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Nakajima Kikka

The Nakajima Kikka (橘花, "tachibana orange blossom"), initially designated Kōkoku Nigō Heiki (皇国二号兵器, "Imperial Weapon No. 2"), was Japan's first turbojet-powered aircraft. It was developed late in World War II, and the single completed prototype flew only once, in August 1945, before the end of the conflict.

Kikka
Role Ground Attack
Anti-ship
Manufacturer Nakajima
Kugisho
Designer Kenichi Matsumura
First flight 7 August 1945
Status Prototype
Primary user Imperial Japanese Navy
Number built 1 prototype plus 24 more units under construction

Design and development edit

After the Japanese military attaché in Germany witnessed trials of the Messerschmitt Me 262 in 1942,[1] the Imperial Japanese Navy issued a request to Nakajima to develop a similar aircraft to be used as a fast attack aircraft. Among the specifications for the design were the requirements that it should be able to be built largely by unskilled labor, and that the wings should be foldable. This latter feature was to enable the aircraft to be hidden in caves and tunnels around Japan as the navy began to prepare for the defense of the home islands. Nakajima designers Kenichi Matsumura and Kazuo Ohno laid out an aircraft that bore a strong but superficial resemblance to the Me 262.[2]

The Kikka was designed in preliminary form to use the Tsu-11, a rudimentary motorjet style jet engine that was essentially a ducted fan with an afterburner. Subsequent designs were planned around the Ne-10 (TR-10) centrifugal-flow turbojet, and the Ne-12, which added a four-stage axial compressor to the front of the Ne-10. Tests of this powerplant soon revealed that it would not produce anywhere near the power required to propel the aircraft, and the project was temporarily stalled. It was then decided to produce a new axial flow turbojet based on the German BMW 003.[2]

Development of the engine was troubled, as it was based on little more than photographs and a single cut-away drawing of the BMW 003; however, a suitable unit, the Ishikawajima Ne-20, was quickly built in 1945. By mid-1945, the Kikka project was making progress once again and at this stage, due to the deteriorating war situation, it is possible that the Navy considered employing the Kikka as a kamikaze weapon, although this prospect was questionable due to the high cost and complexity associated with manufacturing contemporary turbojet engines. Other more economical projects designed specifically for kamikaze attacks, such as the simpler Nakajima Tōka (designed to absorb Japanese stock of obsolete engines), the pulsejet-powered Kawanishi Baika, and the better-known Yokosuka Ohka, were either underway or already in mass production.

Compared to the Me 262, the Kikka airframe was noticeably smaller and more conventional in design, with straight wings (lacking the slight sweepback of the Me 262) and tail surfaces.[2] The triangular fuselage cross section characteristic of the German design was less pronounced, due to smaller fuel tanks. The main landing gear of the Kikka was taken from the A6M Zero and the nose wheel from the tail of a Yokosuka P1Y bomber.

Designation edit

The Kikka is often identified as the J9N1, or occasionally J9Y1, which according to a researcher at the National Air and Space Museum is incorrect. The official name given to the aircraft was 橘花 Kikka. Like other Japanese aircraft intended for use in suicide missions, it received only a name. Imperial Japanese Naval aircraft were designated similar to U.S. Naval aircraft of the time frame. A first letter, denoting the role/type of aircraft, separated by a number that denotes where in the series of aircraft of the same role the aircraft resides, followed by a second letter denoting the design and manufacturing firm, and finally, a second number denoting the aircraft subtype. The first three characters remain constant through all the sub-variants an aircraft might be built to.[3]

Operational history edit

 
The Nakajima Kikka, equipped with RATO rockets for lift off

The first prototype commenced ground tests at the Nakajima factory on 30 June 1945. The following month it was dismantled and delivered to Kisarazu Naval Airfield where it was re-assembled and prepared for flight testing. The first flight took place on 7 August 1945 (the day after Hiroshima was bombed by atomic bomb), with Lieutenant Commander Susumu Takaoka at the controls. The aircraft performed well during a 20-minute test flight, with the only concern being the length of the takeoff run. For the second test flight, four days later (4 days prior to Japan's declaration of surrender), rocket assisted take off (RATO) units were fitted to the aircraft. The pilot had been uneasy about the angle at which the rocket tubes had been set, but with no time to correct them they decided to simply reduce the thrust of the rockets from 800 kg to only 400 kg. Four seconds into take off the RATO was actuated, immediately jolting the aircraft back onto its tail leaving the pilot with no effective tail control. After the nine-second burning time of the RATO ran out the nose came down and the nose wheel contacted the runway, resulting in a sudden deceleration, however both engines were still functioning normally. At this point the pilot opted to abort the take off, but fighting to brake the aircraft and perform a ground loop only put him in danger of running it into other installations. Eventually the aircraft ran over a drainage ditch which caught the tricycle landing gear, the aircraft continued to skid forward and stopped short of the water's edge.[4] Before it could be repaired Japan had surrendered and the war was over.

