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The Bendix Central Air Data Computer is a gear-based analog computer used in 1950s fighter planes. It computed "air data" such as airspeed, Mach number, and temperature. We finally got it operational, hooked it up to some instruments, and got turning gears and spinning dials.

110,070 次观看 • 2 年前 •via X (Twitter)

9 条评论

Ken Shirriff 的头像
Ken Shirriff2 年前

My previous thread discusses the internals of the Bendix computer if you want to learn more. @curious_marc, @TubeTimeUS, and I have been working on this for a long time

Ken Shirriff 的头像
Ken Shirriff2 年前

For videos on the Bendix Central Air Data Computer, see @curious_marc's YouTube channel:

CW 的头像
CW2 年前

this the same Bendix?

Ken Shirriff 的头像
Ken Shirriff2 年前

Yes, Bendix made lots of products. Bicycle brakes? Sure. Analog and digital computers? Yup. Mass spectrometers? Ok. Guidance for the Saturn V rocket? Yes. Record players? Those too. Surface-to-air missiles and nuclear bomb parts? Why not?

Code_of_Kai 的头像
Code_of_Kai2 年前

Baggage would have loved this.

SageDog🇺🇲 的头像
SageDog🇺🇲2 年前

Million dollar question: Is it producing accurate results?

Ken Shirriff 的头像
Ken Shirriff2 年前

The results are inaccurate for two reasons. First, the instruments aren't compatible, so the indicated values aren't right. Second, we lost some of the alignment between gears during repair and we don't know the calibration procedure. So we won't be flying our F-104 with this.

colby h2/acc 的头像
colby h2/acc2 年前

what absolutely stunning engineering. thanks for sharing

AKA 的头像
AKA2 年前

How often was maintenance required? Lubricanting the gears and checking accuracy must have been tedious.

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