Axxman300
Philosopher
Tacit Blue, the competitor to the Have Blue/F-117.
As I understand it, the competitor to the Have Blue prototype was a Northrop XST prototype that had a much higher side RCS:[qimg][qimg]http://i64.tinypic.com/1cgtu.jpg[/qimg][/qimg]
Tacit Blue, the competitor to the Have Blue/F-117.
[qimg][qimg]http://i64.tinypic.com/1cgtu.jpg[/qimg][/qimg]
Tacit Blue, the competitor to the Have Blue/F-117.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armstrong_Whitworth_F.K.10
[qimg]http://flyingmachines.ru/Images7/Putnam/AW/74-1.jpg[/qimg]
[qimg]http://flyingmachines.ru/Images7/Putnam/AW/76-1.jpg[/qimg]
I get a bit confuzzled every time I'm reminded that flying boats/seaplanes aren't standard in every coastal search & rescue agency.
If you're looking for somebody as fast as you can, you need a plane. But to actually help when you do find them, you need to put some people & assets on the surface. Solution? A plane that can go right down to the surface immediately. Except... apparently not.
Eech, the drag those eight wingtips must have caused, not to mention all those strut attachments. With a 110 hp engine ... that would have been one slow bird.
Hans
84 mph (135 km/h; 73 kn) at 6,500 ft (2,000 m)
Yeah. That's slow for a fighter of its era.
Hans
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armstrong_Whitworth_F.K.10
[qimg]http://flyingmachines.ru/Images7/Putnam/AW/74-1.jpg[/qimg]
[qimg]http://flyingmachines.ru/Images7/Putnam/AW/76-1.jpg[/qimg]
Add the Wight Quadruplane to this one. Another similar quad winged aircraft with a similar lack of success. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wight_Quadruplane
Or the much bigger Pemberton-Billing Nighthawk. A twin engined quad with a 37mm cannon and searchlight.
It had an endurance of 18 hours and was supposed to be able to wait all night for a Zeppelin to arrive and then shoot it down.
Unfortunately it only made about 60 mph and took over an hour to reach 10,000 feet.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supermarine_Nighthawk
It was not a jet engine. It was powered by a petrol engine and prop, they just put the prop in a tube.
OTOH, it could be built with the technology of the time. This was only marginally true of real jets.
Hans
I get a bit confuzzled every time I'm reminded that flying boats/seaplanes aren't standard in every coastal search & rescue agency.
If you're looking for somebody as fast as you can, you need a plane. But to actually help when you do find them, you need to put some people & assets on the surface. Solution? A plane that can go right down to the surface immediately. Except... apparently not.