not in the public domain. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile It's always fun to speculate on the real capabilities and purpose. We know what they want us to know. Too bad we need russkie rocket motors to launch it. |
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Collecting data that they didn't want transmitted via possibly intercept-able means?
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So umm...why are the dudes on the tarmac wearing ebola suits??
Ebola. Suits. |
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Hydrazine suits. you have to be in PPE when dealing with it, the vapors are highly toxic. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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So umm...why are the dudes on the tarmac wearing ebola suits?? Ebola. Suits. Hydrazine suits. you have to be in PPE when dealing with it, the vapors are highly toxic. Mark Watney disagrees. |
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Some people think they are just using it to troll China as the thing completely freaks them out at the higher levels apparently.
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Something that cannot be transmitted as electronic data, perhaps. It's easy to envision physical samples of something or other needing analysis. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The real special thing it does is NOT going to LEO or staying up for 674 days, other satellites do that and more. The real special thing is that it comes down and lands intact. I still can't figure out why that is, I wonder what it brings down intact that is worth all of the money they spend on it? Something that cannot be transmitted as electronic data, perhaps. It's easy to envision physical samples of something or other needing analysis. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile Like other peoples satellites? |
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The would require X-37B to rendezvous with the target satellite, not easy.
Lots of amateurs watching X-37B, I would think one of them would have said something if it was in the same orbit as another satellite. |
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I'll have to ask the guy next door who campaigned for Obama since he's the Secret Space Missions Czar for the White House. I'm sure he'll know what's up if he's attended any of the meetings.
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The real special thing it does is NOT going to LEO or staying up for 674 days, other satellites do that and more. The real special thing is that it comes down and lands intact. I still can't figure out why that is, I wonder what it brings down intact that is worth all of the money they spend on it? Something that cannot be transmitted as electronic data, perhaps. It's easy to envision physical samples of something or other needing analysis. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile Like other peoples satellites? The payload bay on that thing is tiny. |
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all you guys disputing the "satellite thief" theory should go watch the beginning of You Only Live Twice...
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Damn, just found out that a previous commander I worked with is on the program. So fucking jealous.
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all you guys disputing the "satellite thief" theory should go watch the beginning of You Only Live Twice... View Quote What part of 'payload bay is tiny' is not sinking in? This is NOT a full-blown STS Orbiter. The problem with stealing foreign Satellites is numerous but the biggest is the surest way to secure them from piracy would be a simple on-board booby-trap. |
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all you guys disputing the "satellite thief" theory should go watch the beginning of You Only Live Twice... View Quote Does that include the parts of the movie where the stealing of the foreign satellite was tracked on radar by the country that launched it? I doubt China or Russia would approve, and I think it may be against the Outer Space Treaty. |
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The payload bay on that thing is tiny. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The real special thing it does is NOT going to LEO or staying up for 674 days, other satellites do that and more. The real special thing is that it comes down and lands intact. I still can't figure out why that is, I wonder what it brings down intact that is worth all of the money they spend on it? Something that cannot be transmitted as electronic data, perhaps. It's easy to envision physical samples of something or other needing analysis. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile Like other peoples satellites? The payload bay on that thing is tiny. Large enough to carry a paint sprayer system and several gallons of paint. Russia and China might be bitching behind the scenes about the graffiti on their satellites that just happens to cover the camera lenses. |
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Large enough to carry a paint sprayer system and several gallons of paint. Russia and China might be bitching behind the scenes about the graffiti on their satellites that just happens to cover the camera lenses. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The real special thing it does is NOT going to LEO or staying up for 674 days, other satellites do that and more. The real special thing is that it comes down and lands intact. I still can't figure out why that is, I wonder what it brings down intact that is worth all of the money they spend on it? Something that cannot be transmitted as electronic data, perhaps. It's easy to envision physical samples of something or other needing analysis. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile Like other peoples satellites? The payload bay on that thing is tiny. Large enough to carry a paint sprayer system and several gallons of paint. Russia and China might be bitching behind the scenes about the graffiti on their satellites that just happens to cover the camera lenses. I was told years ago our ASAT tech was to spray the solar panels and sensor packages and leave it intact. Blowing things up is so messy. The reason we gave up on kaboomy ASAT tech was the spray stuff worked so much better without all that nasty orbital debris. |
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Plenty of potential uses... extra spy satellite coverage, testing satellite subsystems, deorbiting dead satellites, attaching sabotage devices to enemy satellites, etc.
