Idea for new plane: Perfect for 1946 What if (PTO & ETO) - Scharnhorst1943 - 30.11.2008
Hey, Just an idea here, we have several lufty late and what if planes. And I have seen talk about some of the Japanese late war types such as the Shiden.
How about some American and British Planes? I also herd talk of a Meteor, But what do you guys think about a Bell B-59?
I think this would be a wonderful addition and perfect for a What if 1946 Japan scenario.
Thoughts? Opinions?
- Scharnhorst1943 - 30.11.2008
There is a GREAT story behind this plane too.
It was the First American jet, and the Army made a fake cardboard propeller to put on it when on the runway.
Anyway, the story goes that Yeager or another test pilot goes up wearing a Gorilla suit with a stetson had and cigar. He flies up alongside an American P-51, and the P-51 pilot look over and sees a propeller less plane flown by a Gorilla wearing a Stetson had smoking a Stogy.
Anyway, Hilarious story.
- Dr. Strangelove - 30.11.2008
I found the story here:
http://ships.bouwman.com/Planes/P59.html
Hilarious, IMHO.
- RAF_Leigh - 30.11.2008
was thinking about it
maybe someone will soonish
Re: Idea for new plane: Perfect for 1946 What if (PTO & - THE ESCHATOLOGIST - 30.11.2008
Scharnhorst1943 Wrote:Hey, Just an idea here, we have several lufty late and what if planes. And I have seen talk about some of the Japanese late war types such as the Shiden.
How about some American and British Planes? I also herd talk of a Meteor, But what do you guys think about a Bell B-59?
Well i'm sorry if i'm being offensive, but The P-59 wasn't exactly very successful.... considering the fact it was powered by TWO JET engines; it had a top speed of only 413 mph... and as we all know late-war SINGLE ENGINED PROPELLER DRIVEN fighters like the P-51 Mustang, P-47 Thunderbolt, Late model Spitfires, Tempest, Me-109 and FW-190 were MUCH FASTER....
You can view the complete story here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XP-59
- stansdds - 01.12.2008
I have to agree with CyberAce, the P-59 was a dead end project, the P-80 was far more successful.
- Bee - 01.12.2008
Mmmm no thanks. Reckon I'd pass on this one. Much rather a Curtiss Demon or Seversky P-35....
- KG64_Ðørvånski - 01.12.2008
this isnt my top choice for a mod. i'd rather see more early war foreign aircraft, such as the fokker d.xxi and g.1.
- asheshouse - 01.12.2008
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- asheshouse - 01.12.2008
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- vampire_pilot - 01.12.2008
I don't agree - I would love it!
A milestone in aviation in the US.
Airacomet - bring it on!
Luft 46 -
ebz7350 - 01.12.2008
hello..what about some LWF
Junkers Ju 290 as we've got the Fw200,
He-111 H-22 & V1, :?:
Added to this,Heinkel He219A-7,
Keeping IL2 'jet free'.. :wink:
Regards
David
- Divine-wind - 01.12.2008
I wouldn't mind if someone made this, but at the same time I definitely wouldn't mind if there were more early-/pre-war planes being made. :wink: The Seversky P-35 would be fun to have.
However, this is a really nice looking plane. Very clean looking.
CyberAce Wrote:Well i'm sorry if i'm being offensive, but The P-59 wasn't exactly very successful.... considering the fact it was powered by TWO JET engines; it had a top speed of only 413 mph... and as we all know late-war SINGLE ENGINED PROPELLER DRIVEN fighters like the P-51 Mustang, P-47 Thunderbolt, Late model Spitfires, Tempest, Me-109 and FW-190 were MUCH FASTER....
You can view the complete story here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XP-59
According to all these links, the Airacomet flew in 1942. Do you know when the P-51 and P-47 reached their prime? Or the
late-war Spitfire models, the Tempest, etc?
- Radoye - 01.12.2008
P-51B's first deliveries were made in 1942 and it could go 441mph. The earlier P-51A was doing 409mph.
Spitfire IX, also 1942, 408mph.
Typhoon IA (the older sibling of the Tempest) introduced in 1941, 405mph.
P-47B, introduced 1942, 429mph.
All single piston engined fighters available to Allied
frontline operational units at the time of Airacomet's first flight. All in the same ballpark performance-wise with this twin-jet prototype.
It is a nice historic plane, but it was a dud and was never even near to being introduced into an operational unit.
- VT-51_Razor - 01.12.2008
If it's a 1946 what if bird you're looking for, how about an F7F Tigercat? Or an F9F Panther? Or maybe the Douglas F3D Skynight?
http://www.vectorsite.net/avskykt.html
They were either flying by the end of the war, or were already on the drawing boards with prototypes close to completion.