The last article reminded me of what Corso said about the covering of the Roswell Craft and how it was more plastic and web like like a spiders web woven with incredible strength and able to stretch and not break. So, likely this
Aluminum polymer composite
likely is moving in this direction too. So, imagine using a large enough 3d printer solar powered by the sun in space and weaving your own crafts that can withstand unknowable at present stress loads to travel to the nearest star.
So, all you would have to do is to get the 3d printer parts and something like Aluminum polymer composite up into space then assemble it (because whatever you built would never have to withstand earth's gravity if it was only going to travel between planets or stars and never land on a planet. So, it could be constructed in very interesting ways. However, using our present propulsion systems if you were not using the magnetic fields of planets and suns for propulsion through some kind of gravitic or magnetic propulsion likely you still would need metal parts for the propulsion system to keep it from melting the aluminum polymer composite in space from the combustion of present propulsion systems that were not gravity based or magnetic in nature.
To the best of my ability I write about my experience of the Universe Past, Present and Future
Top 10 Posts This Month
- Musk's antics likely causing Tesla's woes
- Old English "Kenning" means "Whales Road" or the Sea
- We woke up to about 4 inches of snow outside our hotel room
- Measles outbreak surpasses 350 cases and is expected to keep growing
- 'I'm worried it's getting worse': Texas measles outbreak grows as families resist vaccination
- ‘He broke barriers’: One of the last survivors of elite group of paratroopers died. He was 108
- Multistate measles outbreak crosses 450 cases
- Mt. Shasta tourism was the highest ever for winter skiing and such BEFORE Trump was inaugurated
- Rifts growing in the Taliban over the ban on girls' schooling
- Tesla showrooms have attracted protesters in 100 or so cities across the US, eager to let passersby know their feelings about the chainsaw-wielding Musk.
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