I thought you were talking about the 787 Dreamliner that I posted, my bad.Stubbee wrote:
got any proof that the he-162d was built and possibly flew?TravisC555 wrote:
It is an ACTUAL plane.Stubbee wrote:
sonder : which aircraft is that? the He-162 had straight wings and 2 v. stabilizers
edit nevermind he-162d proposed variant with a v tail.
this thread about ACTUAL planes or fantasy crap?http://www.vectorsite.net/avhe162.htmlThe He-162C and He-162D got no farther than a half-completed prototype that could be fitted with interchangeable forward-swept or back-swept wings, discovered by the Allies when they occupied the plant at Schwechat. In fact, the only advanced variant of the He-162 that was actually flown was the "He-162E", which was an He-162A fitted with the BMW-003R mixed power plant, which was a BMW-003A with an integrated BMW-718 liquid-fuel rocket engine for boost power. At least one prototype was built and flight-tested for a short time.
This, for being the most innovative 5th generation fighter.IrishGrimReaper wrote:
For being the only proper VTOL aircraft and scaring the shit out of the Argentinians.DBBrinson1 wrote:
For combing 4th-5th generation technology with French elegance and having opted for the 'best of both worlds', with regards to the positioning of the air intakes.
Look mah, it can shoot out of its front, back and arse as well!
For being wáááy sexier than the Blackhawk.
its got two rotors, thats ugly IMO. Takes away from teh elegence of teh body design.
It can fly without its tail, beat that.SonderKommando wrote:
its got two rotors, thats ugly IMO. Takes away from teh elegence of teh body design.
Knock knock
Who's there?
The future.
Who's there?
The future.
I actually really really liked Boeing's JSF entry. Supposedly it exceeded Lockhead Martin's design in performances as well, but was deemed to 'unconventional' by the military top and budgeteers.Boomerjinks wrote:
Knock knock
Who's there?
The future.
http://www.thehowlandcompany.com/images … ed-BoP.jpg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c … y_USAF.jpg
http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/200 … -226-5.jpg
Click to Enlarge
that beoing looks like a frog.Lai wrote:
I actually really really liked Boeing's JSF entry. Supposedly it exceeded Lockhead Martin's design in performances as well, but was deemed to 'unconventional' by the military top and budgeteers.Boomerjinks wrote:
Knock knock
Who's there?
The future.
http://www.thehowlandcompany.com/images … ed-BoP.jpg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c … y_USAF.jpg
http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/200 … -226-5.jpg
http://thumb1.webshots.net/t/36/36/0/21 … sVf_th.jpg
Click to Enlarge
I love the little bird... That must be a BLAST to fly.
I stood in line for four hours. They better give me a Wal-Mart gift card, or something. - Rodney Booker, Job Fair attendee.
they chose the F-35 over the Boeing version, because the people actually making the Boeing version didn't have an efficient way of going from VTOL mode to flight mode.Lai wrote:
I actually really really liked Boeing's JSF entry. Supposedly it exceeded Lockhead Martin's design in performances as well, but was deemed to 'unconventional' by the military top and budgeteers.Boomerjinks wrote:
Knock knock
Who's there?
The future.
http://www.thehowlandcompany.com/images … ed-BoP.jpg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c … y_USAF.jpg
http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/200 … -226-5.jpg
http://thumb1.webshots.net/t/36/36/0/21 … sVf_th.jpg
Click to Enlarge
What I posted wasn't Boeings JSF entry
Took someone long enough.Kurazoo wrote:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spruce_goose
= winnar.
That thing is massive... but the An-225 is comparably awesome.
However, if youre after big aircraft, check out this heli:
noice
Largest helo ever built: Mil Mi-12
Mil Mi-26, largest helo ever to go into production:
Mil Mi-26, largest helo ever to go into production:
Make X-meds a full member, for the sake of 15 year old anal gangbang porn watchers everywhere!
RUSSIAN INNOVATIONblademaster wrote:
http://img49.imageshack.us/img49/7971/8 … om8jy1.jpg
Proof that with big enough engines even a brick can fly.Lai wrote:
I actually really really liked Boeing's JSF entry. Supposedly it exceeded Lockhead Martin's design in performances as well, but was deemed to 'unconventional' by the military top and budgeteers.Boomerjinks wrote:
Knock knock
Who's there?
The future.
http://www.thehowlandcompany.com/images … ed-BoP.jpg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c … y_USAF.jpg
http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/200 … -226-5.jpg
http://thumb1.webshots.net/t/36/36/0/21 … sVf_th.jpg
Click to Enlarge
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Ha! a friend of the family's a pilot, flies 747's (or did, not heard from him in awhile) and said they had the "glide path of a brick".FEOS wrote:
Proof that with big enough engines even a brick can fly.
I've heard the same WRT the deadstick glideslope of the T-38 and the F-16.burnzz wrote:
Ha! a friend of the family's a pilot, flies 747's (or did, not heard from him in awhile) and said they had the "glide path of a brick".FEOS wrote:
Proof that with big enough engines even a brick can fly.
I must say the "proof that with big enough engines even a brick can fly" was first dubbed upon the mighty F-4. Ugly as a fucking bowling shoe, tbh.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
True!FEOS wrote:
I've heard the same WRT the deadstick glideslope of the T-38 and the F-16.burnzz wrote:
Ha! a friend of the family's a pilot, flies 747's (or did, not heard from him in awhile) and said they had the "glide path of a brick".FEOS wrote:
Proof that with big enough engines even a brick can fly.
I must say the "proof that with big enough engines even a brick can fly" was first dubbed upon the mighty F-4. Ugly as a fucking bowling shoe, tbh.
It's hard to beat the glide ratio of the space shuttle though, now that is a brick with wings!
I'm thinking about going for one of these:
Pick up seriously lost people in peacetime and pilots sans aircraft in wartime--sounds like a good mission.
Edit: first pic didn't load.
Last edited by RAIMIUS (2009-12-15 23:15:10)
Long fence is long?
IIRC, most jet airliners can glide rather well...burnzz wrote:
Ha! a friend of the family's a pilot, flies 747's (or did, not heard from him in awhile) and said they had the "glide path of a brick".FEOS wrote:
Proof that with big enough engines even a brick can fly.
(relative to thinks like fighter jets)
Passenger jets have a glide ratio of between 10:1 and 30:1.
Approximately
Approximately
What does that mean Vendetta?
And above your tomb, the stars will belong to us.
i.e. gliding 10m forward by losing 1m of altitude