Too high for my comfort level...

I think I found the flight...

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Thread title reminds me of a time I was flying from LA to San Francisco a few years back. For some reason, I had raised my seat almost all the way up during cruise, probably to avoid the sun. Suddenly, as we started on the arrival, I noticed. I turned to my FO and I said “Boy, I am really high right now!”

After a brief pause, I amended “my seat. My seat is really high. For the CVR.”
 
Well if that was me, I’d be requesting FL490 and trading off the potential for kinetic.
You're describing a constant-energy dive. This was a technique used by some "third gen" fighters to minimize the time needed to get somewhere high and fast. The dive was used to accelerate through the transonic drag-rise where the thrust and aerodynamics didn't match-up to allow for a climbing acceleration or even a timely acceleration in level flight.

The solution was the maximize the power input to the vehicle to gain altitude and some speed on the most-efficient path/speed schedule (an "energy climb," maximizing the specific excess power, Ps), then descend along a constant-energy contour, using all the thrust available plus converting some of that potential energy (h) back into kinetic input as the drag-rise gulped it down while still accelerating. Eventually the aircraft got to a point where maybe they were on the back side of the transonic drag rise and had descended & accelerated enough that the engines could produce enough thrust to continue climbing and accelerating on a energy climb for supersonic conditions.
WM3yAck.jpg
Obviously the drag rise for a Lear going from M=0.64 to 0.7 isn't going to have to deal with any significant transonic drag rise. There's nothing to "get through" and its only going to get worse until there's no more excess power to continue climbing or accelerating. You'd be better-off staying lower and accelerating faster for the trip (all-else equal) ... but that doesn't mean 'climb at VMO/MMO' either; there's an optimum some where between wheezing and screaming at each altitude, speed, and weight.
 
You're describing a constant-energy dive. This was a technique used by some "third gen" fighters to minimize the time needed to get somewhere high and fast. The dive was used to accelerate through the transonic drag-rise where the thrust and aerodynamics didn't match-up to allow for a climbing acceleration or even a timely acceleration in level flight.

The solution was the maximize the power input to the vehicle to gain altitude and some speed on the most-efficient path/speed schedule (an "energy climb," maximizing the specific excess power, Ps), then descend along a constant-energy contour, using all the thrust available plus converting some of that potential energy (h) back into kinetic input as the drag-rise gulped it down while still accelerating. Eventually the aircraft got to a point where maybe they were on the back side of the transonic drag rise and had descended & accelerated enough that the engines could produce enough thrust to continue climbing and accelerating on a energy climb for supersonic conditions.
WM3yAck.jpg
Obviously the drag rise for a Lear going from M=0.64 to 0.7 isn't going to have to deal with any significant transonic drag rise. There's nothing to "get through" and its only going to get worse until there's no more excess power to continue climbing or accelerating. You'd be better-off staying lower and accelerating faster for the trip (all-else equal) ... but that doesn't mean 'climb at VMO/MMO' either; there's an optimum some where between wheezing and screaming at each altitude, speed, and weight.

And now I'm suffering from flashbacks to my third year in college.
 
From what I hear, the G550's on up and the Globals can go up there and do it comfortably at the proper weights.

Yeah I believe that to be the case as well. It's been a while since I was flying down there, but we did detachments a number of times to KSAV and used the W137-140 complex for air to air intercept training. The 137/138/140's were exclusive use for mil traffic but the 139's were co-use. Kind of a strange arrangement. Anyway, most days there would be a lone Gulfstream test jet up in the 139 row just blasting up to the moon. We'd keep an eye on them with the radar just to make sure we were deconflicted (since we'd be working a discrete freq), and you'd regularly see them anywhere from FL450-500+. No thanks, you can have that air Gulfstream :) (this was I believe either 650 or 700 testing that we observed from afar)
 
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You're describing a constant-energy dive. This was a technique used by some "third gen" fighters to minimize the time needed to get somewhere high and fast. The dive was used to accelerate through the transonic drag-rise where the thrust and aerodynamics didn't match-up to allow for a climbing acceleration or even a timely acceleration in level flight.

We called this the Rutowski Climb.....still used by some aircraft, though of course the specific numbers vary.
 
Yeah I believe that to be the case as well. It's been a while since I was flying down there, but we did detachments a number of times to KSAV and used the W137-140 complex for air to air intercept training. The 137/138/140's were exclusive use for mil traffic but the 139's were co-use. Kind of a strange arrangement. Anyway, most days there would be a lone Gulfstream test jet up in the 139 row just blasting up to the moon. We'd keep an eye on them with the radar just to make sure we were deconflicted (since we'd be working a discrete freq), and you'd regularly see them anywhere from FL450-500+. No thanks, you can have that air Gulfstream :) (this was I believe either 650 or 700 testing that we observed from afar)

The Challenger 300 is capped at 450 because it couldn't meet the decompression certification requirement unless tail fins on the bottom of the fuselage (like you see on learjets) were added. Bombardier deemed that look bad for marketing the plane. So they just capped it at 450 and called it a day.
 
The Challenger 300 is capped at 450 because it couldn't meet the decompression certification requirement unless tail fins on the bottom of the fuselage (like you see on learjets) were added.
Any idea why that made a difference for decompression?
 
You're describing a constant-energy dive. This was a technique used by some "third gen" fighters to minimize the time needed to get somewhere high and fast. The dive was used to accelerate through the transonic drag-rise where the thrust and aerodynamics didn't match-up to allow for a climbing acceleration or even a timely acceleration in level flight.

The solution was the maximize the power input to the vehicle to gain altitude and some speed on the most-efficient path/speed schedule (an "energy climb," maximizing the specific excess power, Ps), then descend along a constant-energy contour, using all the thrust available plus converting some of that potential energy (h) back into kinetic input as the drag-rise gulped it down while still accelerating. Eventually the aircraft got to a point where maybe they were on the back side of the transonic drag rise and had descended & accelerated enough that the engines could produce enough thrust to continue climbing and accelerating on a energy climb for supersonic conditions.
WM3yAck.jpg
Obviously the drag rise for a Lear going from M=0.64 to 0.7 isn't going to have to deal with any significant transonic drag rise. There's nothing to "get through" and its only going to get worse until there's no more excess power to continue climbing or accelerating. You'd be better-off staying lower and accelerating faster for the trip (all-else equal) ... but that doesn't mean 'climb at VMO/MMO' either; there's an optimum some where between wheezing and screaming at each altitude, speed, and weight.

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EC8127B8-D251-4BED-ACBE-3BE82AC84708.gif

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EC8127B8-D251-4BED-ACBE-3BE82AC84708.gif
 
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