![]() |
#21
|
||||||
|
||||||
![]() Quote:
However, the only crash of a Ho229 occored when an engine flamed out during the landing approach. And though I agree that the plane was not in the air enough to get data on every single aspect of flight, the fact that in a mock dogfight against the 262 the Ho229 got the upper hand gives some indications of the potential. As do the reports from the flight data that did survive. It stands, the Go229 was remarkebly stable for a swept wing design from the 40ies. Quote:
By your logic alone the P51 was a faulty design, given it's short development history. Quote:
Northrop was too ambitious in the way they build a huge bomber, which amplifies stability problems. And funny enough, the russians considered the 39 to be one their best airplanes. Quote:
![]() ![]() Note the extended wing area around the rear fuselage in the B2. That is not Northrop 40ies/50ies. Quote:
The V2 was an advanced concept. Or let's say it this way, the first Benz car or even the Ford Model T were nice and dandy, nevertheless I'd say the Veyron is an "advanced" concept. In regards to your History Channel reference.....yes, there are people out there that never heared of Goddard and think the A4 came into existence from nothing. The same applies to the first automobile, the first telephone, the Wright flyer and so on. All these inventions build upon already existing concepts. However, I do not think you need to have a crusade to convince ppl of that here. Quote:
I think the A4 had enough influence on american rocket development alright. Last but not least it was the ballistic missile "combined" with the A-bomb that produced the most terrifying weapon ever concieved.
__________________
Cheers Last edited by Bewolf; 05-23-2012 at 10:42 AM. |
#22
|
|||||||||
|
|||||||||
![]() Quote:
Look at the war against Saddam/Irag and the 'weapons of mass destruction' and the controversy out of that... Quote:
Or you tell me which was the first swept wing jet fighter in service and the first ballistic missile used? Quote:
Quote:
There's a lot of people out there who 'expect' stuff... Quote:
That would be an assumption as valid as yours - but nothing more than that (and yours). Assumptions. Quote:
Nobody has ever answered the question why it was done to the inner wing as well later on - obviously not needed for CG. So it is well possible that in the progress of designing the plane they did learn something about the effects of wing sweep as well. After all there was research done before the war even. http://i37.photobucket.com/albums/e6...111/SW2623.jpg Other swept wing design than the Ta 183: http://www.scientistsandfriends.com/...ns/P1101-1.jpg Quote:
The first ballistic missiles. 300km range and 90km altitude. Goddards rockets were experimental. Quote:
Goddard gets credit for the launch of the first liquid fuel rocket, 1926. Von Braun and team for the first ballistic missile. Quote:
Downplaying advances other countries had made is one of them - covering up for own 'shortcomings' at the same time. Creating myths is part of that. +++++ |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Quote:
Plus Von Braun and his boys were taken to the USA immediately after the war. To me it seems that contradicts your statement above... Those reason given 'why the allies decided it was not worth to bother' are exactly those myths created to cover up for own shortcomings. Rewriting history. Bending reality. It's a bit like about the Sherman tank. That a more heavy tank would have been a logistical problem to ship across the Atlantic and all that stuff. Yet after WW II all their main battle tanks were 45+ tons... Exactly the opposite. If it really did not bother the allies they would not have send 600 bomber to Peenemuende and they would not have made a point in getting Von Braun and his crew. +++++ Last edited by tools4fools; 05-23-2012 at 10:37 AM. |
#24
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
Other than the fact that they are both flying wing type aircraft, comparing the Horten interceptor to the Northrop bomber and claiming that the Horton was somehow better/more stable/etc... makes no sense.