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Looks like a satellite destroyer to me. Hang around the horizon until one of the Ruskie sats cruise by and then WHAMMO! right up the ass with a pulsating laser beam. Damn that was cool. Now I gotta go fuck something. :) |
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Looks like a satellite destroyer to me. Hang around the horizon until one of the Ruskie sats cruise by and then WHAMMO! right up the ass with a pulsating laser beam. Damn that was cool. Now I gotta go fuck something. :) View Quote How is it gonna violate the laws of physics and 'hang'? If it could do that, it wouldn't need that $150 mil Atlas V to launch it. |
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What part of 'payload bay is tiny' is not sinking in? This is NOT a full-blown STS Orbiter. The problem with stealing foreign Satellites is numerous but the biggest is the surest way to secure them from piracy would be a simple on-board booby-trap. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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all you guys disputing the "satellite thief" theory should go watch the beginning of You Only Live Twice... What part of 'payload bay is tiny' is not sinking in? This is NOT a full-blown STS Orbiter. The problem with stealing foreign Satellites is numerous but the biggest is the surest way to secure them from piracy would be a simple on-board booby-trap. Fine, fine, fine, I give up. It is really loaded with sharks with friggin' laser beams on their heads. |
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Quoted: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/military-space-plane-lands-after-secret-mision/ An unpiloted Air Force space plane glided back to Earth Friday after a record 674-day stay in orbit, closing out a clandestine military mission with a computer-controlled landing at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. The Boeing-built X-37B Orbital Test Vehicle, wrapping up its second long-duration mission and the secretive program's third flight overall, touched down at 12:24 p.m. EDT (GMT-4; 9:24 a.m. local time), rolling to a stop a few moments later. Other than a brief Air Force statement last Friday announcing landing preparations at Vandenberg, there was no advance warning of the space plane's re-entry and, in keeping with the secrecy surrounding the program, no details on what the spacecraft might have been doing during its nearly two years aloft. View Quote I searched. space, secret and plane View Quote You didn't use X-37B in the title.
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http://www.cbsnews.com/news/military-space-plane-lands-after-secret-mision/ An unpiloted Air Force space plane glided back to Earth Friday after a record 674-day stay in orbit, closing out a clandestine military mission with a computer-controlled landing at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif.
The Boeing-built X-37B Orbital Test Vehicle, wrapping up its second long-duration mission and the secretive program's third flight overall, touched down at 12:24 p.m. EDT (GMT-4; 9:24 a.m. local time), rolling to a stop a few moments later. Other than a brief Air Force statement last Friday announcing landing preparations at Vandenberg, there was no advance warning of the space plane's re-entry and, in keeping with the secrecy surrounding the program, no details on what the spacecraft might have been doing during its nearly two years aloft. View Quote I searched. space, secret and plane View Quote C'mon people, you thought "they" were gonna abandon all those expensive satellites, and whatever else is up there.... I don't think so....who the fuck knows what's in the works, .........or what's really going on....... Hopefully....sumthin'...... |
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The real special thing it does is NOT going to LEO or staying up for 674 days, other satellites do that and more. The real special thing is that it comes down and lands intact. I still can't figure out why that is, I wonder what it brings down intact that is worth all of the money they spend on it? View Quote Actually, it has another ability up its sleeve: Significant delta-v after reaching orbit. This allows it to radically alter its orbit, if required. Regular sats generally cannot do that. |
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1) Carry small micro-sats with their own micro-engines/delta-v.
2) Release them, they rendezvous with another sattelite. 3) ????? 4) Profit. |
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Also unmentioned.... Rods from God... Deep strike asset on overwatch for years at a time. Hit any target on Earth in mere hours.
Unlikely, but plausible. |
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Also unmentioned.... Rods from God... Deep strike asset on overwatch for years at a time. Hit any target on Earth in mere hours. Unlikely, but plausible. View Quote I thought that and then dismissed it since the article mentioned all the extra weight a reusable launch vehicle has to carry into space. Why would they use a method like that to launch something that has to be heavy as shit. |
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Since it's really, really expensive, and Obama is at the helm, I'm going to guess that they are monitoring global warming.
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Its secretly mapping all gun owners for the coming confistication.
