Historic Photos of NASA's Cavernous Wind Tunnels

(theatlantic.com)

45 points | by ohjeez 2 days ago

6 comments

  • echoangle 10 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.

  • JKCalhoun 31 minutes ago
  • trebligdivad 1 hour ago
    The 1937 construction picture with the horses is a great contrast of technologies.
  • 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 42 minutes 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 23 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 39 minutes 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...