Douglas X-3 Stiletto

Douglas X-3 Stiletto

PaísE.e.u.u
Papelexperimental
Primer vuelo15 de octubre de 1952
Construido1

el Douglas X-3 Stiletto fue un avión a reacción experimental de los Estados Unidos de la década de 1950 con un fuselaje delgado y una nariz larga cónica, fabricado por la Douglas Aircraft Company. Su misión principal era investigar las características de diseño de un avión adecuado para velocidades supersónicas sostenidas, que incluían el primer uso de titanio en los principales componentes del fuselaje. Douglas diseñó el X-3 con el objetivo de una velocidad máxima de aproximadamente 2.000 m.p.h, pero fue, sin embargo, seriamente infrapotenciado para este propósito y ni siquiera pudo superar Mach 1 en vuelo de nivel. Aunque el avión de investigación fue una decepción, los diseñadores de Lockheed utilizaron datos de las pruebas X-3 para el Lockheed F-104 Starfighter que utilizó un diseño de ala trapezoidal similar en un exitoso caza Mach 2.

Fuente: Douglas X-3 Stiletto en Wikipedia

Douglas X-3 Stiletto Walk Around
PhotographersRandy Ray, John Heck
LocalisationNational Museum of the USAF
Photos64
Espera, Buscando Douglas X-3 Stiletto para usted...
Douglas X-3 Walk Around
FotógrafoIngrama de Garfield
LocalizaciónUnknow
Fotos35

Ver también:

Segunda Guerra Mundial: La historia visual definitiva de la guerra relámpago a la bomba atómica (DK Definitive Visual Histories) - Amazon Segunda Guerra Mundial Mapa por Mapa (DK History Mapa por Mapa) - Amazon

Douglas X-3 Stiletto Walk Around
PhotographerMeindert de Vreeze
LocalisationNational Museum of the USAF
Photos44

AZ Model AZM7598 1/72 US Air Force Douglas X-3 Stiletto Marca ficticia Modelo de plástico - Amazon


The Shape of Things to Come

el Douglas X-3 Stiletto was perhaps the most visually striking experimental aircraft of the 1950s. Designed to test the effects of sustained supersonic flight, it featured a slender fuselage, a long, tapered nose, and tiny, trapezoidal wings. While the X-3 failed to reach its intended design speeds due to being severely underpowered, it became an invaluable research tool for structural engineering, pioneering the use of titanium in aircraft construction and providing the data that made the Lockheed F-104 Starfighter possible.

Attribute Technical Specification (Douglas X-3)
Papel Experimental High-Speed Research Aircraft
Equipo 1 (Pilot)
First Flight October 15, 1952
Planta motriz 2 × Westinghouse J34-WE-17 afterburning turbojets
Thrust 3,370 lbf (15.0 kN) each / 4,850 lbf with afterburner
Velocidad máxima Mach 1.21 (Reached) / Mach 2.0 (Design Goal)
Envergadura 22 ft 8 in (6.91 m)
Longitud 66 ft 9 in (20.35 m)

Design Innovations and Challenges

  • High Fineness Ratio: The X-3 had an incredibly high “fineness ratio” (length vs. width), designed to pierce the “sound barrier” with minimal drag. Its nose was so long that the pilot sat far back from the tip, necessitating a specialized downward-ejection seat.
  • The First Titanium Jet: The X-3 was the first aircraft to make extensive use of titanium in its major airframe components. This was necessary to handle the “thermal thicket”—the intense heat generated by air friction at speeds above Mach 2.
  • Underpowered Reality: The original plan called for Westinghouse J46 engines, which failed to materialize. The substitute J34 engines were so weak that the X-3 could barely exceed Mach 1 in a level flight, usually requiring a dive to reach supersonic speeds.
  • Trapezoidal Wings: The wings were tiny, thin, and straight (non-swept). This design offered low drag at supersonic speeds but made takeoffs and landings extremely dangerous, with a landing speed of roughly 200 mph (322 km/h).

Inertial Coupling and Legacy

  • Inertial Coupling Discovery: During a test flight in 1954, pilot Joseph Walker experienced “inertial coupling”—a violent, uncontrollable roll/yaw maneuver caused by the mass distribution of the long fuselage. This data was critical in redesigning the tail surfaces of the F-100 Super Sabre.
  • The “Starfighter” Connection: The thin, stubby wing data from the X-3 was directly applied by Kelly Johnson at Lockheed to create the F-104 Starfighter, often called the “Missile with a Man in It.”
  • Tire Technology: Because of its exceptionally high takeoff and landing speeds, the X-3 forced engineers to develop entirely new high-pressure tire compounds and heat-resistant wheel assemblies.
  • Preservation: The sole surviving X-3 Stiletto is currently on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton, Ohio.

Views : 3241

Contesta

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong> 

Obligatorio

Este sitio utiliza Akismet para reducir el spam. Descubra cómo se procesan los datos de sus comentarios.