In the fighter/interceptor role, the kind of long frequency yaw translation instability that plagued all flying wings before the advent of computer controls, would never be an issue. In fact I doubt it would have even been detectable through a reflector gun sight at the ranges and with the short time "on target" that a first generation jet interceptor would have on a piston engine bomber. The simple fact is that the Germans never tried to level bomb with a Go229 from 30000ft, as that is not what it was made for. Saying the German design is somehow better/more advanced/whatever than the Northop bombers is just the same kind of flag waving, fanboy wishful thinking that proponents of American/Allied aircraft have been constantly accused of over the ten plus years of this simulation. Was the Go229 a "superplane"? A world beater? I guess we will never know, as it never met a P-80 in combat.
__________________
![]() Personally speaking, the P-40 could contend on an equal footing with all the types of Messerschmitts, almost to the end of 1943. ~Nikolay Gerasimovitch Golodnikov Last edited by ElAurens; 05-23-2012 at 12:24 PM. |
#25
|
||||
|
||||
![]() Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
The p80 was a great aircraft, but as conventional as an aircraft could get at that time, bar the jet engine and the wing tip fuel tanks later on. Again, Northrop was a visionary. The Hortens were visionaries. With one big difference in regard to making their military aircraft. One build a bomber, one a fighter bomber. One, at least from the few documents and sources we have, worked. The other one, however, and that is a documented fact, not. Nobody ever claimed that the Go229 was a superplane. It was a highly ambitious and for the time highly advanced aircraft with the pontential to produce a flying wing jet fighter in the 40ies, including some of the features that made flying wings a real possebility in the first place, the tail section in this already mentioned, the wing mounted air brakes to use as Rudder another one. The Northrop wings of that time period did not have that, instead they tried to solve the problem with horizontal stabilisation. The modern B2 went the Horten way in this regard, not the original Northrop designs. Who knows what would have happend if Northrop tried to build a fighter in the 40ies/50ies instead, but they built a bomber, so there is as much speculation in here as to over what the final Go229 production fighter would have been like.
__________________
Cheers Last edited by Bewolf; 05-23-2012 at 01:16 PM. |
#26
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The 229 was the sign of how the concept of dogfight was changing: you didn't need something powerful AND manoeuvrable anymore, you needed to take X amount of firepower at Y altitude and at Z speed, make a couple of passes and bugger off.
This imprint will be the signature style of all the interceptors of the 50s and 60s, reaching its apex with the F-104 Starfighter. |
#27
|
||||
|
||||
![]() Quote:
__________________
Cheers |
#28
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The XB-35/YB49 had it's outer rudder flaps as air brakes, an evelon (combined aileron/elevator) and trim tabs. Primary controlles were all hydraulic powered to reduce the forces for the pilot.
|
#29
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
mmmh I'm not sure about that. Granted that it was the theory, but the manoeuvrability aspect was still very important, maybe the 229 wasn't the first, as things like the Natter and Komet came before, but it definitely shows a different trend from the concept of the conventional propeller driven air superiority aircraft. The advantage of superior speed of jets was the edge they needed really.
|
#30
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
![]() Quote:
But you didn't answer my question.. What do you think is more likely? Code:
1) Northrop used design aspects of the Go229.. A plane that you admit is a prototype, A plane that you admit was not thoroughly tested, A plane that you admit very little test data was collected on, and of that even less survived the war Or 2) Northrop used design aspects from their own B-49.. A plane that was well beyond the prototype phase, A plane that was thoroughly tested, A plane that a lot of test data was collected on Quote:
The Go229.. A plane that is a prototype, A plane that was not thoroughly tested, A plane that very little test data was collected on, and of that even less survived the war.. And you say it 'stands' as a 'stable' plane? I have to ask what is that statment based on? Please explain, because I don't see anything said here by anyone that would qualify as proof of stability. Quote:
