Film, Media & TV3 mins ago
What happened to the passenger super glider?
I can remember once reading that passenger jets in the future will be taken up by a rocket to the edge of space and then the passenger glider released where it would glide to the earth. Can anyone remember this or shed any light on it?
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No best answer has yet been selected by Frankk. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.James May went up in a U2. I think you are thinking along the lines of the HOTOL space plane designed by Barnes Wallis.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A46904835
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A46904835
I don't think Barnes Wallis designed HOTOL. He died in 1979.
The link says the design owes a lot to the "swallow" design that he came up with.
A lot of these rocket transportation ideas are just too expensive to be commercial. You might love the idea of being zoomed into space to touch down in Australia 5 hours later but £2,000 a ticket is a steep ticket price, and that's their estimate from 2 years ago
Consider this too. If you need to get to the other side of the world quick - you ring up and someone says "Yes certainly sir, we do 3 flights a week - we can fit you in the day after tomorrow"
Not really commercially viable is it?
Still the EU was going to give the project 10 Million to evaluate - don't know if that happened or whether belts were tightened after the banking crisis
http://www.esa.int/es...ng/SEMTCU0P0WF_0.html
and Google LAPCAT II
The link says the design owes a lot to the "swallow" design that he came up with.
A lot of these rocket transportation ideas are just too expensive to be commercial. You might love the idea of being zoomed into space to touch down in Australia 5 hours later but £2,000 a ticket is a steep ticket price, and that's their estimate from 2 years ago
Consider this too. If you need to get to the other side of the world quick - you ring up and someone says "Yes certainly sir, we do 3 flights a week - we can fit you in the day after tomorrow"
Not really commercially viable is it?
Still the EU was going to give the project 10 Million to evaluate - don't know if that happened or whether belts were tightened after the banking crisis
http://www.esa.int/es...ng/SEMTCU0P0WF_0.html
and Google LAPCAT II
There have been plenty of these ideas over the years Frank. I remember the proposal for a vehicle similar to the Space Shuttle which could enter space in Europe and descend over Australia about 30 minutes later! It's good to have all these ideas - it's where progress starts!
At the end of the day though, it all boils down to economics and the market. The cheapest way to move masses of people from A to B is by conventional jet airliner. That's the cheapest means for the airlines as well as for the fare-paying passenger.
At the end of the day though, it all boils down to economics and the market. The cheapest way to move masses of people from A to B is by conventional jet airliner. That's the cheapest means for the airlines as well as for the fare-paying passenger.
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