Robert Dale Reed (February 20, 1930 - March 18, 2005) was an aerospace engineer who pioneered lifting body aircraft and remotely piloted research aircraft programs for NASA at Dryden Flight Research Center.
Career
editReed, born on February 20, 1930,[1] was an aerospace engineer who pioneered lifting body aircraft and remotely piloted research aircraft programs at Dryden Flight Research Center in 1953.[2] Reed is also known for conducting aerodynamic loads research on the X-1E, X-5, F-100, and D-558-II aircraft.
Later life
editReed retired in 1985, but returned as a contract aerospace engineer to work on the X-33, X-36 and X-38 research vehicles, two of which featured lifting body configurations. In all, Reed managed 19 projects and designed a dozen aircraft during his career.
He died March 18, 2005, in San Diego.
Awards
editBefore his retirement from NASA in 1985, Reed won four NASA awards ranging from the Exceptional Service Medal to an Associate Fellow Award.
References
edit- ^ "Robert D Reed". Fold3. Retrieved May 8, 2020.
- ^ "NASA - Driving Forces".
Sources
edit- Reed, R. Dale; Lister, Darlene (1997). Wingless Flight: The Lifting Body Story. Washington, DC: National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Print
- Hallion, Richard; Gorn, Michael H. (2004). On the Frontier: Experimental Flight at NASA Dryden. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. Print.
- Dunbar, Brian. "Driving Forces." NASA. NASA, 12 Jan. 2009. Web. 06 June 2014.