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#1
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Ran across some interesting pics of this strange aircraft:
http://www.geocities.com/unicraftmod.../ho38/ho38.htm Rob |
#2
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(robert arndt) wrote in message . com...
Ran across some interesting pics of this strange aircraft: http://www.geocities.com/unicraftmod.../ho38/ho38.htm Some more information can be found he http://www.laahs.com/art09.htm I can't understand why Argentina's government invested time and money on such weird ideas, when IMHO they should have invested FIRST on developing their "conventional" (so to speak) aircraft industry and THEN on "revolutionary" projects. |
#4
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![]() I can't understand why Argentina's government invested time and money on such weird ideas, when IMHO they should have invested FIRST on developing their "conventional" (so to speak) aircraft industry and THEN on "revolutionary" projects. Well, they had Reimar. He was certainly their best shot at a breakthrough, and a breakthrough probably seemed their best shot at developing significant aircraft. There are always those who believe that the conventional wisdom is wrong--that there is a carburetor that gives 80 mph to a gallon, only the oil companies bought it up and suppressed it. The notion that hard work and heavy investment is the way to progress is hard to swallow for these people. Argentina was in a tough spot in the 1950s. Twenty years earlier it had been one of the important countries of the world, and now it was sliding into irrelevance. No doubt Reimar looked good to the Peron government, as a short-cut to the riches that should have been Argentina's. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put CUB in subject line) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#5
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(robert arndt) wrote in message . com...
Ran across some interesting pics of this strange aircraft: http://www.geocities.com/unicraftmod.../ho38/ho38.htm Rob dude, that is one UGLY aircraft. looks like a grossly pregnant glider! but then what do you expect from a transport derived from a WW2 bomber that would have only dropped oranges in anger! i think the Argentine government appreciation of the Nazi regime severely affected their reasoning. decades later this thinking led to the failed Falklands invasion. Jason |
#6
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Cub Driver wrote in message . ..
I can't understand why Argentina's government invested time and money on such weird ideas, when IMHO they should have invested FIRST on developing their "conventional" (so to speak) aircraft industry and THEN on "revolutionary" projects. Well, they had Reimar. He was certainly their best shot at a breakthrough, and a breakthrough probably seemed their best shot at developing significant aircraft. There are always those who believe that the conventional wisdom is wrong--that there is a carburetor that gives 80 mph to a gallon, only the oil companies bought it up and suppressed it. The notion that hard work and heavy investment is the way to progress is hard to swallow for these people. Argentina was in a tough spot in the 1950s. Twenty years earlier it had been one of the important countries of the world, and now it was sliding into irrelevance. No doubt Reimar looked good to the Peron government, as a short-cut to the riches that should have been Argentina's. I wouldn't be so hard on them. Flying wings provide impressive performance as several Boeing stidies have shown and the US certainly experimented with several Northrop designes. The WW2 Horten HXVIIIA flying wing Jet bomber http://www.luft46.com/horten/ho18a.html was on the basis of conservative calculations capable of a round trip bombing mission to the USA at 600mph using the same fuel gussling Jumo 004B engines on the Me262. This I am sure would have been technically impossible in a conventional layout. (Presumably the more reliable Jumo 004D then in production would have been needed for reliabillity) Flying wings have a few problems: 1 unique stability problems (more easily controlled with modern fly-by-wire controls but still solvable without) 2 Finding cargo space. (B2 has woefull low altitude performance because the bulged center section was increased to improve bombload at the expense of low altitude drag) 3 Burried engines must be small diameter or multiples someting that Northrop got wrong in the YB49: they thickened the wing rather than thining the engines. As a business strategy it problably wasn't to bad either. Rather than take on the US and UK industry head on you jump past it using radical technology. It turns out that in anycase that the UK industry, the Asutralian Industry, the Canadain Industry all failed to varying degrees so the Argentinain industry is by non means unique. The US industry was helped by a huge domestic market and rather generous funding for achieving technical supremacy over the Soviets. I suspct the legendariy designers like Kurt Tank, The Hortens and to a lessor extent Messerschmit many have been given too much freedom and not enough surpervision or they may simply have been trying to do to much with too little. Argentina was excluded from a lot of trade agreements because of its neutrality during WW2. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put CUB in subject line) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#7
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"Cub Driver" wrote in message
... I can't understand why Argentina's government invested time and money on such weird ideas, when IMHO they should have invested FIRST on developing their "conventional" (so to speak) aircraft industry and THEN on "revolutionary" projects. Well, they had Reimar. He was certainly their best shot at a breakthrough, and a breakthrough probably seemed their best shot at developing significant aircraft. There are always those who believe that the conventional wisdom is wrong--that there is a carburetor that gives 80 mph to a gallon, only the oil companies bought it up and suppressed it. The notion that hard work and heavy investment is the way to progress is hard to swallow for these people. Argentina was in a tough spot in the 1950s. Twenty years earlier it had been one of the important countries of the world, and now it was sliding into irrelevance. No doubt Reimar looked good to the Peron government, as a short-cut to the riches that should have been Argentina's. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put CUB in subject line) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com A Mercedes SMART car can do 100MPG+ ... it can also do 80MPH ;¬) Matt |
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