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Actually, it has another ability up its sleeve: Significant delta-v after reaching orbit. This allows it to radically alter its orbit, if required. Regular sats generally cannot do that. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The real special thing it does is NOT going to LEO or staying up for 674 days, other satellites do that and more. The real special thing is that it comes down and lands intact. I still can't figure out why that is, I wonder what it brings down intact that is worth all of the money they spend on it? Actually, it has another ability up its sleeve: Significant delta-v after reaching orbit. This allows it to radically alter its orbit, if required. Regular sats generally cannot do that. I doubt it. X-37B carries extra weight in the form of tiles for heat shielding, aerodynamic surfaces and a metal fuselage. All of that extra weight could be put into thrusters and fuel. Most satellites are purpose designed and have a much lighter apparent construction. Just how much delta-v has this orbiter demonstrated up until now? |
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I thought that and then dismissed it since the article mentioned all the extra weight a reusable launch vehicle has to carry into space. Why would they use a method like that to launch something that has to be heavy as shit. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Also unmentioned.... Rods from God... Deep strike asset on overwatch for years at a time. Hit any target on Earth in mere hours. Unlikely, but plausible. I thought that and then dismissed it since the article mentioned all the extra weight a reusable launch vehicle has to carry into space. Why would they use a method like that to launch something that has to be heavy as shit. Upgradable. Can be reconfigured for different missions. Doesn't inherently look like a weapon. Also, orbital strike doesn't have to rely on kinetic energy tungsten rods. A reentry vehicle with TPS and a more traditional guided HE warhead would be lighter. However, I find it unlikely that this is the X-37Bs primary mission. |
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I doubt it. X-37B carries extra weight in the form of tiles for heat shielding, aerodynamic surfaces and a metal fuselage. All of that extra weight could be put into thrusters and fuel. Most satellites are purpose designed and have a much lighter apparent construction. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The real special thing it does is NOT going to LEO or staying up for 674 days, other satellites do that and more. The real special thing is that it comes down and lands intact. I still can't figure out why that is, I wonder what it brings down intact that is worth all of the money they spend on it? Actually, it has another ability up its sleeve: Significant delta-v after reaching orbit. This allows it to radically alter its orbit, if required. Regular sats generally cannot do that. I doubt it. X-37B carries extra weight in the form of tiles for heat shielding, aerodynamic surfaces and a metal fuselage. All of that extra weight could be put into thrusters and fuel. Most satellites are purpose designed and have a much lighter apparent construction. If the info from this things earlier days with NASA are any indicator, it has substantial fuel onboard. Just how much delta-v has this orbiter demonstrated up until now?
Hasn't does not equal cannot. A fleet in being. If bad guys know you have a recon asset that can radically change its orbit and show up at unexpected times and places, it's a PITA to consider anything "safe". Time will tell. |
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Where was the FAA and TSA on that one? That unmanned flight was probably all like, "SURPRISE COCK BAGS!" as it landed and they were all like surprised and shit.
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Spy satelite that can zoom around changing orbit quickly then cone down and refuel then go back up?
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Quoted: http://a57.foxnews.com/global.fncstatic.com/static/managed/img/fn2/feeds/Space.com/876/493/x37b-space-plane-otv1-landing.jpg http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/61/X-37B_orbital_test_vehicle_landing.jpg http://www.extremetech.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/usaf-x-37b-landing-640x353.jpg View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: You reckon there is one up there at all times? Spreading Ebola. Low-orbit chemtrails http://a57.foxnews.com/global.fncstatic.com/static/managed/img/fn2/feeds/Space.com/876/493/x37b-space-plane-otv1-landing.jpg http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/61/X-37B_orbital_test_vehicle_landing.jpg http://www.extremetech.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/usaf-x-37b-landing-640x353.jpg I can tell from those pics it must be ebola. Those guys dressed the same as the ebola guys. |
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I read about that on the news this morning... am still curious if the leak was intentional or not. My guess is STRATCOM is trumping secrecy for political reasons. Too many derpers assuming we have no capabilities and believing Russian propaganda.
Lockmart's fusion announcement as well. It's like the good old Cold War again. Try to keep up, Russia. |
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http://a57.foxnews.com/global.fncstatic.com/static/managed/img/fn2/feeds/Space.com/876/493/x37b-space-plane-otv1-landing.jpg http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/61/X-37B_orbital_test_vehicle_landing.jpg http://www.extremetech.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/usaf-x-37b-landing-640x353.jpg View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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You reckon there is one up there at all times? Spreading Ebola. Low-orbit chemtrails http://a57.foxnews.com/global.fncstatic.com/static/managed/img/fn2/feeds/Space.com/876/493/x37b-space-plane-otv1-landing.jpg http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/61/X-37B_orbital_test_vehicle_landing.jpg http://www.extremetech.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/usaf-x-37b-landing-640x353.jpg It's got windows, so the passengers can look out. Sweet. |
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Something that cannot be transmitted as electronic data, perhaps. It's easy to envision physical samples of something or other needing analysis. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The real special thing it does is NOT going to LEO or staying up for 674 days, other satellites do that and more. The real special thing is that it comes down and lands intact. I still can't figure out why that is, I wonder what it brings down intact that is worth all of the money they spend on it? Something that cannot be transmitted as electronic data, perhaps. It's easy to envision physical samples of something or other needing analysis. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile Repairs and refit. |
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More than 3,100m/s of delta-v in orbit...
It only needed ~60m/s to station-keep for the duration of this mission... |
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Ha, none of you guys are even close.
I've got a 3rd cousin, who's ex-wife's uncle works on this program. He said the secret craft is purposely designed to safely return Barrack Obama and the Wookie back to their home planet after they allow Ebola to kill off half of America. |
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What Intel data would be valuable two years after it was collected? If it was important enough to spend billions to collect, I can't see waiting years to get it.
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