NASA Ames Research To Close Largest Windtunnels 118
Makarand writes "The world's largest and second largest
wind tunnels operated by the
NASA Ames Research center
will be shutdown after 60 years
and may remain shut unless major defense contracts from
the Pentagon or the private sectors are available.
The largest windtunnel will be fired up for the last time in June for four hours.
It will test the parachutes that will land the Mars exploration rovers onto the Red Planet
next year.
Fewer defense contracts and the increasing use of computer simulations are being cited as reasons
for the windtunnels to face closure."
blows (Score:5, Funny)
No (Score:2)
(The fans are downstream from the test section.)
Re:No (Score:1)
*Rim shot*
sorry...
Simulation jobs (Score:1, Offtopic)
FP!
Well blow me... (Score:3, Funny)
Funride (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Funride (Score:2)
whooooooo! *splat*
Re:Funride (Score:3, Interesting)
Cheers,
Costyn.
Re:Funride (Score:1)
Women must wear skirts
Re:Funride (Score:1)
I’m surprised. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I'm surprised. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I'm surprised. (Score:5, Informative)
wind tunnel tests the actual thing
The largest one could house a 737, which is not that large of a plane, and it can only attain a speed of 140 mph. What good is that? This is a very small subset of the "actual thing". I mean if you already went to the expense of creating a fullsize preproduction aircraft, why not throw a robot pilot, a computer and some sensors and fly the thing for real? Or throw a 1/4 size plane into a windtunnel that can test up to 700 mph?
Subsonic air flight is pretty much old hat by now. "Real" windtunnels can do things at speeds up to mach 7 or so to test the interactions of heat/pressure/speed that approach chaotic interactions and are very difficult to model or conduct a real test, and these windtunnels are at the threshold of our current technologies. This is what I would like to see from NASA. I see this as a sign of progress, not a sign of budget cuts.
Takeoff, Landing, Rotorcraft (Score:3, Insightful)
As far as "flying the thing for real", it's very hard to get a 3-D picture of the flow around an aircraft in flight, especially if it isn't flyable yet.
Re:I'm surprised. (Score:2)
Re:I'm surprised. (Score:2)
Re:I'm surprised. (Score:2)
In fewer words (Score:2)
Cryogenic tunnels do the same thing by cooling the gas; it's a bit safer too.
Re:I'm surprised. (Score:1, Funny)
"One test is worth 1,000 expert opinions."
Translated, this means that there's nothing quite like empirical data to verify analytical results. The gathering of this empirical data is best done in a controlled environment, NOT post-production!
Re:I’m surprised. (Score:2, Interesting)
However, no software is perfect.
Isnt the surest way of knowing how an object will behave in the wind is to run it through a wind tunnel?
After all, consider sending a probe to mars. What if the parachute checked out OK in a computer simulation, but doesn't apply to real physics because of some bug?
Its not a matter of money, but a matter of time.
To see a probe destroyed after years of hard work is very sad, especially when it could have been avoided by placing it i
Re:I’m surprised. (Score:5, Funny)
I don't know, my "Hello World" program seems to be bug free. Be careful with sweeping generalisations.
Isnt the surest way of knowing how an object will behave in the wind is to run it through a wind tunnel? After all, consider sending a probe to mars. What if the parachute checked out OK in a computer simulation, but doesn't apply to real physics because of some bug?
Computers can do cute things like simulate the parachute in a Martian atmosphere. Which might be kind of handy given that the air density on Mars is 1% [aspsky.org] of Earth.
For the simple stuff, there are wind tunnels. For everything else, there's computers.
Re:I’m surprised. (Score:4, Funny)
Does it check if the output is writable? Does it do integrity checks on its memory(and itself) to verify there was no corruption or tampering?
Re:I’m surprised. (Score:2)
Just define it as bug free in the specs
Re:I’m surprised. (Score:2, Insightful)
Wrong. For simple stuff there are computers, for everything else there's wind tunnels. Just because a computer can model something, does not mean we know how to model it.
