The Navy repainters would have a heyday with that.Hopefully, he'll finish his XFV-12A next.
But do you do a realistic flight model there, or an imaginary one where they somehow made the vertical thrust work?Hopefully, he'll finish his XFV-12A next.
Here you go...
The OMS
But do you do a realistic flight model there, or an imaginary one where they somehow made the vertical thrust work?
(The XFV-12A never made it past hover testing because it didn't create enough thrust for VTOL.)
I'm thrilled to see projects like this. I had a quick look myself last night, and it is a real gem, just his XF-91. Apart from my personal interest in 50s/60s era experimental aircraft, I'm thrilled there's still folks who are willing to make these off-the-beaten path creations, freeware, no less.
Rallymodeller, some repaints of this would be delightful. Would you consider either a mid 50s NACA or late 50s NASA flashed prototype? Something like the Douglas D-588-2, Bell X-2, or even the later XB-70 - would be a perfect guise for testing at Edwards ...
Thanks to Uenoshing for a great set of experimental aircraft. He's been working on these literally for years - they're worth a look.
dl
Those aircraft didn't have adverse yaw problems, their wingspans were too short. They had roll-yaw coupling issues if one tried to roll them too much, which lead to the fuselage's inertia overcoming the low aerodynamic damping of the flight surfaces. Having said that, I only rolled it once, not multiple times, but it did seam to diverge a little during that one roll, so it might be modeled.Does it have the same or similar adverse yaw characteristics as the X-3 and F-104???
That crew capsule reminds me of a Peel 50 bubble car of the 1960s.