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Comments on: X-48B mini flying-wing drone prototype resumes testing

Super Space Detective 

Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 08:12 GMT

Paris Hilton

From that angle it looks a little bit like the Douglas F4D Skyray of the late 1940s, if you squint and you're a bit drunk. Perhaps that's why they called it the Skyray 48. Could this be the first remote-controlled mini-scale concept model that kids will want to have posters of on their bedroom walls?

At the moment there are no funds in place... 

Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 08:27 GMT

Must be British then. Should be the national motto that.

Geniuses at work? 

Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 09:04 GMT

Unhappy

" "With slats retracted the take-off and landing approach speeds are about 70 knots (129kph), [which is] 15 knots higher than with slats extended," Boeing X-48B boffin Norman Princeon told Flight "

How is this a news story, that's what slats do - lower the take-off and landing speeds - Handley Page told the world that around 1919. HP had a biplane with a stall speed of 33 mph in 1934 and the (jet powered) Hunting H.126 32 mph in the 60s.

Flying wings 

Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 10:09 GMT

Jobs Halo

There is nothing new about flying wings. Avro Vulcan for one. And that was certainly not quiet. Bloody hell no!

Maybe the devil is in the detail.

@ graeme 

Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 11:13 GMT

I think the point is that the difference between slats out and in is only 15 knots, making it possible? to land without extending the slats ... resulting in a considerable reduction in landing noise ;)

What are the chances... 

Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 11:52 GMT

Happy

...of picking one of these babies up at my local model store?

I want one.

History repeating 

Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 12:12 GMT

Here is a very good picture of a 40 year old airplane:

http://www.testpilot.ru/russia/tupolev/144/tu144_1.htm

It is done from the right angle so you can see the blend. It is not a big blend, but blend none the less.

Apparently, a more blended profile was tested during the early parts of the test program, but abandoned due to the difficulty in manufacturing.

Anyway... History repeating (and so much for the aforementioned airplane being a "copy of concorde").

Standard Union Workers 

Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 12:20 GMT

Go

You can just tell... They're a union... One person working, two people watching, one more person on a beer run.

avro vulcan? 

Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 13:18 GMT

Black Helicopters

was a delta wing configuration, not a true flying wing.

@ everyone 

Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 13:30 GMT

Stop

make sure you are clear between a delta winged aircraft and a flying wing. The latter is a blended wing body where the whole aircraft is the lifting mass. A Delta wing aircraft is still a tube with wings.

First blended wing 

Posted Wednesday 16th April 2008 16:11 GMT

Like most things aeronautical, it was German. May I introduce the pre-war Junkers G38:

http://www.return2style.de/swingaring/amig38.htm

A passenger aircraft which could carry passengers inside the thick wings as well as the fuselage.

Made in the UK 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 01:46 GMT

Boffin

Well, seeing as how it's made in the UK, it's doomed. They'll figure out a way to do it really cheap, then the entire program will inexplicably grow 5000% in the first year, and then the only working prototype will crash (or disappear in orbit around another planet).

Proudly made in the U.K. hahaha.

Just send the contract to the Yanks and be done with it, it's cheaper in the long run and it only costs you your privacy.

Yet more German engineering. 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 11:45 GMT

Check this whole range of Horten machines:

http://www.nurflugel.com/Nurflugel/Horten_Nurflugels/horten_nurflugels.html

Just Build It Already! 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 15:56 GMT

Go

Look, it looks cool, so can we just build it and be done with it please! The law of building stuff is:

Is it cool?

If cool build, if not what you doing designing uncool stuff!

@Flying vulcan noise 

Posted Saturday 26th April 2008 09:49 GMT

<<There is nothing new about flying wings. Avro Vulcan for one. And that was certainly not quiet. Bloody hell no!>>

Too right! I was at an airshow years ago when I got hit by the full force of the engines directed at me from one of the last remaining birds flying. It must've been a few hundred yards away and airborne, but it was fuc*king painfully deafening. Almost knocked me off my feet.

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