1. NOVA | Transcripts | Battle of the X-Planes - PBS
Feb 4, 2003 · Find the complete program transcript, including credits for the NOVA program Battle of the X-Planes, originally broadcast on PBS on February ...
Find the complete program transcript, including credits for the NOVA program Battle of the X-Planes, originally broadcast on PBS on February 4, 2003.
2. “NOVA: Battle of the X-Planes” Documentary Essay - IvyPanda
Aug 16, 2020 · The documentary film NOVA: Battle of the X-Planes throws light on the functioning of the aircraft industry. In particular, much attention is ...
Much attention is paid to the cooperation of companies representing this industry with military agencies, especially the Department of Defense.

3. Battle of the X-planes | San Antonio Public Library | BiblioCommons
Aug 1, 2024 · Battle of the X-planes — From 1996 to 2001, Boeing and Lockheed Martin produced rival designs and prototypes for the Joint Strike Fighter, ...
Battle of the X-planes — From 1996 to 2001, Boeing and Lockheed Martin produced rival designs and prototypes for the Joint Strike Fighter, a combat plane intended for the 21st century needs of the U.S. Air Force, Navy, and Marines. NOVA was allowed a first-ever inside look at a Department of Defense weapons competition, filming at Lockheed Martin's famous Skunk Works and Boeing's Phantom Works. One of the most difficult and potentially lucrative aeronautical projects ever undertaken--the winner could earn up to $1 trillion over the life of the project--the JSF may well be the last manned fighter built by the United States. The program captures this clandestine world where amazing flying machines are hatched amid freewheeling brainstorming, cost-conscious compromising, and nervous speculation about what the other side has up its sleeve, enlivened by hair-raising moments inside the cockpit, with a pilot's-eye view of prototypes in flight.
4. Friendly rivals re-fight historic 'Battle of the X-Planes' - Aerotech News
Missing: (2003) | Show results with:(2003)
The Main Event for the 2021 Gathering of Eagles was billed as The Battle of the X-Planes, in which nine veterans representing both sides of that historic fighte

5. Battle of the X-planes - Burlington Public Library
Battle of the X-planes [DVD] / produced and directed by Michael Jorgensen ; a Nova Production by Myth Merchant Films for WGBH/Boston ; telescript by Daniel ...
Director of photography, Michael Jorgensen ; edited by Daniel McCabe, Dick Bartlett, Glen Kugelstadt ; aerial cinematography, Judson Brohmer, Tom Reynolds, Kevin Flynn ... [et. al.] ; additional music by Michael Richard Plowman ; aerospace consultant, William H. Sweetman.
6. [PDF] An Inventory X-1 to X-50 - NASA
Missing: summary Battle
7. Loser X-Planes - Smithsonian Magazine
Missing: summary | Show results with:summary
Every research aircraft poses a question. Sometimes the answer is "forget it."

8. Lockheed Martin X-35 | Military Wiki - Fandom
The Lockheed Martin X-35 was an experimental aircraft developed by Lockheed Martin for the Joint Strike Fighter Program. It was declared the winner over the ...
The Lockheed Martin X-35 was an experimental aircraft developed by Lockheed Martin for the Joint Strike Fighter Program. It was declared the winner over the Boeing X-32 and went on to enter production in the early 21st century as the F-35 Lightning II. The Joint Strike Fighter evolved out of several requirements for a common fighter to replace existing types. The actual JSF development contract was signed on 16 November 1996. The JSF program was created to replace various aircraft while keeping

9. Battle of the X-Planes - TV Time
Missing: summary | Show results with:summary
From 1996 to 2001, Boeing and Lockheed Martin produced rival designs and prototypes for the Joint Strike Fighter, a stealthy, affordable combat plane intended for the 21st century needs of the U.S. Air Force, Navy, and Marines. In "Battle of the X-Planes," NOVA goes behind the scenes to show the world's newest fighter taking shape, as Boeing and Lockheed Martin compete to win the largest contract in military history. NOVA's film crew was part of a small group allowed into both camps, in the first-ever inside look at a Department of Defense weapons competition. The team filmed inside installations where cameras have never been allowed: the famous Skunk Works, where Lockheed Martin designed the celebrated U-2 and SR-71 spy planes, and Boeing's equally hush-hush Phantom Works.
