
NAH-1S (NASA-736) Cobra on,the NASA Ames flight line at sunrise

Cobra AH-1G (NASA-736) helicopter hovering on Ames ramp

Cobra AH-1G (NASA-736) helicopter hovering on Ames ramp

Cobra AH-1G (NASA-736) helicopter hovering on Ames ramp

Bell NAH-1G (USA 70-15979 NASA-736) FLITE Cobra helicopter hovering on Ames ramp is successor to the original FLITE Cobra. It has been used extensively in joint NASA/Army human factors research in the areas of night vision displays and voice communications since its arrival in 1987. Note: Used in publication in Flight Research at Ames; 57 Years of Development and Validation of Aeronautical Technology NASA SP-1998-3300 fig 140

Y0-3A (NASA-718) Quiet Plane and AH-1G (NASA-736) helicopter during noise abatement flight test at Crow Landing facility

STS073-736-018 (29 October 1995) --- The Kalahari Desert in Namibia, Africa, forms the backdrop for this scene. Five NASA astronauts and two guest researchers spent almost 16 days of research in this science module affixed in the payload bay of the Space Shuttle Columbia in Earth-orbit. The tunnel in bottom foreground served as the busy passageway for the seven crew members, who split their forces into two shifts. The Nosob and Olifants Rivers can be delineated in the terrain below.

FIELD OF VIEW OVERLAP STUDY PROJECT TEST ON FLIGHT LINE WITH NASA 736 COBRA (USA 70-15979). FLITE Cobra Research Team Personnel - Front row, L-R: Tom Reynolds, Nick Pirot, Sean Hogan, Loran Haworth, John Browning. Middle row, L-R: Dr. Mary Kaiser, John Spooner, Richard Lee, Montoe Deering, Sue Laurie, Paul Aristo, Alan Lee, Zsolt Halmos, Zoltan Szoboszlay, John Denman, Lee Mountz. Back row, L-R: Dr. Dave Foyle, Millard Edgerton, Ron Fong, Gertrude 'Trude' Schlaich, Gary Leong, Linda Blyskal, Brian Hookland, Steve Timmons, Fran Kaster, Wendel Stephens, Alex Macalma, Dana Marcell. Fig. 141 NASA SP Flight Research at Ames: 57 Years of Development and Validation of Aeronautical Technology