Re:I’m surprised. (Score:2)
Wind Tunnels are Simulators too, duh (Score:1)
Gee, I guess it's impossible for an experimentor to be able to evacuate the air in a wind tunnel until it was 1% that of sea level on Earth....Wa
Re:I’m surprised. (Score:5, Informative)
Reynolds numbers are roughly matched (by changing temperature and flow speed) to test in smaller-than-life wind tunnel tests, and it's now possible to do this for a much larger range of real word conditions (by using colder tunnels and high/low pressure and high velocity flows) with much smaller (ie cheaper) wind tunnels. It's also done much more accuratly, up to and including equivalent tests for supersonic and hypersonic flows. You just can't test a hypersonic (M5+) flow in a large wind tunnel, it would need a huge mass flow rate.
Combine this with the availability of cheap supercomuter time and the fact that your 3D models can be used for aerodynamic testing, systems integration _and_ CAD/CAM (so you only need to build one virtual model and not four - saving a huge heap of cash) and you have a sharp decrease in the need for large wind tunnels.
Re:I’m surprised. (Score:2)
Re:I’m surprised. (Score:3, Interesting)
I think I used to walk by there (Score:3, Informative)
That link is really good; I wasn't aware of an online history. There were always tales of incidents, like this one:
Re:I think I used to walk by there (Score:1)
Re:I’m surprised. (Score:4, Funny)
If they are going to use an AMD* based computers they'll need an EXTRA wind tunnel instead to cool them.
* I got an AMD so I'm allowed to bash it :)
Re:I’m surprised. (Score:1)
Hangar 1 also at Ames (the hangar used for the USS Macon, a dirigible from the 1930's) has a bunch of lead and other chemicals (and, hence
This isn't absolutely horrid... (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm just glad that the kind of world that built them isn't here. Not that widespread fear of terrorism, suspension of civil rights without public outcry, and widespread imperialism are good, but at least we're unlikely to see the kind of war that ravages an entire continent for a decade, or at least not ours.
Note: I wrote this at almost three in the morning, so if it's a bunch of crap, that's probably why.
Re:This isn't absolutely horrid... (Score:2)
Oh, you mean the world that landed a man on the moon? Or perhaps the world that sent probes to the outer planets and, ultimately, out of the solar system entirely? Or maybe you're talking about the world that produced fast, reliable air transportation anywhere in the globe? Or could you be referring to the world that produced the hypersonic X-planes?
Don't act like this wind tunnel was made to kill babies and burn villages. It was built b
Re:This isn't absolutely horrid... (Score:1)
I'm fully aware of that. However, what were we doing sixty years ago? We were fighting the bloodiest war that the world has ever seen, that had more casualties than all other wars combined. That device was built to enable us to build materiel of war. It was to let "engineers" further the war effort. It's no shock that the "Army Corps of Engineers" are a group that are used in battle to complete necessary tasks, and have
Re:This isn't absolutely horrid... (Score:2)
Try this excellent wind tunnel site clicky [nasa.gov] and see if I am wrong.
NOOO (Score:3, Funny)
"MAJOR" contracts needed? (Score:2)
Re:"MAJOR" contracts needed? (Score:2)
So yes, I say it takes major defense programs. Because only a tiny fraction of a programs overall budget will be dedicated to windtunnel work. And much of the analysis will be subscale. You'll only go full scale once the design is nailed down. Even then you need programs
also requires a lot of power (Score:2)
In further news (Score:5, Funny)
NASA is also looking into tapping the "natural gas" deposits found around the nation's Taco Bells.
Testing?? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Testing?? (Score:2)
Re:Testing?? (Score:1)
see this is one of the reasons a windtunnel is better than software. if there is a problem in software you might never know until the real "stress test" happens, but a wind tunnel is a practical stress test - where the environment is replicated using real physics as much as possible (rather than softwar
I thought???? (Score:1, Funny)
Racing... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Racing... (Score:1)
Last year Jaguar sucked cause they didn't have a wind tunnel. This year they suck because they have a driver who can't keep the car on the track, and runs over his own mechanics.
