Boeing Model 837 V/STOL, TFX fighter designs

Orionblamblam

ACCESS: USAP
Top Contributor
Senior Member
Joined
5 April 2006
Messages
12,086
Reaction score
10,391
Website
www.aerospaceprojectsreview.com
"Model 837" was a catch-all designation system covering several hundred preliminary designs... 837-702 is the highest-numbered one I've got, and represents a supersonic VG deisng with obvious stealth features. Dates from around 1960, and covered everything from Harrier near-clones to F-111 near-clones to designs not unlike Anikin Skywalkers podracer. From the clearly subsonic to the clearly very supersonic.

I have 60 or 70 of these designs (so, about one in 10). I'll post the drawings now and then (of course, I *can* be bribed to speed things along). These drawings are all I have on them, I'm afraid.

Here's the first two.
 

Attachments

  • -317.GIF
    -317.GIF
    179.9 KB · Views: 1,467
  • -318.GIF
    -318.GIF
    114.8 KB · Views: 1,329
Now those are interesting, the latter is virtually a US 1154, :eek:

Look forward to seeing more of them ;)

G
 
Had another subscriber to APR (http://www.up-ship.com/eAPR/index.htm), so here's another batch. The drawing quality greatly improves from here.
 

Attachments

  • -319.GIF
    -319.GIF
    88.9 KB · Views: 1,036
  • -321.GIF
    -321.GIF
    81.8 KB · Views: 974
  • -322.GIF
    -322.GIF
    88.7 KB · Views: 938
will it be available for sale at your web?
 
pometablava said:
will it be available for sale at your web?


No. This comes from the Boeing historical archives, rather than from government archives or public domain sources, so I cannot legally advertise this for sale. Boeing's licensing department typically wants several hundred dollars per item.

Posting a few at a time as orders for APR subscriptions come in, that I can do (I'm pretty sure, anyway).
 
Got another subscriber (only been the better paert of a week since the last...), so here's three more.
 

Attachments

  • -323.GIF
    -323.GIF
    93.2 KB · Views: 381
  • -324.GIF
    -324.GIF
    424.5 KB · Views: 352
  • -324A.GIF
    -324A.GIF
    107.1 KB · Views: 349
Huzzah! Another batch of drawings. Notice that the -326 looks more like it's being towed by its engines, rather than pushed by them. The purpose of this was to get the jet exhaust as far forward as possible, so that a flap mounted in the middle of the wing copuld be used to vector the thrust downwards.
 

Attachments

  • -326B.GIF
    -326B.GIF
    191 KB · Views: 429
  • -326A.GIF
    -326A.GIF
    235.4 KB · Views: 479
  • -325.GIF
    -325.GIF
    138.7 KB · Views: 372
Thanks Scott for posting these drawings - quite a variety of designs indeed.

-329 reminds me of an American Sea Vixen :)

Enjoy the Day! Mark
 
I think they mean this Aircraft
800px-Sea.vixen.flying.arp.jpg

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Havilland_Sea_Vixen

how ever to "Test Fly" one of These is not so bad either <jk> ;D
supervixens%20320x240.jpg
 
Nice pics Michel ;)

And going back to the topic:

Three variations on a theme for VAX.

Scott, VAX means that these were rival designs to the Corsair II?
 
pometablava said:
Scott, VAX means that these were rival designs to the Corsair II?

Perhaps not serious contenders, but that appears to be the case, yes. I have no data on whether these designs were actually proposed. I suspect that if these very preliminary designs actually made it to Serious proposal stage, they would have been granted other Model numbers.
 
Well, VAX program was something different from the VAL competition. Both were intended for supplanting the Skyhawk, but: 1) VAX was to be a supersonic aircraft; 2) There were no limitation in originality of design 3) Had to have some of the capabilities of the Vigilante (both as a nuclear strike aircraft and a recon platform). VAL was strictly a light strike aircraft and had to be a derivative design (from an aircraft already used by the Navy, moreover) and to use a TF-30. VAX was more a Navy TFX (SOR-183). See here: http://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,1487.msg12526.html#msg12526
 
Thanks gentlemen.

Then, that 837 family of desings was a very interesting one because it covered a wide range of attack/strike aircraft concepts from the V/STOL approach.
 
pometablava said:
Thanks gentlemen.

Then, that 837 family of desings was a very interesting one because it covered a wide range of attack/strike aircraft concepts from the V/STOL approach.

I think that was the only link: strike with V/STOL. Beyond that... the capabilities and configurations varied wildly.
 
Another subscriber, so some more drawings. These designs are somewhat similar, but differ in the engine arrangements. Oddly, several very different engines employed on the same airframe. The -329 again claims to be a VAX design.
 

Attachments

  • -329.GIF
    -329.GIF
    129.9 KB · Views: 702
  • -330.GIF
    -330.GIF
    83.5 KB · Views: 601
  • -331.GIF
    -331.GIF
    112.2 KB · Views: 570
And another subscriber. The -332 is another VAX design, clearly related to the previous designs. But the -333 is a far more conventional lift-jet close support design, looking like a Mirage; the -335A goes back to the Harrier.
 

Attachments

  • -335A.GIF
    -335A.GIF
    67.5 KB · Views: 363
  • -333.gif
    -333.gif
    134.9 KB · Views: 607
  • -332.GIF
    -332.GIF
    134.1 KB · Views: 578
Huzzah. So, three more. The first two again look like VTOL Mirages or Delta Darts, the third is another VAX design.



If you're interested in the whole set, PM me.
 

Attachments

  • -336.GIF
    -336.GIF
    100.3 KB · Views: 297
  • -337.GIF
    -337.GIF
    88.4 KB · Views: 282
  • -338.GIF
    -338.GIF
    312.2 KB · Views: 385
The VAX competition has been reoriented at least three, possibly four times. And this I think is reflected in the 837 variations. From what I've been able to reconstruct, first VAX specs were for a a generically ship-based (not only carriers) subsonic V/STOL (with Marines having a say), then it became a supersonic STOL for carriers, then perhaps a VTOL again, but supersonic, and lastly a supersonic VG CTOL or moderately STOL. If we had something like the 837 progression from other firms (GD, Lockheed, Vought) I think the same variety would transpire. For example, it could be possible that the proposed Vought A3U (model V-455, an attack derivative of the Crusader and later morphed in the V-461 with a turbofan) was a submission to VAX, while the V-450 was a VTOL... anything from the Vought Heritage? The VAL was the V-463, possibly a V-461 w/o afterburner.
 
Somebody was clearly thinking of those VAX designs in 1990. Front engine, direct lift with aft vectoring nozzle, delta wing.
 
Boeing Model 837-354A as found in Roskam’s Airplane War Stories: An Account of the Professional Life and Work by Dr. Jan Roskam, © 2002 DARcorporation
 

Attachments

  • -354A.jpg
    -354A.jpg
    100.3 KB · Views: 176
Helo, J have some pictures,J think its Boeing model 837 ,and a few diferent models
 

Attachments

  • -335A.jpg
    -335A.jpg
    34.5 KB · Views: 257
  • -333.jpg
    -333.jpg
    60.1 KB · Views: 445
In fact, I think there were several attempts from Boeing to produce French Mirages. The Boeing 837 you mention here looks like the Mirage V. And I know Boeing was trying to produce the "V".
 
A better scan of the Model 837-333:
 

Attachments

  • -333.gif
    -333.gif
    134.9 KB · Views: 729
some drawing Boeing model 837-336 and 337
 

Attachments

  • -337.jpg
    -337.jpg
    41.9 KB · Views: 645

Please donate to support the forum.

Back
Top Bottom