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    Day of the Cheetah

    Page 8
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    James' tall, powerfully built frame was covered-a better term

      might have been "encased"-in a stiff flight suit made of nylon

      and metallic thread. James had to carry around a small portable

      air conditioning unit to stay comfortable, and the suit was so

      stiff that James had to be hoisted into his steed on a hydraulic

      lift. A small army of "squires"-military and civilian scientists

      and technicians, led by Doctor Alan Carmichael, the chief proj-

      ect engineer and Patrick's civilian counterpart-followed James

      on his lift up toward his incredible steed.

      Both McLanahan's and James' aircraft were in a large open-

      ended hangar, used more to shield the two fighters from the

      ultra-magnified eyes of Soviet reconnaissance satellites than to

      protect against the weather. It was only four-thirty in the mom-

      ing, but the temperature was already starting to climb; it was

      going to be a scorcher in the high Nevada desert test-site north

      of Las Vegas known as Dreamland.

      But Patrick wasn't thinking about the heat. His eyes were on

      the sleek lines of the jet fighter before him.

      DreamStar . . .

      As McLanahan stood gazing at the fighter the senior noncom-

      missioned officer of the DreamStar project, Air Force Master

      Sergeant Ray Butler, moved alongside him.

      "I know how you feel, sir," Butler said in his deep, gravelly

      52 DALE BROWN

      voice, running a hand across his shaved head. "I get a shiver

      every time I see her."

      She was a child of the first X-29 advanced technology dem-

      onstrator aircraft built in the early and mid-1980s. Long, low,

      sleek and deadly, DreamStar was the only fighter aircraft any-

      where with forward-swept wings, which spread gracefully from

      nearly abeam the cockpit back all the way to the tail. The

      forward-swept wings allowed air to stick to the aircrafts control

      surfaces better, making it possible for the aircraft to make faster

      and wilder maneuvers than ever thought possible. She was so

      agile and so fast that it took three independent high-speed com-

      puters to control her.

      "Chief," Patrick said as they began a walkaround inspection

      of the fighter, "there's no question she's one sexy piece of hard-

      ware. Very sexy."

      Butler nodded. "Couldn't put it better myself."

      The cockpit seemed suspended in mid-air on the long, pointed

      forward fuselage high above the polished concrete floor of the

      satellite-bluff hangar. Beside the cockpit on each side of the fu-

      selage were two auxiliary fins, canards, integral parts of the

      DreamStar's advanced flight controls. When horizontal, the ca-

      nards provided extra lift and allowed the fighter to fly at previ-

      ously unbelievable flight attitudes; when moved nearly to the

      vertical, the canards let the fighter move in any direction without

      changing its flight path. DreamStar could climb or descend with-

      out moving its nose up or down, turn without banking, dart

      sideways in, literally, the blink of an eye.

      The one large engine inlet for the single afterburning jet en-

      gine was beneath the fuselage, mounted so that a smooth flow

      of air could still be assured even at radical flight attitudes and

      fast changes in direction. DreamStar had two sets of rudders,

      one pair on top and one on the bottom, which extended and

      retracted into the fuselage as needed; the lower stabilizers were

      to assure directional control at very high angles-of-attack (when

      the nose would be pointed high above the flight path of the

      aircraft) and low speed when the upper stabilizers would be in-

      effective.

      Even at rest she seemed energetic, ready to leap effortlessly

      into the sky at any moment. "She looks like a great big cat

      ready to pounce, " Patrick said half-aloud.

      They continued their walkaround aft. DreamStar's engine ex-

      DAY OF THE CHEETAH 53

      haust was not the typical round nozzle on other fighters. She

      used an oblong vectored-thrust nozzle that could divert the en-

      gine exhaust in many different directions. Louvers on the top

      and bottoms of the nozzle could change the direction of thrust

      instantaneously, giving DreamStar even greater maneuverability.

      The vectored thrust from the engine could also act as added

      boost to shorten takeoff rolls, or as a thrust-reverser during dog-

      fights or on landing to bleed off energy.

      She was one hell of a bird, all right, and Patrick McLanahan

      figured he had the best job in the world-turning her into the

      world's newest and deadliest combat-ready weapon. Patrick

      "Mac" McLanahan, an ex-Strategic Air.Command B-52 radar

      navigator-bombardier-especially remembered for his role on the

      Flight of the Old Dog that knocked out a Soviet laser installa-

      tion-was the project officer in charge of development of the

      DreamStar advanced technology fighter. Once perfected, the XF-

      34A DrearnStar fighter would be the nation's new air-superiority

      fighter.

      Walking around the engine exhaust they noticed a crew chief

      running over to activate an external-power cart. "Looks like

      they're ready for power," Butler said. "I'd better go see how

      they're doing. Have a good flight, Colonel.

