Showing posts with label design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label design. Show all posts
Friday, April 13, 2018
Air Force One 747
Big, Beautiful, and Powerful. Fast and Agile. One of a Kind. All
Electric powered flyable rendition of the USAF Air Force One 747. We
recently designed and delivered this very challenging UAV project. #AeroTelemetry #AirForceOne #Design #UAV #AerospaceEngineering #Art #Build #Fly #Airplane #USAF #OneOfAKind #AllElectric #747airplane #History #Amazing #125mph
Monday, September 25, 2017
Allison V-1710-27 Engine Restoration
Joe Bok and his team took great pride in restoring this Allison
V-1710-27 engine. This engine traces its history back to a starboard
engine mount on a Lockheed P-38 Lightning during 1943. Previously
removed from a P-38 during the war and shipped back to the United States
for overhaul on December 31st, 1943. An incredible piece of American
history that has survived the years to be brought back to life once
again.
Valve cover removed to show the cool overhead 4-valve per cylinder design. P-39 Exhaust Stacks are just for looks!
Thursday, July 13, 2017
#TBT Flight of our 1/2 scale H-1 Racer
6 years ago today, we were flying our 1/2 scale Hughes H-1 Racer for the
AMA's 75th Anniversary Event in Muncie, Indiana. What a day! Thanks to
Steve Carey for the cool video! #aviation #design #technology #carbonfiber #AMA #anniversary #sucessfullflights #videooftheday #awesome #AmericanMuscle #AllAmericanAviators
Tuesday, October 4, 2016
UAV Landing Gear Top 5 Companies
Aero Telemetry was named one of the top 5 vendors for UAV Landing Gear.
Click here to read the full article: http://www.businesswire.com
Contact us for your custom UAV landing gear needs.
Click here to read the full article: http://www.businesswire.com
Contact us for your custom UAV landing gear needs.
Tuesday, August 30, 2016
Bonneville Speed Week 2016
2016 Hot Rod Trophy to George Poteet and our friends on the Speed Demon
II Team. Congratulations and well done! New B/BFS record and Fastest
Speed of Bonneville Speed Week at 442 MPH.
Tuesday, July 12, 2016
San Diego Air and Space Museum Visit
A great visit with the staff and volunteers of the San Diego Air &
Space Museum Restoration Shop! What an amazing group of individuals.
They really take pride in their work!
Thank you for taking the time to share your stories. #aviation #history #veterans #avgeeks #SDASM
Thank you for taking the time to share your stories. #aviation #history #veterans #avgeeks #SDASM
Thursday, January 29, 2015
Aero Telemetry's WWI Kettering Bug full size replica
Initially commissioned for a History Channel Television Show
commemorating the 100th Anniversary of the start of World War I, the
full-size replica of the Kettering Bug will now be the subject of an intense
one-hour TV documentary that will feature the various aspects of the airplanes
design, it’s secretive military history, the famous people behind the
development, and the airplane’s contribution to the advancement of early
aviation technology.
The background and technical details of the Kettering Bug
have been meticulously researched for historical accuracy and re-designed with
many of the same materials and techniques that were used to build the original.
In commemoration of the 100 year anniversary of WWI, this amazing full-size
replica is being prepared for its first flight by Joe Bok and his Aero
Telemetry Team.
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Hollywood Takes to the Air Event
Aero Telemetry was honored to have their Hughes H-1 Racer on display in the front lobby of The Academy's Linwood Dunn Theater in Hollywood two weeks ago. The 4 night event was a celebration of Aviation and Cinema. The first night was a presentation given by Oscar winners Craig Barron and Ben Burtt called The Illusions of Flight: Behind the Scenes of Hollywood's Aviation Classics. For those in attendence it was a packed house and an amazing presentation!
Below are some pictures of our H-1 Racer display.

