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Living in the Future: The Education and Adventures of an Advanced Aircraft Designer
 
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Living in the Future: The Education and Adventures of an Advanced Aircraft Designer [Paperback]

Daniel P. Raymer

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Product details

  • Paperback: 350 pages
  • Publisher: Conceptual Research Corporation (17 Mar 2010)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0972239723
  • ISBN-13: 978-0972239721
  • Product Dimensions: 2.3 x 1.5 x 0.2 cm
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,180,271 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Daniel P. Raymer
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Product Description

Product Description

Dan Raymer, noted aircraft designer and author of the industry standard textbook "Aircraft Design: A Conceptual Approach", has written a non-technical book that will be treasured by everyone who loves aeroplanes, wonders how they get designed, and wants to know how somebody becomes an aircraft designer. Half the book is Raymer's warm and personal memoir of growing up in the 50's and 60's as the son of a Navy Test Pilot, discovering his own love of aviation, and entering the rarefied club of those who stare at a blank sheet of paper and turn it into a new aircraft or spacecraft design. The other half covers Raymer's early involvement in the projects that became the B-2, F-22, T-45, F-35, and many more. The book is an 'easy' read, quick-paced, funny, and aimed at a general audience. Raymer includes his mistakes, disappointments, and downright stupid decisions. It's not all aeroplanes either - read about Raymer's aborted musical career, his misadventures in exotic destinations like Belarus, Turkey, and Bulgaria, how he got on the Internet early enough to grab, and how he came to write his design textbook.

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Customer Reviews

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Amazon.com:  4 reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
A book worth buying 19 Jun 2010
By Scott Lowther - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
While the history of recent publishing is replete with the memoirs of astronauts, test pilots, program managers and (rarely) the occasional engineer, this book is unique in that it serves not only as the personal history of the author (a well known aircraft conceptual designer), but also presents a number of the designs he worked on. Many of these seem to have not seen the public light of day previously. I highly recommend this book. It's enjoyable, readable, and stuffed with unbuilt aircraft projects (Yay! Three-view drawings!!!!). What more could a guy want? OK, nekkid wimmins, but one cannot have everything. If you are interested in finding out how preliminary aircraft design is done, and what happens with those designs, then this book is for you.

"Living In The Future" is essentially two separate books... the authors life story (190 pages) and the authors design projects (170 pages). You can read one without having to have read the other. Interestingly, both covers are the front cover... like some old-school sci-fi potboiler double-issues, "Living In The Future" features the two books back to back in a single softcover binding. Read through to the middle, then flip the volume around and again read through to the middle.

As Raymer himself points out, this work does not have the most polished prose. Indeed, it is written in a very casual style... and is eminently readable. The autobiographical half of "Living In The Future" is engaging both in terms of readability and in just being a good yarn. Not just aircraft and launch vehicle design, but also world travel, music, women, partying, all that stuff I hear good things about.

Dan Raymer is known from his publications of papers and books ("Aircraft Design: A Conceptual Approach" being the best known) as well as his aircraft design software (RDS - Integrated Aircraft Design and Analysis). In his career at places like Rockwell and Lockheed, he designed a vast number of aircraft... not a one of which has so far been built (see NOTE). "Living in the Future" describes both the events and personalities surrounding these design efforts, as well as many of the designs themselves. Such projects as Rockwell's earliest Advanced Tactical Fighter (eventually became the F-22); the Rockwell Delta Spanloader stealthy bomber; the X-31 (did you know some thought was given to building it out of an F-86???); a Lockheed ASTOVL fighter series that was a predecessor to the F-35; the "Black Horse" and Pioneer Rocketplane "Pathfinder;" a launch vehicle that uses sunlight, of all things; several small ground attack planes (including one with a slewable wing); the Hot Eagle/SUSTAIN concept to shoot a dozen or so crazed Marines in a rocket vehicle anywhere in the world; future airliners; unmanned aircraft, and more!

NOTE: Not entirely true. Raymer was in on the X-31, and very recently he roughed out the design for the FireJet target drone, which has entered production.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Lighthearted and enjoyable read 7 Jun 2010
By L. Van Bavel - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
One side of the book offers quite a unique insight into the life and career of a noted aircraft designer, well known for his best seller "Aircraft Design: A Conceptual Approach". You will get to know Dan as if he was a long time friend, and get some insider exposure to the strange world of advanced design. Many of his short stories are fun reading and a few have nothing to do with aviation.

Flip the book over and you will read a series of chapters covering into more details some concepts that Dan Raymer worked on. Included are many never-before-published drawings and artwork of some really interesting concepts. A few of them where part of the multiple streams eventually leading to the F-35.

There are no equations in this book. It is all about the rest of the story. It could have been titled "Aircraft Design Volume 2: A Human Approach".

Fun, easy to read and highly recommended.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
A life well lived! 14 May 2012
By Bo Henriksson - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is NOT the average scientist writing his biography (maybe with a little "help" from a spook)! This is Doctor Raymer very much himself, in his own words, telling us about a very, very interesting and rewarding career in most things aerodynamic. A pilot himself, he recounts flying everything from hang gliders to fighters, all the projects he has worked on and the many interesting travels he has made. All in a one-off type of prose that's both colorful and hilarious!
This is a guy you wish you could meet one day and have a beer or three with!
Living in the future is a testament to a life well lived. Highly recommended!

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