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Some of the latest developments in propeller aircraft has fascinated
me. It also brought up an interesting hypothetical question; mostly when reading about modern day warbird replicas. With relatively easily available technology off the shelf (no rail guns or laser cannon please). Lets say a reasonable development budget of oh say $300 million. The question is are we capable of producing superior prop aircraft than the great fighters of WWII and what configuration would it take? To keep the discussion relatively focused we'll put in a couple of rules: 1. Mission: Air superiority/dominance during WWII. Land based. It should be able to clear the skies of any and all opposition at all ranges and altitudes. 2. Must be a propeller aircraft. 3. Only armanent allowed are guns/cannons. No guided missiles. I guess dumb firing rockets will be ok since they were used during WWII. With the above two exceptions all of modern technology is allowed to be used for example composite materials, radars, titanium armour, fly-by-wire (will dynamic instability benefit the agility of a prop plane?) advanced aerodynamic configurations (rear mounted engines). To make matters really intesting helicopters are fine. Just as long as the driving force isn't a jet. If we were to design a new prop, gun armed aircrafy would it essentially look pretty similar to a carbon fibre, turbo-prop P-51 Mustang or would it be some bizzare split wing, dual rear engined travesty? regards, Nev |
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![]() "Nev" wrote in message ... Some of the latest developments in propeller aircraft has fascinated me. It also brought up an interesting hypothetical question; mostly when reading about modern day warbird replicas. With relatively easily available technology off the shelf (no rail guns or laser cannon please). Lets say a reasonable development budget of oh say $300 million. The question is are we capable of producing superior prop aircraft than the great fighters of WWII and what configuration would it take? Su we have nearly sixty years of additional power, aerodynamic, explosive, fusing, gun, electronics and materials research to draw upon. To keep the discussion relatively focused we'll put in a couple of rules: 1. Mission: Air superiority/dominance during WWII. Land based. It should be able to clear the skies of any and all opposition at all ranges and altitudes. 2. Must be a propeller aircraft. I assume you mean to allow turboprops. If you stick to piston engined planes you'll blow your budget trying to recreate the engine base. 3. Only armanent allowed are guns/cannons. No guided missiles. I guess dumb firing rockets will be ok since they were used during WWII. With the above two exceptions all of modern technology is allowed to be used for example composite materials, radars, titanium armour, fly-by-wire (will dynamic instability benefit the agility of a prop plane?) advanced aerodynamic configurations (rear mounted engines). Gun sights tied to radars and computers would be "death dot" types. Gatling gun or high speed revolver would shred any WWII fighter in a second. To make matters really intesting helicopters are fine. Just as long as the driving force isn't a jet. Helicopters are not suitable for the mission: less than half the needed speed. If we were to design a new prop, gun armed aircrafy would it essentially look pretty similar to a carbon fibre, turbo-prop P-51 Mustang or would it be some bizzare split wing, dual rear engined travesty? Depends on who does the designing: Rutan would make something bizarre. I'ld guess you'd end up with an all weather plane between a P-38 and P-61 in size. Likely twin turbo prop to free up the center line for radar and the gun. Slightly sweep wing and aerodynamics to give a top speed something better than 550mph. Engines and pilot virtually proofed against any air fighter guns of the period and the rest pretty robust. Boom & zoom tactics, blast one and blow through, reposition and repeat. Superior speed and targeting makes it mighty attractive. Or heck, something bigger but with a CIWS or two mounted, then you would even have to point the nose at'em. |
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John Keeney wrote:
snip I'ld guess you'd end up with an all weather plane between a P-38 and P-61 in size. Likely twin turbo prop to free up the center line for radar and the gun. A couple of alternatives for the centerline gun - Through the prop hub as per WWII engine mounted guns (wasn't the original idea for a 20mm Birket/hispano like this from WWI?). - Rear engine as per some studies for CAS in the 80s, BA? Or both as per Dornier 335, hmmm 2 x Bear engines (15,000hp each) might be a bit much. Or maybe the Voyager idea of 2 different powers, one small for cruise efficiency and range with a bigger one for combat (oil etc preheated). The cruise engine optimised for cruise at FL300+ should give good range together with some protection from flak and being bounced (A nice preliminary study for a mere 100K, recommending a more detailed study). For combat alpha and beta pitch could be used on one or two to control acceleration/deceleration without spool up time. Single power lever of course. The main limit to power would probably be prop problems with precession during violent manouvering being only one. Radar could be wing mounted with electronic correction for night/cloud sighting. Trike gear would be essential even for a single engine, the ground loop rate was bad enough at WWII p/w ratios let alone with p/w x 2+ and the sort of ground angle required by biggerprops. A Pitts with 1,000hp might be a bit of a handfull. I suspect 300M might be a bit low for development now. The Australian Wamira trainer from the early 80's chewed up AUD70M before cancellation before flight, there were many reasons spec changes being the main one To give one exanple, had to be side by side, had to be tandem, other people might want the other so has to be either!!!. Instead the PC9 (pre Texan II) was bought, this is roughly equivalent to the Bf109A, Spit 1, P40A in performance. AFAIK the PC9 and Texan II are loosely derived from the Bf109, although no common parts, the chain went, Bf109 begat the lower powered PC3 trainer (cheaper to operate and better manners) then the PC7, PC9 and Texan II went through an incremental process of desired handling and MORE GRUNT. regards jc |
