- Lockheed CL-400 Suntan
infobox Aircraft
name = CL-400
type = Proposedreconnaissance aircraft
manufacturer = Lockheed Aircraft Corporation
caption = 3-view of the Suntan concept aircraft
designer= Clarence L "Kelly" Johnson
first flight=
primary user=
more users=
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retired=
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variants with their own articles=Suntan was the
code-name of aprototype reconnaissance aircraft program, with the goal of creating a much faster and higher-altitude successor to the U-2, enabled by the use of liquid hydrogen (LH2) as fuel. From1956 -1958 , theUnited States Air Force funded a highly secretive program of research and development on the aircraft (the CL-400, designed at the LockheedSkunk Works ) and engine design, and made significant investments in large-scale LH2 production. In addition to Lockheed, Pratt and Whitney (part of United Aircraft, nowUnited Technologies Corporation ) played a major part. Program successes included the concept design of aMach 2.5 aircraft capable of flying at 30,000meter s, and successful conversion of an existingturbojet engine to run on liquid hydrogen, as well as 25+ hours of testing on a customized LH2 engine design.Ultimately, budgetary pressures and difficulty achieving sufficient range, plus the fact that an LH2 powered aircraft was considered too dangerous [ [http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/SP-4404/ch8-12.htm] Gen. Curtis E. LeMay... received a full briefing on Suntan and his initial reaction brought dismay to the team. "What," he exploded, "put my pilots up there with a ... bomb?"] and expensive to maintain led to the project's cancellation. In addition, the unusual fuel would have meant that existing airbases would have needed extensive facilities to handle the aircraft.
However, the aircraft research was redirected to more conventionally-fueled designs and resulted in the successful
SR-71 .By advancing the state of the art in LH2 propulsion, and by establishing an industrial infrastructure for high-volume hydrogen production, the groundwork was laid for successful use of liquid hydrogen as a
rocket fuel for theApollo program and theSpace Shuttle .Notes
* Chapter 8, "Suntan," in "LIQUID HYDROGEN AS A PROPULSION FUEL, 1945-1959" from the NASA History Office [http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/SP-4404/ch8-1.htm]
ee also
*
Reaction Engines A2
*Skylon
*Space Shuttle References
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