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#1
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Ran across it while looking for something else:
http://tanks45.tripod.com/Jets45/His...1/Enforcer.htm Interesting... Rob |
#3
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![]() (robert arndt) wrote Ran across it while looking for something else: http://tanks45.tripod.com/Jets45/His...anP51/Enforcer. htm Interesting... I have a cool 8x10 of this jet Mustang, with 15' flames roaring out of each wingtip pod. I had several people on RAM insist I was mistaken and it was really wingtip fuel tanks! ![]() Neat bird - this is the first time I have seen a photo of it sitting on the ground. v/r Gordon ====(A+C==== USN SAR Aircrew "Got anything on your radar, SENSO?" "Nothing but my forehead, sir." |
#4
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![]() Gordon wrote: (robert arndt) wrote Ran across it while looking for something else: http://tanks45.tripod.com/Jets45/His...anP51/Enforcer. htm Interesting... I have a cool 8x10 of this jet Mustang, with 15' flames roaring out of each wingtip pod. I had several people on RAM insist I was mistaken and it was really wingtip fuel tanks! ![]() Neat bird - this is the first time I have seen a photo of it sitting on the ground. Not only was the ramjet tip tried, but wing tip radiators that looked a bit like ramjets on a racer, and a pair of pulse jets hung off the underwing hard points were tired too. |
#5
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Seraphim wrote in
: [snip] It is interesting, but I can't say that I am too suprised, the US had a few crazy things like that durring and after WWII. I recall that the USN did something similar with a F6F Hellcat that had a turbojet engine in it. Not perchance the Ryan Fireball? IBM __________________________________________________ _____________________________ Posted Via Uncensored-News.Com - Accounts Starting At $6.95 - http://www.uncensored-news.com The Worlds Uncensored News Source |
#6
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On 29 Oct 2003 06:13:54 GMT, IBM wrote:
Seraphim wrote in . 8: [snip] It is interesting, but I can't say that I am too suprised, the US had a few crazy things like that durring and after WWII. I recall that the USN did something similar with a F6F Hellcat that had a turbojet engine in it. Not perchance the Ryan Fireball? IBM Yes, that is it. I do not know who these guys are, and they are certainly welcome, but (at least for now) they really do not have much aviation knowledge. Al Minyard |
#7
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IBM wrote in message . ..
Seraphim wrote in : [snip] It is interesting, but I can't say that I am too suprised, the US had a few crazy things like that durring and after WWII. I recall that the USN did something similar with a F6F Hellcat that had a turbojet engine in it. Not perchance the Ryan Fireball? Nope. The Navy and Westinghouse used an F6F as a flight test platform for the Model 19X (J30) and 9.5X (J32) turbojets in 1943/44. The 9.5X was a really neat thing - a fully functional turbojet 9.5" in diameter - almost model airplane sized - intended for use in guided missiles. It's an indication of the disparity of resources, talent, and wealth that existed in 1945 vis-a-vis the Allies and the Axis. While they'd been struggling to productionize the Jumo 004 and BMW 003, we were taking the time and effort to build turbojsts that were intended to be thrown away. Another example, that ties in well, is a comparison between the Fritz-X and Hs 293 antiship missiles to the U.S. Navy Bat. The Germans weren't ever able to dope out stuff like feedback control systems. This meant, among other things, that they were never able to match the Allies in the development of things like AA Fire Control Systems - they never had anything that matched the Army SCR-584 autofollow radars and M-9 Gun Predictors, which pointed and trained the guns automatically by Remote Power Control, and performed the fuze setting functions as well. (In a U.S. Army AAA Gun Battery (The 90mm guns) in late 1944, the crew at the gun mount did no aiming or firing at all - their job was to stuff rounds in the breech as fast as they could. The engagement was run from the radar trailer - The radar crew would lock on to a target, and the engagement was automatic after that.) U.S. Navy systems for guns from the 1.1" AA gun on up, were the same. That menat more accuracy and effectiveness in shooting, and far better Economy of Force. Anyhow, while the Fritz-X and Hs 293 were remote-controlled by a human in the launching airplane, twiddling a joystick to match either the flares on the missile's tail with the target, or trying to interpret a fuzzy and grainy TV picture with the outside world, the Bat was an autonomous active-radar seeeking, self-homing launch and leave weapon. With the addition of the Westinghouse 9.5 engine (proposed but not ready during the war), it wouldn't have been far short of the Harpoon in terms of raw performance. (The guidance systems, of course, got much smarter in the intervening 30 years between Bat and Harpoon.) Pete Stickney __________________________________________________ _____________________________ |
#8
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#9
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Anyhow, while the Fritz-X and Hs 293
were remote-controlled by a human in the launching airplane, twiddling a joystick to match either the flares on the missile's tail with the target, or trying to interpret a fuzzy and grainy TV picture with the outside world, the Bat was an autonomous active-radar seeeking, self-homing launch and leave weapon. With the addition of the Westinghouse 9.5 engine (proposed but not ready during the war), it wouldn't have been far short of the Harpoon in terms of raw performance. (The guidance systems, of course, got much smarter in the intervening 30 years between Bat and Harpoon.) Pete Stickney Yeah, right. How good was the BATs wartime success compared to the Fritz X and Hs 293? What did it sink? One Japanese destroyer? BTW, several Hs 117 test missiles used radar guidance and the Bv 246 Hagelkorn tested an anti-radar homing device as well. And what exactly is the BAT compared to the the entire German missile program in WW2 that revolutionized warfare ever since? The Germans had entire categories of missiles that had no Allied equivalent. The US didn't even need missiles to win the war- just strength in numbers. The Germans OTOH were forced to pioneer new technologies in an effort to stem the Allied tide. Rob __________________________________________________ _____________________________ |
#10
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