Historic Photos of NASA's Cavernous Wind Tunnels

(theatlantic.com)

47 points | by ohjeez 2 days ago

9 comments

  • dsrtslnd23 1 minute ago
    With all the technological advances, why are wind tunnels still widely in use today (instead of pure computational approaches)?
  • yardie 11 minutes ago
    The NASA Langley stability wind tunnel [0] is now part of Randolph Hall at Virginia Tech. You can visit it in Blacksburg, VA. Beautiful campus, btw. The stability tunnel is the biggest, they also have smaller hypersonic tunnels and

    I worked there as a work-study student. Part of the job was wiping down the tunnel chamber after their test runs. The smoke you see used in wind tunnel videos is not actually smoke, but a white oil. And for a FWS job the pay wasn't bad, had to put on a bunny suit and crawl around tight spaces, LOL.

    [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virginia_Tech_Stability_Wind_T...

  • echoangle 32 minutes ago
    https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2018/05/historic-photos-of...

    Magnetically levitating the model in the tunnel and measuring the forces by measuring how the magnets need to be driven to keep the model in place is pretty cool.

  • irthomasthomas 8 minutes ago
    Incredible photography.
  • trebligdivad 1 hour ago
    The 1937 construction picture with the horses is a great contrast of technologies.
  • JKCalhoun 52 minutes ago
  • robviren 2 hours ago
    Reminds me of the old construction photos for nuclear reactors in the US. Astoundingly complex machines at a massive scale getting out together at what now feels like impossible speed. I can't help but feel like a Roman 100 years after the fall staring up at aqueducts wondering how anyone every built such a thing.

    I'm positive someone could show me an impressive thing we built recently. I don't feel like that is my point. Im just astounded those people in that time could build what they built with the tools they had as fast as they did.

    • Samtidsfobiker 1 hour ago
      We can build amazing things today too, but we have a lot higher standards and a lot more requirements than they did, which makes everything take longer time. Outside my office window an enormous new new warehouse was erected in just a few weeks, but it is just a huge box with no added extras so it can't have been very hard to do
    • lorislab 44 minutes ago
      One thing that changed is that modern engineering moved a lot of complexity from the construction site into the design phase. A project today may take longer because we simulate, certify, model failures, and optimize before pouring concrete. The old projects sometimes had more visible physical labor, but less computational overhead.
  • close04 1 hour ago
    > In 1920, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) completed its first wind-tunnel facility, a copy of an existing British tunnel.

    This is a reminder that nobody starts at the top. They usually start by copying a lot of what those at the top do, as a shortcut to getting there.

  • coreyh14444 2 hours ago
    Imagine what Adrian Newey could have done in there...