      Patrick returned his salute and headed toward the plane he

      would be flying that morning. If the two aircraft were humans,

      the second jet fighter, Cheetah, would be DreamStar's older, less

      intelligent cousin. A by-product of the revolutionary SMTD,

      Short Takeoff and Landing and Maneuverability Demonstrator

      projects of the last decade, Cheetah was a line F- 15E two-set jet

      fighter-bomber, heavily modified and enhanced after years of

      research and development in the fields of high performance flight

      and advanced avionics. It had come to Dreamland, this top-

      secret aircraft and weapons research center northwest of Las

      Vegas, seven years earlier. It had been at Dreamland for less

      than a day before then Lieutenant General Bradley Elliott, the

      director of HAWC, had had her taken apart for the first time.

      The changes to the airframe had been so extensive that it had

      been given a code-name Cheetah instead of keeping its original

      nickname, Eagle.

      Hard to believe, McLanahan thought, that such a machine like

      Cheetah could be outdated in so short a time.

      The remarkable enhancements built into DreamStar had been

      54 DALE BROWN

      tested years earlier on Cheetah, so Cheetah shared DreamStar's

      huge movable forward canards, vectored-thrust engines and

      computer-commanded flight controls. But even Cheetah was

      starting to show its twenty years of age. Modifications to every

      component of the fifty-seven-thousand-pound aircraft meant lots

      of riveted access panels scarred across its fuselage, performance-

      robbing patches that layers of paint could barely hide. With an

      eleven-hundred-pound remote-control camera mounted just be-

      hind her aft cockpit, her once impressive top speed of Mach two

      was now a forgotten statistic-she'd have a tough time, Patrick

      thought, of reaching Mach one
    without afterburners. DreamStar

      could easily cruise at one point five Mach without 'burners.

      Where all of the high-tech components had made DreamStar

      the fighter of the future, those same enhancements had taken a

      severe performance penalty on Cheetah. But there was still one

      man who could make Cheetah dance in the sky like a brand-new

      bird. Patrick found that extraordinary young pilot asleep under

      Cheetah's nose, using the nosewheel as a headrest.

      ,. C. I I

      "Yo," came a sleepy reply.

      Patrick went up the crew-boarding ladder, retrieved a set of

      ear noise protectors from the cockpit. "On your feet. Time to

      go aviating.

      For C. Powell that bit of Air Force jargon was raw meat to

      a starving wolf-he was up, on his feet and skipping up the crew

      entry ladder like a kid.

      "Say the word, Colonel."

      "I'm stopping by to see how our boy is doing in DreamStar,

      McLanahan said, putting on the ear protectors to block out the

      noise of the external power cart. "Should be fifteen minutes to

      engine start. Get Cheetah ready to fly."

      "You got it, boss."

      In another life, Captain Roland Q. Powell, the only son of a

      very wealthy Virginia family, all five feet five and one hundred

      twenty pounds of him, must have been a barnstormer; before

      that he might have ridden barrels over Niagara Falls. "Plain

      reckless" would have been the wrong term to describe his fly-

      ing, but "reckless abandon" was close. He was totally at

      home in airplanes, always pushing his machine to the limit but

      staying in control at all times. He never flew slow if he could

      fly fast, never made a turn at thirty degrees' bank when he could

      DAY OF THE CHEETAH 55

      do sixty or ninety, never flew up high when he could fly down

      in the trees. He earned the nickname " " from his Under-

      graduate Pilot Training instructors who would mutter "Jesus

      Christ" (usually followed by "help me" or "save me") when

      they found out they had been scheduled to fly with Roland Pow-

      ell.

      He became an FAIP, first assignment instructor pilot, out of

      Undergraduate Pilot Training, but the Air Force didn't want an

      entire Air Force filled with JC. Powells, so he was assigned to

      Edwards Air Force Base. Flight test was the perfect place to

      stick Roland Powell. He knevall there was to know about aero-

      dynamics but would still agree to do anything the engineers asked

      of him, no matter how dangerous or impossible it seemed. As a

      result Powell got the hot planes. Every jet builder wanted to see

      what magic JC. Powell could conjure up with his airframe. He

      was soon enticed to Dreamland by General Elliott with the

      promise of flying the hottest fighter of them all-Cheetah. Pow-

      ell's expertise both as a pilot and as an engineer helped speed

      up the development of DreamStar, but he chose to stay with

      Cheetah. From then on, he had been her only pilot.

      But JC. Powell had had his time in the spotlight. Now, it

      was Kenneth Francis James' turn.

      When he got to DreamStar again, Patrick climbed up the lad-

      der on the hydraulic lift and watched as James was lowered into

      the cockpit. His special flight suit was preformed into a sitting

      position, making James look like a plastic doll. Once James was

      lowered into place, Patrick moved toward him as close as pos-

      sible without interfering with the small army of experts attending

      to the pilot's seat configuration.

      "Feeling okay, Ken?"

      James nodded. "Snug, but okay."

