hagaricus
ACCESS: Barclaycard
- Joined
- 5 November 2010
- Messages
- 177
- Reaction score
- 172
I've been grinding these ideas around in my head for ages, so I thought I'd put them out there, even if just to be shot down in flames.
VTOL: the main thing about this, and the reason it has largely evolved into STOVL is the penalty imposed on the aircraft for the hover. Has anyone attempted to take the experience of all the VTOL research and apply it to STOL? after all, if you can combine artificial stability, blown surfaces/ejectors, vectored thrust and variable geometry to create a mach 2 aircraft with a landing speed of, say 40 knots you've achieved a large percentage of what VTOL actually does, possibly for less of a penalty? I'm thinking this might be a better way to allow smaller STOBAR carriers..
Another way to minimise the penalties of VTOL is the tailsitter. As I understand it the main problem of these is the pilot's orientation in transition & hovering mode. UAVs don't have this problem, and I'm pretty sure spaceflight has taught computers how to operate on different axes, so the step from there to tube-launch and the "submarine aircraft carrier" seems obvious? Tube-launched & deck-recovered, UAVs could give the sub it's own airborne capability.. I expect something like this is already on the forum, but I tried searching..
Anyhow, these are the mumblings of the bloke down that end of the bar, and mine's a bloody mary. cheers!
VTOL: the main thing about this, and the reason it has largely evolved into STOVL is the penalty imposed on the aircraft for the hover. Has anyone attempted to take the experience of all the VTOL research and apply it to STOL? after all, if you can combine artificial stability, blown surfaces/ejectors, vectored thrust and variable geometry to create a mach 2 aircraft with a landing speed of, say 40 knots you've achieved a large percentage of what VTOL actually does, possibly for less of a penalty? I'm thinking this might be a better way to allow smaller STOBAR carriers..
Another way to minimise the penalties of VTOL is the tailsitter. As I understand it the main problem of these is the pilot's orientation in transition & hovering mode. UAVs don't have this problem, and I'm pretty sure spaceflight has taught computers how to operate on different axes, so the step from there to tube-launch and the "submarine aircraft carrier" seems obvious? Tube-launched & deck-recovered, UAVs could give the sub it's own airborne capability.. I expect something like this is already on the forum, but I tried searching..
Anyhow, these are the mumblings of the bloke down that end of the bar, and mine's a bloody mary. cheers!