Posted on 01/16/2010 7:51:40 PM PST by ErnstStavroBlofeld
With radar-cross-section (RCS) trials for Boeings Silent Eagle semi-stealthy F-15 prototype complete, company officials are now focusing on South Korea as a possible first customer.
The RCS testing took place during a two-week period last August and September, although Boeing has only just acknowledged it because of proprietary issues, says Mark Bass, vice president of F-15 programs.
The company is eyeing South Koreas forthcoming F-X3 competition for 60 fighters as the first sales opportunity for the Silent Eagle. The South Korean parliaments recent hesitancy about investing in all-stealth aircraft validates our approach with the aircraft, says Bass. The company is considering potential international co-development partners for a Silent Eagle conformal fuel tank, although no announcements have been made.
Boeing is developing the variant for international customers that already operate F-15s and are seeking additional aircraft. The system is a possible alternative for nations interested in the Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. The Silent Eagle is not as stealthy as the JSF, but it could provide flexibility for countries trying to stretch their defense dollars.
In the early days of an air campaign, the Silent Eagle can be outfitted with weapon bays suitable for carrying air-to-air and air-to-ground weapons that would be tucked inside conformal fuel tanks, thus reducing the aircrafts front-quadrant RCS. The aircraft could then be reconfigured in hours to handle the F-15s characteristic heavy load of weapons once early threats are removed and sustainment operations begin.
The RCS tests on F-15E1, an Air Force test asset leased to Boeing, took place at the companys anechoic chamber in St. Louis. Various coatings were evaluated and a final candidate has been selected and applied to the appropriate portions of the airframe. Testing produced the desired results, he said. Bass declined to provide details on the coating or the precise
(Excerpt) Read more at aviationnow.com ...
I wonder how stable the Horten’s would have been in flight? Northrop did a lot of work with flying wings & had a heckuva time solving those problems in an era long before fly-by-wire.
I have seen a series about the B-2 where the guys from Northrup got special permission to go see Jack basically on his death bed to tell him the “wing could fly”. As i remember the prototypes (old ones) were lost due to uncontrollable yaw issues.
Although there was yaw, the losses were unrelated to that.
Both the original prop powered XB-35s survived to be scrapped.
Of the three YB-35s converted to YB-49s, one suffered structural failure in flight, and one was lost in taxi trials, the last being scrapped.
“And yet the F-22 line has been canceled. The Eagle is 40 years old from the drawing board.”
Sheesh. How else are the Chicoms supposed to acheive parity with us?
I take your point. I wouldn’t think that the Horten was designed for a turning fight, however. More along the lines of a high-speed, blow-thru attack.
I also wonder if low-radar observability was really what the designer was after or weather it was a by-product associated with an attempt to minimize drag while optimizing speed.
I've read a lot about Jack Northrop's work on his flying
wings and I think the USAF could have had an effective
aluminum skined version by the late 1950’s if it wasn't so
politically unacceptable to the top brass in the USAF at
the time.
There were two major complaints about the Northrop YB-49’s
that the brass used as an excuse to stop development of the
planes.
1) The bombadiers found it almost impossilbe to hold a
steady course on target because of the hyper sensitivity of
the rudders under manual control which caused excessive
yawing back and forth left to right.
2) The bombays had been designed for conventional bombs of
the day and were not big enough for the new nuclear bombs.
Both of these problems could have been overcome by
inclusion of a autopilot to dampen the excess yaw and
enlarging the bombays.
But the real problem was that most of the top brass just
didn't like the way the flying wing looked. It didn't look
like what they thought a bomber should look like.
Instead they went with the Convair B-36 which in my opinion
was not a very successful design.
Yes the B-35 would have matched the performance of the B-36 with a 30% smaller aircraft on the original specification , which was carrying 10,000 lbs to Nazi Germany from Continental US.
But that job was never needed, and what was needed post war was carrying short fat special stores to Russia.
Those would never fit in the B-35, while the B-36 , designed to carry two 42,000 conventional bombs, could carry short fat fission bombs designed for the B-29/50, and even long fat superbombs that were thought needed in c.1950 with ease (It was the only plane that the Mks 14,17,24 would fit)
enlarging the bombays.
Unfortunately they were in the wings, and it was going to be impossible to make them any deeper, so the suggestion was to carry the bomb semi-externaly, which would have severely shorted the range, which had been already taken a hit by turning it into the jet B-49.
Even so, the only bomb that would sort of fit was the Mk15, a puny 2 megatons, when the B-47 could carry the 10 Megaton Mk21/36.
It would be the late 50s before the USAF had a bomb that would fit inside the B-49, and by that time the B-58, which had three times the speed, 50% more altitude, and the same range, was available.
The Northrop Flying Wing was always the wrong plane for the time (except that of the alternate history universe of Newton Leroy Gincrich's novel 1945).
F-15SE Silent Eagle - the best machine from St. Louis, MO.
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