EC00-0317-41
The third iteration of the X-38, V-131R, glided under a giant parafoil toward a landing on Rogers Dry Lake near NASA’s Dryden Flight Research Center during its first free flight Nov. 2, 2000. The X-38 prototypes were intended to perfect technology for a planned Crew Return Vehicle (CRV) “lifeboat” to carry a crew to safety in case of an emergency on the International Space Station. Free-flight tests of X-38 V-131R evaluated upgraded avionics and control systems and the aerodynamics of the modified upper body, which was more representative of the final design of the CRV than the two earlier X-38 test craft, including a simulated hatch atop the body. The huge 7,500 square-foot parafoil would have enabled the CRV to land in the length of a football field after returning from space. The first three X-38’s were air-launched from NASA’s venerable NB-52B mother ship, while the last version, V-201, would have been carried into space by a Space Shuttle and made a fully autonomous re-entry and landing.November 2, 2000NASA Photo / Carla Thomas› X-38 Project Description
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