>Actually a lot is revealed with the image of the engine on top of what the hell I don't know. But the small pipes mean the fuel source is potent AF.
it's a pratt&whitney J58 sitting on a service cart next to a SR-71. the engines burn conventional JP-7 jet fuel.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockheed_SR-71_Blackbird#/media/File:Pratt_&_Whitney_J58.jpg
>We're talking levels of potency that could fuel entire countries for days with a tear drop sized of it. Prove me wrong.
KEK… hardly a challenge, fuckwit.
JP-7 is a compound mixture composed primarily of hydrocarbons; including alkanes, cycloalkanes, alkylbenzenes, indanes/tetralins, and naphthalenes; with addition of fluorocarbons to increase its lubricant properties, an oxidizing agent to make it burn more efficiently, and a caesium-containing compound known as A-50, which is to aid in disguising the radar and infrared signatures of the exhaust plume. The SR-71 Blackbirds used approximately 36,000–44,000 pounds (16,000–20,000 kg) of fuel per hour of flight.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JP-7
gasoline has more kcal/lb than JP-7.