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#1
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I have seen descriptions of the F-22 having a service ceiling of 50,000 feet
which is 13,000 less than I have seen for the F-15. I thought the F-22 was much more advanced.in every way except perhaps top speed. How can the F-22 be the air supieriority fighter of the future when its predessor can fly 2 miles higher? What gives? Am I wrong? |
#2
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On Sat, 13 Mar 2004 09:59:24 -0500, "zxcv" wrote:
I have seen descriptions of the F-22 having a service ceiling of 50,000 feet which is 13,000 less than I have seen for the F-15. I thought the F-22 was much more advanced.in every way except perhaps top speed. How can the F-22 be the air supieriority fighter of the future when its predessor can fly 2 miles higher? What gives? Am I wrong? 50,000 is the most common number given for just about any modern fighter. It's a pretty much meaningless number. The F-22 is suppose to operate at 60k+ regularly and they've designed a pressure suit specifically for the F-22. Unless the suit has been cancelled. Anyway that's the last I've heard. |
#3
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![]() "zxcv" wrote in message ... I have seen descriptions of the F-22 having a service ceiling of 50,000 feet which is 13,000 less than I have seen for the F-15. I thought the F-22 was much more advanced.in every way except perhaps top speed. How can the F-22 be the air supieriority fighter of the future when its predessor can fly 2 miles higher? What gives? Am I wrong? F-22 is designed to operate at at least 60K ft. Besides, it will be able to detect F-15s and other non-stealthy a/c, identify them and if necessary shoot at them with either infrared- or radar-guided missiles without being seen visually (paint scheme) or detected electronically (stealth shape and construction materials) until a defender has no real chance of breaking contact or of returning fire. FWIW, the figures for engine power and ceiling for the F-22 appear conservative. Thanks for the post. |
#4
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Interesting in that the service ceiling number given corresponds to the
maximum permissible altitude for operations without a pressure suit. My experience has been that ceiling figures are based on the actual performance of the aircraft (disregarding any other factors). Maybe not in this case as I suspect the jet is capable of greater than the 50,000 figure. Mark "zxcv" wrote in message ... I have seen descriptions of the F-22 having a service ceiling of 50,000 feet which is 13,000 less than I have seen for the F-15. I thought the F-22 was much more advanced.in every way except perhaps top speed. How can the F-22 be the air supieriority fighter of the future when its predessor can fly 2 miles higher? What gives? Am I wrong? |
#5
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![]() ceiling figures are based on the actual performance of the aircraft In theory, "service ceiling" is the altitude at which an aircraft can no longer climb at 100 feet per minute. "Absolute ceiling" is the altitude at which it can no longer climb at all. However, it is an honored tradition to hand out misleading ceiling information. The B-36 had a service ceiling I believe in the high 30Ks, but was known to have flown at 50K and above. I'm amazed at the notion of a 50K-plus service ceiling being thrown around here. This modern fighters must be more like rockets than jet planes. In the 1950s-1960s the only planes that could get up that high were semi-gliders like the B-36 and the U-2. What is the practical altitude limit at which a jet can no longer ingest enough air to keep it operational? all the best -- Dan Ford email: (requires authentication) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#6
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I understand that the "high power" 1950's designs (F-104, EE Lightning) were
capable of intercept climbs to 70,000+ ft (there are stories of RAF Lighnings doing practice intercepts on transiting U-2s over UK at their operational ceiling - without the U-2's approval!). The Vulcan could operationally cruise at 65,000 ft (plus?) and that is (sorry, was) the operation hight of Concorde at the end of the fuel burn on transatlantic flights. "Cub Driver" wrote in message ... ceiling figures are based on the actual performance of the aircraft In theory, "service ceiling" is the altitude at which an aircraft can no longer climb at 100 feet per minute. "Absolute ceiling" is the altitude at which it can no longer climb at all. However, it is an honored tradition to hand out misleading ceiling information. The B-36 had a service ceiling I believe in the high 30Ks, but was known to have flown at 50K and above. I'm amazed at the notion of a 50K-plus service ceiling being thrown around here. This modern fighters must be more like rockets than jet planes. In the 1950s-1960s the only planes that could get up that high were semi-gliders like the B-36 and the U-2. What is the practical altitude limit at which a jet can no longer ingest enough air to keep it operational? all the best -- Dan Ford email: (requires authentication) 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 . ..