      Patrick watched as James was set into his specially molded

      ejection seat, strapped into place, and had his oxygen, environ-

      mental and electronic leads connected. The image of a medieval

      knight being readied for combat flashed in Patrick's head, topped

      off when they placed James' helmet on his head and clipped it

      into a clavicle ring on his shoulders. The helmet was essentially

      a holder for a variety of superconducting sensors and terminals

      that covered the inner surface. Once the helmet was locked into

      place, the flight suit became one gigantic electronic circuit, one

      big superconducting transistor. It became the data-transmission

      56 DALE BROWN

      circuit between James and the amazing aircraft he was strapped

      into.

      "Self-test in progress," Carmichael said. The computer, a

      diagnostic self-test device as well as an electroencephalograph

      to monitor the human side of the system, checked each of the

      thousands of sensors, circuits and transmitters within the suit

      and their connections through the interface to DrearnStar. But

      Carmichael chose not to let the computer do his work, even

      though he was the one who had designed the interface; the sci-

      entist manually ran through the complex maze of readouts,

      checking for any sign of malfunction or abnormal readings.

      He found none; neither did the computer. A few minutes later,

      Carmichael turned to Patrick, nodded. "He's ready."

      Patrick walked around the lifts narrow catwalk and knelt down

      in front of James. He could barely see a movement of James'

      eyes through the helmet's thick electro-optical lenses.

      "Ready to do some flying, buddy?"

      They looked at each other. There was no movement at all

      from James. Patrick waited, watched. James appeared to be

      trying to decide on something. He didn't seem fearful or appre-

      hensive or at all nervous. He was just . . . what?

      Patrick glanced at Carmichael. "Alan? How's he doing?"

      "His beta is pinging off the scale," Carmichael said, recheck-

      ing the electroencephalograph readouts. "No alpha or theta

      activity at all."

      Patrick turned again to James, bent down close to him. "We

      can reschedule this, buddy. Don't push it. It's not worth the

      grief .

      "No. I'll be okay. I'm just . . . trying to get ready .

      "Then relax, let it come to you, don't chase it. If it doesn't

      happen, it doesn't happen.- ,@'

      "Hell of a way to fight a war," James said-the tension in

      his voice was obvious. "I can see a fighter pilot telling his

      squadron commander, 'I know the enemy is rolling across the

      base but I can't fly today-my damn theta isn.'t responding . . I

      I've got to prove that I can go in and out of theta-alpha in a

      moment's notice."

      "Making the system operational is still a few years off, Ken,"

      Patrick told him. "Don't worry about all that. Relax, don't force

      yourself or the system. Let's just go up and have some fun

      Finish up and buy me a beer at the Club afterward. That's all.

      57

      DAY OF THE CHEETAH

      Patrick raised a hand in front of the test pilot, and James

      slapped a metallic-lined glove into it. "Punch a hole in the sky,

      buddy. That's an order, too." He gave James one last thumbs-

      up and stepped off the lift.

      By the time Patrick had stepped back onto the tarmac Dr.

      Carmichael was shaking his head in disbelief.

      "He's already under alpha-JC. parameters. I think he's getting

      to the
    point where he can do it anytime. If we had him hooked

      up outside the plane, he could probably go into theta-sine A

      before we strap him in."

      "He gets nervous every now and then," Patrick added, "es-

      pecially before a big test like this one. Back me up on monitor-

      ing him, Alan."

      An external power cart was running on Cheetah by the time

      Patrick returned, climbed into the aft cockpit and strapped in.

      Aircraft power was already on, and his crew chief and test-range

      officers had already done a fast preflight of the telemetry and

      data collection instruments packed into the cockpit. Because

      Cheetah was the only jet around that could even try to keep up

      with the DreamStar, it was now used to fly photo-chase on train-

      ing and test flights. The special high-speed camera Cheetah car-

      ried tracked DreamStar as it went through its paces. Patrick

      could monitor all of DreamStar's important electronic indica-

      tions and if necessary take control of the plane by remote con-

      trol.

      With all of DreamStar's power off, however, there was only

      one readout to monitor-the EEG of Ken James himself. Like

      Carmichael, Patrick was amazed as he watched the electronic

      traces of James' different brainwave patterns. He clicked open

      his interphone.

      "He's almost into theta-sine alpha already."

      "Does that mean I can go to sleep too?" JC. Powell said.

      "How fast could ou go into theta-alpha?" Patrick said,

      watching the readouts change. "I know you've flown the

      DrearnStar simulator. Could you do any better?"

      "Patrick, I'm a pilot, not a robot." 's voice had lost its

      sardonic tone. "Seems to me ANTARES turns pilots into near-

      robots. But to answer your question: sure, I could go into theta-

      sine-alpha quickly. Couple of minutes. Staying in theta-alpha

      was another trick. I could never quite get the hang of it. But I

      58 DALE BROWN

      didn't lose DrearnStar, I gained Cheetah. I figure I got the better

      deal.

      Which was a long speech for JC. Powell; it underscored his

      dislike for ANTARES. ANTARES might be th@'great addition

      to DreamStar's already amazing array of avionics, it might be

     


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