Showing posts with label Boing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boing. Show all posts

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Photo of Boing 777-200 MH370 Malaysia Airlines (MAS) Missing

Vietnamese Air Force search-owned Boeing 777 200 Malaysia Airlines the missing after two hours of takeoff March 8, 2014 plane carrying 239 people from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. Image Credit: AFP PHOTO / Thanh Nien Newspaper
Malaysia Airlines flight from Kuala Lumpur-Beijing reported missing. Plane with flight number MH370 was not able to be contacted by air traffic control shortly after takeoff on Saturday (03/08/2014) at 00:41 local time.

The Boeing 777-200 that lost contact at around 2:40. The plane carrying 239 passengers including 2 babies and 12 crew.

Passengers scheduled to arrive at the Beijing International Airport at about 6:30 am. Rescue teams from various countries including Malaysia Airlines and the local authorities are conducting a search plane together.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Boeing Phantom Ray

Boeing Phantom Ray

Boeing Phantom Ray 
Boeing Phantom Ray airborne system (UAS) is a stealthy unmanned combat air vehicle being developed by Boeing using company funds. The Phantom Ray is a demonstrator aircraft, about the size of a fighter that will conduct a program of test flights involving surveillance, ground attack and autonomous aerial refueling missions. The Boeing Phantom Ray unmanned airborne system made its first solo flight April 27, 2011 at NASA's Dryden Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base in California.

The first flight of the fighter-size jet under its own power lasted 17 minutes. The Phantom Ray reached an altitude of 7,500 feet and a speed of 178 knots (or a little over 200 miles per hour). The flight followed a series of high-speed taxi tests conducted in March to validate ground guidance, navigation and control and verified mission planning, pilot interface and operational procedures.

The successful flight demonstrated Phantom Ray's basic airworthiness and set the stage for additional flights over the next few weeks. The announcement of the flight was the first time the tight veil of security that was thrown over the program was lifted. The Phantom Ray is considered to be a test bed for the development of a series of unmanned stealthy, carrier-based strike aircraft for the U.S. Navy.

Once the aircraft becomes operational, potential missions may include intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, suppression of enemy air defenses, electronic attack, strike and autonomous air refueling.
"The first flight moves us father into the next phase of unmanned aircraft," Craig Brown, Phantom Ray program manager for Boeing, said in a statement.

"Autonomous fighter-size unmanned aircraft are real, and the UAS bar has been raised. Now I'm eager to see how high that bar will go."

The last time the stealth jet was airborne was on Dec. 13 when it was ferried to Edwards atop a modified Boeing 747 from Boeing's Phantom Works facility in St. Louis, Mo. The Phantom Works is Boeing’s own “skunk works,” whose mission is to build near-operational prototypes to get airplanes flying more quickly.