XP67_Moonbat
ACCESS: Top Secret
- Joined
- 16 January 2008
- Messages
- 2,261
- Reaction score
- 465
Jemiba said:"The style of the 3-view is indeed very 'FlugRevue' "
Maybe it's a kind of a "standard style", as most such 3-views in "FlugRevue"
are signed "HR", implying that the last name of the artist begins with R, but
the 3-view of the XF-11 is signed by "Hueber", surely the last name.
Apteryx said:Hey, y'all--
I have a copy of "Air Historian." Found it in a secondhand bookstore in Bundaberg, Queensland, in 1976. A one-off, apparently. The D-2 article is not very coherent, but full of interesting tidbits. Although the author is not identified, this passage is found in the article:
"Now, for the first time, Australian aviation artist-draughtsman researcher, Harry Robinson has created a set of drawings of this rare machine from the past."
Note that the previously posted 3-view is credited to Langdon G. Halls. The article does feature this other front view, not captioned or attributed, which the reader is left to wonder about. Interestingly, it seems to show inline engines installed. Tornados?
--Ian
is it possible to see the other views.....
OK, here's the remaining pics from Air Historian.
Note the D-2s have bagged a Heinkel 111 on a night sortie!
lark said:I did before I asked the question David...
In fact, I hoped to find more about the timeframe/date of the twinfinned
design.The article in Air Power History gives no indication as far as I saw.
All the sources I searched did not even made a mention of it..
Clioman said:Thomas Wildenberg is co-author of a biography of Howard Hughes, and he's done an excellent multi-part article that should be considered as a good source for info on the D-2. See "A Visionary Ahead of His Time: Howard Hughes and the U.S. Air Force," especially Part II, "The Hughes D-2 and XF-11," in Air Power History magazine, Vol. 55 No. 1 (Spring 2008); it's published by the AF Historical Foundation, and well worth seeking out. The article includes an especially interesting photo of a wind tunnel model of an early version of the D-2 now held by the Florida Air Museum:
RyanCrierie said:Here is a random photo of the XF-11 sitting on a tarmac somewhere. Notice the connie in the background...
Stargazer2006 said:Do we know exactly what difference there is between D-2/DX-2 and D-5? Until now I've always assumed the D-2 was the initial design submitted by Hughes and the D-5 the actual prototypes...
Howard Hughes was involved in a near-fatal aircraft accident on July 7, 1946, while piloting the experimental U.S. Army Air Force reconnaissance aircraft, the XF-11, over Los Angeles. An oil leak caused one of the counter-rotating propellers to reverse pitch, causing the aircraft to yaw sharply. Hughes tried to save the craft by landing it on the Los Angeles Country Club golf course, but seconds before he could reach his attempted destination, the XF-11 started to drop dramatically and crashed in the Beverly Hills neighborhood surrounding the country club.