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Morgans wrote:
"Monk" wrote Never mind. This picture puts in better perspective. http://northrop.host.sk/images/MX-32...rry_Crosby.jpg After looking at the two pictures, I would put his eyeballs at between 3 and 4 feet off the ground. Still, that's quite a perspective, since it is your melon that is out in front of almost everything else, and it is what would get smushed, if anything "bad" happened. Hmmm. Also, I have never read about it's flight characteristics, but the small fin, and the fact that it would be totally blanketed in a spin, I would bet a very mean flat spin could develop, if it was ever spun. I had never seen that one before. Interesting, and probably slick as snot! It would be fun to build one with the pilot sitting like a sleek glider pilot, and with a pusher prop. Rocket powered maybe? See the3rd pic down. http://www.strange-mecha.com/aircraft/FW/Northrop.htm But THIS is the sweetie... N9M was a scaled down pre-design version of the XB-35/49 N-9M 1942 = 1-2pC flying wing; two 260hp Menasco C6C; span: 60'0" length: 17'10" v: 257/100/x range (est): 500 ceiling (est): 21,500'. One-third-size flying scale model of B-35. Gross wt: 7000#, endurance: 3.2 hrs. POP: 1 N-9M, 1 N-9M-A, and 1 N-9M-B with two 300hp 8-cyl Franklin O-540-7. Although officially test models for USAAF, s/ns were never assigned. The first N-9M crashed on 5/19/43, killing test pilot Max Constant. The N-9M-B was restored by the Planes of Fame Museum in 1994. http://www.aerofiles.com/north-n9m.jpg http://www.aerofiles.com/north-n9mx.jpg http://www.aerofiles.com/north-N9Mcockpit.jpg For a synopsis of ALL Northrop work... http://www.aerofiles.com/_north.html Richard |
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