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Monday, June 30, 2014
Aero Telemetry's Spruce Goose built for the movie The Aviator
The
Spruce Goose flew several times over two days in the Long Beach Harbor.
The first test flight took place on the afternoon of Sunday November
23, 2003.
Joe Bok's rendition of the Hughes Flying Boat made its' Hollywood Film debut on November 24, 2003. The airplane was loaded onto a barge and moved into a location near the Queen Mary. Several vintage Navy boats were moved into a position that would align them with the camera and the model's anticipated flight path. The Aero Telemetry Spruce Goose made several breath-taking flights that day.
Part of the crew launched and recovered the huge model from a floating barge, while the flight crew were positioned on a vintage World War II US Navy Patrol boat. Academy Award winning visual effects director, Rob Legato, filmed the amazing footage of the Spruce Goose as it passed by the stern of the PT boat to recreate the famous flight of the Spruce Goose.
To read more about this incredible build and flight check out the website http://www.h4hercules.com/ for all things Spruce Goose!
Joe Bok's rendition of the Hughes Flying Boat made its' Hollywood Film debut on November 24, 2003. The airplane was loaded onto a barge and moved into a location near the Queen Mary. Several vintage Navy boats were moved into a position that would align them with the camera and the model's anticipated flight path. The Aero Telemetry Spruce Goose made several breath-taking flights that day.
Part of the crew launched and recovered the huge model from a floating barge, while the flight crew were positioned on a vintage World War II US Navy Patrol boat. Academy Award winning visual effects director, Rob Legato, filmed the amazing footage of the Spruce Goose as it passed by the stern of the PT boat to recreate the famous flight of the Spruce Goose.
To read more about this incredible build and flight check out the website http://www.h4hercules.com/ for all things Spruce Goose!
Monday, May 5, 2014
Aero Telemetry's Hughes H-1 Racer
Great Article as featured in FLY RC MAGAZINE:
AERO TELEMETRY’S HUGHES H-1 RACER By Tom Atwood
An extraordinary crew works at Aero Telemetry Corporation. Founded
by Joe Bok, the Aero Telemetry Corporation (ATC) has been providing airborne electronics and custom built unmanned
air vehicle (UAV) systems to the military since the early 1990s. Many of our
readers also know that this remarkable company specializes in scale aircraft for
movies and in UAV’s. Remember the movie, The
Aviator? Joe's team provided 11 different models for the production. Notably, the giant
scale Hughes XF-11 (30-foot wingspan), H-4 Hercules (Spruce Goose), and Hughes
H-1 Racer were all flown safely and successfully. As noted at the company's website, these models
“are still considered to be some of the largest flyable scale airplanes ever built for
use in a movie. Long hours of hard work, perseverance, and technical know-how
by the Aero Telemetry team made these extraordinary airplanes possible.”
But
many may not know the diverse additional areas of expertise Aero Telemetry has
expanded into over the last decade, building on robust project successes in
military based UAV programs. One of the coolest projects in aerospace today is
the Boeing X-48 Blended Wing Body aircraft or BWB. Aero Telemetry was contracted by The
Boeing Company to build the front landing gear for the X-48 blended wing body
unmanned air vehicle. “The design and fabrication of the landing gear required
the Aero Telemetry team to perform dynamic load testing with data acquisition
sensors to match deceleration rates to acceptable airframe load limits.”
Aero
Telemetry also specializes in vintage engine restorations. Joe Bok and his team took great pride in restoring an
Allison V-1710-27 engine. That engine was once a starboard engine mount on a
Lockheed P-39 Lightning during WWII. It was shipped back to the United States
for overhaul in late 1943. It is an incredible piece of American history that
has survived the years to be brought back to life once again by the ATC
team—see the projects pages at www.aerotelemetry.com
for more on this and the other diverse
programs at ATC. Their technology is also used at academic institutions and in
one project, ATC designed a package to detect the impact energy of football helmets, while in use, on the playing field.
H1 RACER
As the AMA planned
its 75th anniversary celebration, which will be held in Muncie this July, it
inquired with Joe whether ATC might do something special for the gala event.
Joe’s team came up with a 50 percent scale H-1 Racer. The H-1 in The Aviator, designed based on countless
photos of the original at the Smithsonian, weighed 450 pounds. The new model
looked to weigh in at 225 pounds ready to fly. “Too heavy,” said the AMA. It
would have to top out at 125 pounds to be legal at the event. Joe’s
indefatigable team went back to the drawing board—a 3rd plane had to
be designed and built!
And true to form, ATC
developed new technology. Precisely engineered resin-infused carbon fiber cloth
would comprise the new H-1’s skin. This will be the largest and perhaps the most
sophisticated 50 percent scale model in the world, with custom engineered
retracts and sophisticated electronic control systems. The 5-cylinder, 4-stroke
radial initially envisioned for the project may have to be replaced with a
lighter mill. But Joe, an aerospace engineer with a can-do attitude, is not
fazed. He says this has been a useful challenge that has expanded ATC’s
markets.
We applaud this magnificent
project, and also the contributions of the ATC team in other arenas. Joe and
his people are making a difference by providing electronic systems to the
military, and for this reason this aerospace group also wears a badge of honor.
Photos by Aero Telemetry
Photos by Aero Telemetry
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Thursday, February 6, 2014
Designing the XF-11
Completing the XF-11 airplane in less than 3 months proved to be one of
the biggest challenges for the Aero Telemetry team. Joe and his team
had to design, build, and test
a custom set of hydraulic, retractable landing gear, fabricate an
ultra-strong airframe, coordinate a complex airborne flight control
system, and integrate all of these systems seamlessly to overcome the
aerodynamic stresses of high speed and heavy payload.
The primary scale models for The Aviator were the Aero Telemetry XF-11 and the H-4 Hercules or Spruce Goose. Both of these airplanes would be designed and fabricated over a period of 3 months by Joe Bok and his Aero Telemetry team. At the time, they were the worlds largest (unmanned) flyable scale aircraft ever flown for a big budget Hollywood movie.
The aerodynamic profile of the wing, engine thrust-lines, CG location, main airfoil angle of attack, incidence angles (between wing and horizontal stabilizer), counter-rotating propellers, and vertical stabilizer offset angles were just a few of the critical design criteria addressed and implemented correctly by the Aero Telemetry engineering design team. All these specific details contributed directly to the success and margin of safety exemplified in all the flights of the Aero Telemetry XF-11.

The primary scale models for The Aviator were the Aero Telemetry XF-11 and the H-4 Hercules or Spruce Goose. Both of these airplanes would be designed and fabricated over a period of 3 months by Joe Bok and his Aero Telemetry team. At the time, they were the worlds largest (unmanned) flyable scale aircraft ever flown for a big budget Hollywood movie.
The aerodynamic profile of the wing, engine thrust-lines, CG location, main airfoil angle of attack, incidence angles (between wing and horizontal stabilizer), counter-rotating propellers, and vertical stabilizer offset angles were just a few of the critical design criteria addressed and implemented correctly by the Aero Telemetry engineering design team. All these specific details contributed directly to the success and margin of safety exemplified in all the flights of the Aero Telemetry XF-11.

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