@royal1d: If the speed record for a crewed, powered aircraft, is Mach 6.7 (4520mph or 7274km/h)… how’s a ship go 25k🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤔🤔

Royal1D
Royal1D
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Region: US
Friday 15 May 2026 05:13:15 GMT
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theloniuscrespin
theloniuscrespin :
“It’s would have to nose down 800-ft per second” so we’re just saying fuck gravity and forgetting about how that works
2026-05-15 09:42:10
113
wolfie1403
wolfie1403 :
I mean, his maths is off to start with. it would be 320 inches curve per second. 2455mph top speed + 60 seconds = 40 miles per second. 40 x 8 inches earth curve = 320 inches...320 inches is only 27 foot or 8.5metres? not much is it?
2026-06-08 08:22:22
2
awoken019
awoken :
The blackbird flies these speeds at 80k feet. That's just twice as high as a commercial airplane. So we're talking about the lower half of the stratosphere. The official speeds at reentry from the Artemis roughly translate to .4 mach at that height, while after liftoff mach 3 was reached about 10km heigher than the SR71 flies. In other words: the thinner air in heigher altitudes is the explanation for less friction on the Artemis.
2026-06-13 22:25:29
0
hater_ade0
hater_ade :
Blackbird is designed to fly in earth's atmosphere, the space shuttle is designed to fly in space where there is no friction.
2026-06-13 13:18:51
3
thanksforyourcooperati0n
thanksforyourcooperati0n :
All NASA paperwork claims a flat unrotating earth
2026-06-12 03:21:10
3
mickbuzz1
mickbuzz1 :
I have flown at 35,000 feet at night. I'm not the only person who has done this. Millions of holidaymakers do this every single day. Flying at 35,000 feet at night would be impossible on a flat Earth, with the sun in the sky 24/7 and above me!
2026-06-06 16:45:13
5
bigbadjohn954
Big John P. :
How did the space shuttle do Mach 25 (17,500 mph) to leave earths atmosphere without ripping apart ? Thats the hard question.
2026-05-15 15:57:26
22
rgm080419
RGM080419 :
And a space shuttle does 14,000 miles an hour or something like that
2026-06-11 19:42:04
1
crispynuggets44
James :
Did you know that in SPACE, there’s no atmosphere ergo no friction
2026-05-15 07:32:21
17
dirtriderdog4
dirtriderdog4 :
Look at the SR 71 and tell me where they store the fuel.
2026-05-25 11:46:57
7
gyulabgy85
Bürger Gyula :
Can someone tell me where is the fuel for this birds? Just think about it for a sec😁
2026-06-13 19:20:04
0
juelzlee1
Juelz :
I genuinely am confused how people know the sr-71 blackbird and its capabilities on EARTH but they question a spaceships capabilities (hundreds of millions of dollars of research btw)
2026-05-15 12:47:40
1
henkie06
henkie06 :
Hilarious this guy
2026-06-07 17:45:07
0
jcz7734
czczio :
But you know that a plane can make a flight relative to the horizon without quilting with its beak? All you need is a speed control. And when a passenger plane lands, it lowers the flight over the runway, and then the beak has up. haha but you're funny
2026-06-06 09:53:51
0
lowlyop
LowlyOP :
well this guy's clearly a rocket surgeon
2026-05-15 08:20:55
18
dj.harris89
DJ Harris :
No it wouldn’t
2026-06-07 14:04:12
0
tazio7107
Steve Brown1373 :
Please read
2026-05-15 05:27:34
5
leefitzgerald1005
Lee Fitzgerald :
he's not mentioning the difference between flying along the air friction of the planet compared to bursting through it to get into space...partial air friction with the shuttle compared to the blackbird
2026-06-07 13:46:34
0
jasnjas3.0
Jason :
It goes mach 8+
2026-06-12 04:48:41
0
ar16nj
Ar16 :
It’s programmed to keep elevation
2026-06-09 22:12:33
1
universeulalternativ
universulalternativ :
sr 71 has a range of 4600 km....has paper thin wings, where the fuel fit in those wings????
2026-06-06 15:23:33
2
tyler_blarg
tyler Blarg :
“Gravity”
2026-05-20 19:36:14
0
bp5022
Ladder Vibes :
In a vacuum genius
2026-05-15 13:52:15
0
dannywms8
dannywms8 :
Is there proof of it ever flying this speed ?
2026-06-08 07:08:39
1
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