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On Thu, 04 Dec 2003 16:37:38 GMT, Scott Ferrin
wrote: Or both as per Dornier 335, hmmm 2 x Bear engines (15,000hp each) might be a bit much. I imagine it might be a bit large too :-) Make for interesting an interesting piece of flying boom refuelling also. greg -- In the beginning. Back in nineteen fifty-five Man didn’t know about a rock ’n’ roll show And all that jive. |
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In article ,
Scott Ferrin wrote: On Thu, 04 Dec 2003 02:07:05 +1100, wrote: John Keeney wrote: snip I'ld guess you'd end up with an all weather plane between a P-38 and P-61 in size. Likely twin turbo prop to free up the center line for radar and the gun. A couple of alternatives for the centerline gun - Through the prop hub as per WWII engine mounted guns (wasn't the original idea for a 20mm Birket/hispano like this from WWI?). - Rear engine as per some studies for CAS in the 80s, BA? Or both as per Dornier 335, hmmm 2 x Bear engines (15,000hp each) might be a bit much. I imagine it might be a bit large too :-) Just how long would the main gear have to be? |
#7
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Nev wrote:
1. Mission: Air superiority/dominance during WWII. Land based. It should be able to clear the skies of any and all opposition at all ranges and altitudes. 2. Must be a propeller aircraft. 3. Only armanent allowed are guns/cannons. No guided missiles. I guess dumb firing rockets will be ok since they were used during WWII. How about a Pucara? Cheers David |
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#9
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![]() The question is are we capable of producing superior prop aircraft than the great fighters of WWII and what configuration would it take? I'm not sure what the engine would be. Is there an off-the-shelf turbine engine that could be tweaked to the war-emergency power requirements of a fighter aircraft? I'm not saying there is none! I haven't the faintest idea of what the capabilities of existing turbines might be. But note that the horsepower of front-line fighters in WWII was more than doubled in four years, as an example of wartime requirements. Also, lives were cheaper in those days. The Germans accepted a man-killer like the Me 163 into front-line service, and the Me 262 would also be unacceptable today, with its 10-hour engine life. all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#10
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![]() "Cub Driver" wrote in message ... The question is are we capable of producing superior prop aircraft than the great fighters of WWII and what configuration would it take? I'm not sure what the engine would be. Is there an off-the-shelf turbine engine that could be tweaked to the war-emergency power requirements of a fighter aircraft? I'm not saying there is none! I haven't the faintest idea of what the capabilities of existing turbines might be. But note that the horsepower of front-line fighters in WWII was more than doubled in four years, as an example of wartime requirements. Also, lives were cheaper in those days. The Germans accepted a man-killer like the Me 163 into front-line service, and the Me 262 would also be unacceptable today, with its 10-hour engine life. The engine entered service with an MTBO of 25 hours which was well established. (about 16 missions) Manufacturing complaince and service realities degraded this to 10 hours for a while. Still if I was an Ju 88 pilot I'd prefer converting to the Jet than the Me 109 given that my combat skills and the concentraion of allied aircraft. Mean time between overhall was 25 hours not total engine life and was a problem of lack of chromium and particularly nickel at one level and at another level poor manufacturing quality control compliance. (This made the biggest difference; the use of unskilled factory labour versus technicians and tradesmen who did not need supervision or detail instructions) Injector burners were the most heavily consmed item but could be easily replaced. The 6 Combustion chambers were made of simple carbon steel coated in aluminium and needed to be replaced at 25 hours. Both the hollow air cooled tinadur and cromadure turbine blades were removed at 25 hours, x-rayed and if OK replaced for a further 10 hours. Theoreticaly engine overhaul life reached 60 hours in the latter model s. Earlier engines, the Jumo 004B1 had solid blades while the Jumo 004B4 had hollow aircooled blades and was more reliable. The first experimental blades had lives of 4 hours to over 100 hours due to manufacturing spread. What the Jumo 004B lacked was a throttle bypass system to bypass excess fuel as the compressor spooled up. The control system did rely on RPM and pressure but this was inadaquete in cases of rapid throttle movement. The over supply of fuel could raise combustion temperatures by 200C which had the effect of burning through combustion chambers and turbines. The BMW 003A used on the Arado 234C and He 162 volksjaeger despite lagging 9 months behined and actualy having its control system derived from the Junkers model was more sophisticated in having a throttle bypass system. The annular combustion chamber on the BMW 003A lasted 200 hours, the turbine could be removed, inspected and replaced in less than 2 hours, the engine did have a throttle limiting system. Unlike the 004 the engine did not need to be stripped down. The Jumo 004C and Jumo 004D both entered production (for use in prototypes) and had increased thrust of 1050 and 1100kg due to detail refinements. In the case of the 004D this included duel zone combustion to overcome the atomisation problems that cuased flameouts at high altitude and idling. (These engines all entered production but not service. A Jumo 004C apparently propelled an Me 262 to 584mph.) Part of the problem the engineers faced was the fuel. Although designed for running on the diesel based J2 fuel for reasons of economy and safety this added a 2 stage startup initialy on a lighter fuel as well as necesitating fuel systems that could cope. Some Me 262 missions were flown with crude oil in the tanks. The crude oil was refined only by centrifuge, then heated and pumped into the tanks. all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
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