Go McLaren!
Re:Racing... (Score:1)
just to clarify...not 100 meters (Score:2)
The world's largest is only 80 X 120 ft. [nasa.gov]
Re:Racing... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Racing... (Score:1)
recipe for failure (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:recipe for failure (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:recipe for failure (Score:1)
A simulator only tells you what a thing should do, not what it actually does.
Fan for computer. (Score:1, Funny)
Maybe i could buy the wind tunnel and move in like
they did with those old missle silo's. It could be
sleeping on air every night. I guess you could be
flipping around in there unless you ate a balanced diet.
The upside is no one would hear you fart.
what you say? (Score:1)
we went from:
In space no one can hear you scream
to:
in this wind tunnel no one can hear you fart.
I'm surprised you didn't mention that there was also no 'lingering' problem either, just whoosh!
Re:Fan for computer. (Score:2)
The tunnel is driven by six 40-foot diameter fans that are powered by six 22,500 horesepower motors.
22,500 horsepower... now that, my friends, is what I call a fan!
A sad day... (Score:3, Funny)
Because now, everyone will have to use a third-largest wind tunnel, and just dream about the days when there was a second largest wind tunnel and even a largest wind tunnel.
Re:This really blows. (Score:1)
Re:This really blows. (Score:1)
Reading from the right to left
Outflow pipe#FANS#--TUNNEL--#FANS#InFlow pipe
it suckes and blows
Wow! This brings back some memories! (Score:5, Interesting)
We did lots of commerical and military stuff, and I'm really not surprised to find the F117 and a few other machines that I prolly shouldn't mention not on their list of aircraft we helped build.
For a young geek in Western New York, this was a radically cool job. When I started working there we used a bunch of IBM 1401's [geocities.com], at the time their largest single installation of these machines.
Later we became a DEC shop, and beta tested their PDP 11/70 [telnet.hu] series of machines.
Prolly the neatest thing - aside from the computers that is - were the models. There were a group of craftsman that would carefully, over a period of months and sometimes years, hand craft these incredibly accurate models of the various aircraft.
But they weren't just static models, being integrated with hundreds of air pressure sensors.
I worked on what was called the 'Data Reduction Team'; our machines captured, in real time, data from these sensors and later we could model the prototype aircrafts performance - should it be built that is!
Far cheaper to spend a few months in a wind tunnel testing various models then to build the real thing and have it crash.
When working we were a 24/7 shop, and although the money was good, that was the rub. The biz was largely defense driven, and after a few years I got tired of the binge and purge nature of working in defense.
But the story had a happy ending, as I landed a gig at Bell Labs and never looked at the defense industry again.
The old Ames setup (Score:3, Interesting)
The Standardized Wind Tunnel System (SWTS) was run in all the subsonic and transonic tunnels, and we had a contractual obligation to fix any problem within two hours (the $5000/hour cost figure was the reason for that).
The PDP's ran DEC's RSX-11M op
Fundraising? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Fundraising? (Score:1)
Re:Fundraising? (Score:2)
Well, we can be sure that shipping won't be included [slashdot.org], yet, some geeks [slashdot.org] would want to live in it..
It's simply not (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It's simply not (Score:1)
"Surely it doesn't cost that much to run". It incurs a cost to run, and yes it would be nice for science to keep open, but if it's running in negative dollars maybe it needs to go.
As a wide-eyed recent Aerospace Engineering graduate, I rest assure that this is NOT being closed because of numerical methods. As for many other e
It can be economical (Score:3, Interesting)
However the Aerospace Engineering Department at Old Dominion University figured they could use the wind tunnel and started to operate it themselves and were able to both train students and make money from it.
Recently the Wind Tunnel has been used to test full scale model of a Wright Flyer [wrightexperience.com] that is scheduled to fly at the end of this year.