If so, what you are referring to is the design development time.. Which was a very short time! But now re-read what I wrote about the Go229 and note I was referring to the 'testing' time, not the 'design' time. Testing time is something the P51 got plenty of AFTER the first prototype was build! With that cleared up In short, durring WWII anyone could design a plane and build a prototype.. But until the flight testing was done, they really didn't know for sure if what they build would be worth a dam, let alone fly. Today, they can simulate a lot if not most things prior to a prototype being build, such that when the actual flight testing occurs they got a pretty good idea of what to expect.. Which was NOT the case in WWII and is the core of my point in my previous post to you.. That being a lot of the late war Germans stuff did NOT have the luxury of extensive testing.. They were desperate and had to forgo a lot of the testing that they themselves would have like to have done, but were unable to do. Therefore they did not have time to find the errors one could have found had they had more time to test it.. As was the case of Nortrops flying wings post war.. Which is why this 'myth' of the Go299 of being stable can go un-challanted, in that no one, not even post war, bothered to test it throghtly to see if that was in fact the case. Quote:
Yet we know in fact they did! Which in turn means your logic has 'issues' Quote:
Code:
1) Northrop used design aspects of the Go229.. A plane that you admit is a prototype, A plane that you admit was not thoroughly tested, A plane that you admit very little test data was collected on, and of that even less survived the war Or 2) Northrop used designs aspects from their own B-49.. A plane that was well beyond the prototype phase, A plane that was thoroughly tested, A plane that a lot of test data was collected on Now if that has not sunk in yet.. I think I know a way to help it sink in.. And all you have to do is answer one question Question: What does the Go229 have that the Northrop flying wings of the 40s and 50s didn't have? Once you realize the answer is nothing Than and only than will it be clear as to why Northrop would be smart to start the B2 project based on their thoroughly tested production level designs of the 40s and 50s over a Go229 prototype that was not thoroughly tested.. In that had it been thoroughly tested 'chances' are that Horton would have had to do some of the things Northrop did based on what Northrop discovered during testing Quote:
Which is hard to see from the drawings you provided.. So I decided to make my own where I combined a top view of a B2, B49 and a Go229 (see attached). Note these are not blue prints, thus the scale may be off in the drawings a bit. But note the wing span of the B49 vs the B2.. And note they are both 172ft.. At which point one has to ask again What do you think is more likely? Code:
1) The wingspan of the B2 being 172 ft and the wingspan of the Go229 being 55 ft indicates Northrop based the B2 design on the Go229 Or 2) The wingspan of the B2 being 172 ft and the wingspan of the YB49 being 172 ft indicates Northrop based the B2 design on the B49 Quote:
I think it is safe to say I know the difference.. As one who works at White Sands Missile Range and works in the same building that Von Braun worked in after the war.. A building that still has the rail-road tracks in it where they use to assemble the V2 for test, and is just down the street from a display of what some call 'the most complete V2 in the world'.. On that note WSMR is only a short drive from Roswell where they have a Goddards museum and one of Goddards original launch pads and is not the far from where Goddards did his rocket testings in the 20s and 30s.. Which is also why I feel safe in saying the V2 was not as advanced as the history channel would have you belive. Unless you consider 'advanced' to mean something build using about 20 of Goddards patents from the 20s and 30s in the construction of the V2. Quote:
On that note, I always wondered what the space race would have been like had Goddard not died in 1945 to throat cancer. Imagine Von working with Goddard.. The man Von Braun freely admitted after the war, much of the V-2 design was directly borrowed from the writings of the American rocket scientist Robert Goddard [1].. The man Von Braun said "His rockets ... may have been rather crude by present-day standards, but they blazed the trail and incorporated many features used in our most modern rockets and space vehicles[2].. I don't know what they could have done working together.. But I think it is safe to say the Russians would not have beat us into space and that we would have got to the moon even sooner. [1] http://www.nmspacemuseum.org/halloff...tail.php?id=29 [2] http://history.msfc.nasa.gov/vonbrau...childhood.html [3] http://blog.modernmechanix.com/the-m...door-to-space/
__________________
Theres a reason for instrumenting a plane for test..
That being a pilots's 'perception' of what is going on can be very different from what is 'actually' going on. Last edited by ACE-OF-ACES; 05-24-2012 at 12:15 AM. |
![]() |
|
|