YOU THINK THE A380 IS BIG?

Exceptional restoration is in the details

Moderator: jingle_jangle

squid
Member
Posts: 463
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2003 8:54 am

Post by squid »

Aircraft design got really fanciful with the development of fly-by-wire computer systems. That's when things like "the flying wing" got developed. All of a sudden, the actual ability to control the plane became less of an issue, and the collective imagination of the aerospace engineering world just went wild. Computers could monitor and adjust the aircraft control surfaces any number of times per second, so concepts like stability got a little bit ... old fashioned. In fact, certain fighter planes are designed to be flown close to the edge of chaotic instability. Coupled with a fly by wire system (which keeps them in the air), it actually makes them extremely, scarily agile.

I've always thought that the prettiest plane ever was the B-1 Lancer, which was developed circa 1965. It has a lovely, graceful, swan-like shape that I've always admired. Too bad it's also quite deadly.

Image
User avatar
wints
Veteran RRF member
Posts: 6481
Joined: Sun Oct 07, 2001 11:21 am

Post by wints »

If we are talking about design, especially from a passenger standpoint, then in many respects the discussion ends here in 1969 and has not been advanced since...


Image
shamustwin
Senior Member
Posts: 5287
Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2003 5:00 am

Post by shamustwin »

FWIW, I got a peek at the A380 at LAX up close and personal.
From afar it reminded me of a sausage with wings.
User avatar
charlyg
Senior Member
Posts: 3755
Joined: Sat Jun 04, 2005 2:01 am

Post by charlyg »

Jerry, I think there may be a song in there somewhere!
User avatar
leesh
Advanced Member
Posts: 1510
Joined: Fri Apr 14, 2006 5:00 am

Post by leesh »

This is the real sausage with wings:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_747_Large_Cargo_Freighter

But Wints - this might be something you might like:
http://www.boeing.com/commercial/787family/

(All of this is coming from an unbiased opinion, naturally Image )
User avatar
johnallg
Rick-a-holic
Posts: 17688
Joined: Wed Apr 05, 2006 12:13 pm

Post by johnallg »

Yeah, right! :D ;)
shamustwin
Senior Member
Posts: 5287
Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2003 5:00 am

Post by shamustwin »

I could adapt The Bongos' "Number With Wings" to "Sausage With Wings". Image
User avatar
wmthor
Veteran RRF member
Posts: 3475
Joined: Sat Sep 23, 2000 8:14 am

Post by wmthor »

Alisha, do you think we (i.e YOU) could get one of those Dreamliners for an International Rickenbacker Confluence.

Image
'96 1997 LH MG
'98 360 LH MG
'00 360/12 Carl Wilson LH FG
'07 730S Shiloh LH
alanz
Intermediate Member
Posts: 1197
Joined: Sat Jan 08, 2005 7:58 pm
Contact:

Post by alanz »

Why am I not surprised that the server at boeing.com is down?
Listen to that sustain!
User avatar
leesh
Advanced Member
Posts: 1510
Joined: Fri Apr 14, 2006 5:00 am

Post by leesh »

Maybe Richard Image There is a prototype barrel section of the 787 in the new Future of Flight Museum in Everett......
User avatar
eric_b
RIC
Posts: 480
Joined: Fri Jun 30, 2006 12:16 pm

Post by eric_b »

The Russian WIG's were quite impressive...And LOUD too!
"It's not the obscene thick gloss, but how it's applied"
User avatar
eric_b
RIC
Posts: 480
Joined: Fri Jun 30, 2006 12:16 pm

Post by eric_b »

I'm partial to this baby..Toiled long and hard on these in my pre-guitar period. Image
"It's not the obscene thick gloss, but how it's applied"
nukebass
Veteran RRF member
Posts: 707
Joined: Thu Jan 25, 2001 6:21 pm

Post by nukebass »

I saw a show on the history channel that reviewed the "secret" German airforce in World War II. They had a concept (I don't remember the designer) for a flying wing that would have been capable of taking off in Germany and bombing New York City. A large part of the design concept was later used to develop the stealth bomber. I think it's amazing all the advances that came out of World War II.
User avatar
rumbush
Intermediate Member
Posts: 524
Joined: Sat Oct 23, 2004 7:03 am
Contact:

Post by rumbush »

Ohhhh..the YF-23, gorrrrrgeous airplane. They had (have?) one over at the museum on Prairie in Hawthorne. Been right up next to it. Way more of a looker than that goofy, forlorn F-22.

Eric what did you do for Northrop on this project? If you tell will you have to kill me?
Sytý Hladovému Nevěří
User avatar
eric_b
RIC
Posts: 480
Joined: Fri Jun 30, 2006 12:16 pm

Post by eric_b »

Yes...Especially since it mostly involved Radar Cross Section work..Actually got to have a seat in the one in the picture during a trip to Edwards.

The YF-23 at the Museum of Flight in Hawthorne is the 2nd prototype(PAV-2),which was powered by GE engines,which were quite a bit more powerful than it's Pratt and Whitney powered stablemate..It was definitely the Hotrod of the two,though PAV-1 was no slouch either.

The "official" Supercruise speed on the GE powered jet is "Very fast at 41,000 feet"...Still classified..Let's just say it put the Raptor in the weeds ;-)

Ryan,I believe you are thinking of one of the Horton Flying Wings,which did indeed have some influence on Jack Northrop's designs,culminating in the B-2A..
"It's not the obscene thick gloss, but how it's applied"
Post Reply

Return to “Reflections of a Curmudgeon: by Paul Wilczynski”