NASA may not be able to operate these facilities economically, but smaller groups that
How about more in-house wind tunnel tests? (Score:2)
Between that and today's supercomputers that can do large-scale computational fluid dynamics (CFD) very accurately, small wonder why large wind tunnels are f
60 years? (Score:1)
Yeah I know its lame but im tired, and there are wolves chasing after me.
hope they keep the building (Score:4, Interesting)
It adds another weird element to the already surreal aspect that Ames/Moffet presents, particularly to the north. There's a number of odd (nay, sinister) looking buildings, some positively Quatermassey domes, weird towers, and of course the giant rectangular intake of the wind-tunnel building. The whole place has a cool area 51 big science of the 60s feel about it.
Combine that with the Mountain View city lot beside it, where they keep hundreds of trees and bushes in wooden boxes, ready to be transplanted, lined up in neat little rows - it looks a bit like the set of The Prisoner.
Nearby is SGI's main campus, where they've build a couple of ultra-modern office buildings (not as short of cash as we may have thought). Given that SGI's major remaining customers are NASA and NSA, it's get another little piece of the "look what government money built" zone up by Shoreline.
Re:hope they keep the building (Score:3, Interesting)
I never thought about the site as "Prisoner" like but indeed it is. These large structures are very visible from the 101 freeway that runs right by the base, but you can't really appreciate the sheer size of these structures until you're on the base right next to them.
I live in Cupertino, just a couple of miles away. Back when Moffett Field was an active Naval Air Station, there was a yearly Air Show usually featuring the Blue Angels, acrobatic planes, mili
More like Big Science of the 40's (Score:2)
The 12', also being shut down, was also an interesting beast, operating at several atmospheres in a closed circuit. Someone once calculated that the compressed air had enough stored energy to blow the entire block-sized structure a half mile into the air. It was tested fairly carefully.
Local people will be happy (Score:5, Informative)
It is interesting to see now they don't have enough customers.
Kind of sad (Score:1, Interesting)
Rest easy, MilitaryIndustrial Pork to the Rescue (Score:2)
The point? The military is going to be nice and flush with cash, if anyone actually *wants* to use the tunnels, they will get $$$.
it's a defensive measure (Score:1)
Goes to show... (Score:2)
Speaking of the wind.... (Score:1)
Or maybe it blows because it's not blowing...
Or maybe it's just this comment that blows.
This is sort of an intended result (Score:1)
It sounds like things are working out the way they were intended to. It's not that wind tunnels will completely disappear, but we'll be able to use them to cross-check portions of computational results.
And don't forget: wind tunnels can't test everything, even on
very encouraging (Score:2, Insightful)
This is an interesting post but... (Score:2)
BB, I know that graduation parties can bring a good man down, but your post is hard to read. Split it in paragraphs and capitalize, man.
I read your post because I am very much interested in the aeronautics field, but rest assured that 99% of the potential readers skipped it because of its bad formatting. That's really too bad.
That said, you are entirely right. I did a brief stunt in numerical analysis and simulation. Most standard codes work well now (gotta love FORTRAN spaghetti plates) for sub-, trans
16ft too (Score:1)
Bless my ears (Score:1)
Here in the trailer park... (Score:2)
Really. Exit 101 onto Shoreline N, then turn right on Space Park Way. Space Park Way ends at the trailer park, backed up against the NASA Ames boundary fence. The view driving down Space Park looks truly wierd, with a giant air intake, over a hundred feet high and much wider, towering over the trailer park.
If anyone ever makes "The Slums of Silicon Valley", that's the location.
What'll happen to them? (Score:1)
Also I heard of people using old aeroplane fans, pointed down, and then using the thrust to push themselves upwards, so they get an effect just like skydiving, but only a few feet off the ground. It was used for training and safety tests and such, could these be used like that? My guestimates figure you could do car-diving with wind tunnels that big!
^^^ ^^^ <- air
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this is.. (Score:1)
Rather sad though.
Wow (Score:1)