However, it is an honored tradition to hand out misleading ceiling information. The B-36 had a service ceiling I believe in the high 30Ks, but was known to have flown at 50K and above. Well, the roughly 40Kft service ceiling of the B-36s was true, pretty much, (As in it's climbing at 100'/minute at that height) but it's still climbing, and the ceiling changes as weight decreases as fuel is burned off. (And a climb at less than 100'/minute is still a climb, after all.) At B-36 cruise speeds and endurance, they had a lot of time to drift up to some amazing heights. The Engine Operation Charts in the -1 go up to 53,000', with instructions for the Flight Engineers on how to set things up for maximum performance above that height. Of course, with that small an amount of reserve power, any maneuvering will cost some height. (But it'll cost any intercepting fighters even more. They had even less of a maneuver margin, and a much higher stall speed, and, in order to make a gun or rocket pass, would have to pull more G than the B-36. Eiither the -36 turns inside them, or the interceptor (If you're talking an F-86 era jet, like a Mig-15 or 17, or a Yak-25) stalls out and has to fall a couple of miles before it can recover. I'm amazed at the notion of a 50K-plus service ceiling being thrown around here. This modern fighters must be more like rockets than jet planes. In the 1950s-1960s the only planes that could get up that high were semi-gliders like the B-36 and the U-2. Well, could get there, and stay there for a while. The early supersonic fighters had supersonic combat ceilings in the low 50Kft range, for the most part. But some though, like Walt Bjorneby's Hotrodded F-104As, with the J79-19 engine used in the F-4E, could, when supersonic, sustain more than 65,000'. A B-58 on its Design Mission profile, with a 500 NM supersonic run-in to the target, was expected to be at somewhere around 63,000'. (And it had power to spare - The B-58's flight limits were set by airframe and compressor imlet tempertures, not thrust available) What is the practical altitude limit at which a jet can no longer ingest enough air to keep it operational? Ah... That's one of those "That Depends" questions. Basically, the answer is "The height at which the engine can no lonvger burn enough fuel to supply more energy than the turbine take out to drive the compressor". But that's much too simple. The big factor is the ability of the compressor to take in enough air and compress it sufficiently without mucking up the flow though the engine. This is a fairly complex relationship of Mass Flow, Pressure Ratio, and Temperature, and it's described by the Compressor Map for the engine. This can be tricky. Westinghouse, the U.S. pioneer of Axial Flow turbojets. (They had the J30 flying before anybody on the Allied side had ever seen a German jet engine) had pretty much sewn up the Navy's jet engine business woth its very successful and very reliable first generation engines, the J30 (FH-1 Phantom, & some prototypes), the J32 (A 9" diameter midget turbojet for guided missiles), and the J34 (Which powered the F2H Banshee, the F3D Sky Night, and was stuck, in pods, onto a zillion P2V/P-2 Neptunes and civilianized C-82s and C-119s as boosters). At that point, they could do no wrong. When it came to the followon J40, however, things didn't turn out so well. The J40 was to be a big engine, producing about 10,000# of thrust for the next generation of Navy Jets. (A3D, F4D, F3H, F10F, and even the original F-102.) The problem was, the engine's compressor wasn't too good at handling off-design airflows. (Jet engines , especially back then, were designed to operate most efficiently at a single set of conditions.) It was so bad that the engine would compressor stall and flame out while climbing through 30,000', in straight, unaccelerated flight. And they coudn't straighten it out. The somewhat smaller J46, which wasn't o be a J34 replacement, was pretty much the same. The Navy nearly lost all of their fighter follow-ons to the original straight-wing jets, the Manufacturers had to scamble to find alternate engines, (Douglas lucked out, more or less. Ed Heinemann never trusted the J40, so he designed sufficient stretch into his airplanes that they could take Pratt & Whitney's J57. McDonnell had to settle for the Allison J71, which wasn't good, but not as bad as the J40. Grumman just abandoned the F10F), and Westinghouse ended up out of the Jet Engine Businesss. -- Pete Stickney |
#8
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![]() Eiither the -36 turns inside them, or the interceptor (If you're talking an F-86 era jet, like a Mig-15 or 17, or a Yak-25) stalls out and has to fall a couple of miles before it can recover. Yes, this is evidently just what happened. The USAF ran tests over Florida, as I recall, and all the B-36 pilot had to do to lose an interceptor was to start a gentle turn. The same thing was reported (more vaguely, of course) of Chinese MiG-15s over China. However, the USAF never agreed to play with the Navy or the RAF, both of which begged for a trial run at the 36. (The British at that time held the altitude record, though of course not everybody was into setting records, since to do so was to give out information you might want to keep to yourself.) I heard a great story by a B-47 (RB-47?) pilot who was intercepted over Arcangel (I don't know how to spell that). SAC was routinely flying over European Russia with B-47s, and the RAF with B-45s, but their immunity to interception was of course predicated on the performance of the MiG-15. On this occasion, the MiG not only got up there (with some difficulty, it's true) but was able to get off a shot or two. The Finnish newspapers reported that somebody was banging away up there, so the chase evidently went on for some little time. The B-47 got home with a thumping big hole in the skin, which the pilot had framed and carried about with him for show & tell lectures. In any event, that was how SAC learned about the MiG-17.... all the best -- Dan Ford email: (requires authentication) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
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