At this point, the second prototype was close to completion, and approximately 23 more airframes were under construction.[1] Five of these were two-seat trainers.[5]

Postwar edit

 
A Kikka stationed at the Patuxent River Naval Air Base, Maryland, 1946
 
Nakajima Kikka in the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center

After the war, airframes 3, 4, and 5 (and possibly other partial airframes) were brought to the U.S. for study. Today, two examples survive in the National Air and Space Museum: The first is a Kikka that was taken to the Patuxent River Naval Air Base, Maryland for analysis. This aircraft is very incomplete and is believed to have been patched together from a variety of semi-completed airframes. It is currently still in storage at the Paul E. Garber Preservation, Restoration and Storage Facility in Silver Hill, Maryland. The second Kikka is on display at the NASM Udvar-Hazy Center in the Mary Baker Engen Restoration Hangar. Correspondence in 2001 with Japanese propulsion specialist Kazuhiko Ishizawa theorized that Nakajima constructed the Museum’s Kikka airframe for load testing, not for flight tests. This may explain why the engine nacelles previously fitted on the Museum’s Kikka airframe are too small to enclose the Ne-20 engines.[1] However, Ishizawa later stated that a limited survey at the Paul E. Garber facility concluded that this Kikka may not be a strength-tester due to the presence of wiring, hydraulics and controls.[6] Furthermore, Susumu Watanabe, who was in charge of engine outfitting for the Kikka, recalled that the engine nacelles of the strength tester were the same as the standard aircraft, and that the strength tester was stressed until failure.[7] Based on this information, the mock nacelles were potentially added for display purposes after transit to the United States.

Two Ne-20 jet engines had been taken to the US and sent for analysis to the Chrysler Corporation in 1946. This was only revealed in 2005 by W. I. Chapman, who was in charge of the project at the time. A working engine was assembled with the parts of the two Ne-20s, and tested for 11 hours and 46 minutes. A report was issued on 7 April 1947, titled "Japanese NE-20 turbo jet engine. Construction and performance". The document is now on display at the Tokyo National Science Museum.

Variants edit

Nakajima Aircraft Company developed some variants of the aircraft:

Five of the planes under construction at the end of the war were to be completed as two-seat trainers.[5] Other follow-on versions proposed included a reconnaissance aircraft, and a fighter armed with two 30 mm Type 5 cannons with 50 rounds per gun. The fighter was expected to be powered by a more advanced development of the Ne-20, known as Ne-20 Kai 6.37 kN (650 kgf), which was planned to have approximately 30% more thrust than the Ne-20.[8]

Operators edit

  Japan

Specifications (Kikka) edit

 
Ne-20 engine taken from the second Kikka prototype on display at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia

Data from Kikka, Monogram Close-Up 19

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Length: 9.25 m (30 ft 4 in)
  • Wingspan: 10 m (32 ft 10 in)
  • Height: 3.05 m (10 ft 0 in)
  • Wing area: 13.2 m2 (142 sq ft)
  • Airfoil: K125 at root, K309 at tip
  • Empty weight: 2,300 kg (5,071 lb)
  • Gross weight: 3,550 kg (7,826 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 4,312 kg (9,506 lb)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Ishikawajima Ne-20 axial-flow turbojet engines, 4.66 kN (1,047 lbf) thrust each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 696 km/h (432 mph, 376 kn) at 10,000 m (33,000 ft)
  • Range: 948 km (589 mi, 512 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 12,000 m (39,000 ft)
  • Time to altitude: 6,000 m (20,000 ft) in 12 minutes with bomb load
  • Wing loading: 269 kg/m2 (55 lb/sq ft)
  • Thrust/weight: 0.27

Armament

  • Bombs: 1 × 500 kg (1,102 lb), or 1 × 800 kg (1,764 lb) bomb

See also edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Lee, Russell (28 September 2016). "The History of Japan's First Jet Aircraft". National Air and Space Museum. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2017-11-17.
  2. ^ a b c The International Encyclopedia of Aircraft 1991, p. 24.
  3. ^ Francillion 1995, pp. 51–52, 549–554.
  4. ^ Monogram Close-Up 19 - Monogram Aviation Publications 1979, pp. 4.
  5. ^ a b Mikesh 1979, p. 23.
  6. ^ Ishizawa 2006 p60
  7. ^ Ishizawa 2006 p61
  8. ^ Ishizawa, Kazuhiko (2006). Kikka: The Technological Verification of the First Japanese Jet Engine Ne-20 (in Japanese). Tokyo: Miki Shobo. ISBN 978-4895224680.

Bibliography edit

  • Francillon, René J. (1995) [1970]. Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War. London: Putnam & Company. ISBN 0-370-30251-6..
  • The International Encyclopedia of Aircraft. Toronto, Ontario, Canada: B. Mitchell, 1991. ISBN 0-88665-964-7.
  • Ishizawa, Kazuhiko. Kikka: The Technological Verification of the First Japanese Jet Engine Ne-20. Tokyo: Miki Shobo, 2006. ISBN 978-4895224680.
  • Mikesh, Robert C. Kikka, Monogram Close-Up 19. Bolyston, Massachusetts: Monogram Aviation Publications, 1979. ISBN 0-914144-19-7.
  • Yamashita, Takeo, ed.「秋水」と日本陸海軍ジェット、ロケット機. ["Akimizu" and Japan Army and Navy jets and rocket aircraft] Tokyo: Model Art Co. Ltd., 1998.
  • 別冊航空情報編集部. 航空秘話復刻版シリーズ (2): 知られざる軍用機開発(下). Tokyo: Kantosha, 1999. ISBN 4-87357-051-4.
  • 歴史群像編集部. [歴史群像] (2006). 大戦末期 航空決戦兵器, 橘花、火龍、秋水、キ74......幻のつばさ(2) [Late War II Air Decisive Weapon, Tachibana, Fire Dragon, Akimizu、Ki 74]. 太平洋戦史シリーズ [Pacific War History Series] Vol.56 (in Japanese). Tokyo: Gakken. ISBN 4-05-604536-4..

External links edit

  • The Nakajima Kikka entry at the Hikoki: 1946 website
  • Smithsonian NASM page on their Nakajima Kikka
  • Nakajima Kikka – Minijets.org

nakajima, kikka, 橘花, tachibana, orange, blossom, initially, designated, kōkoku, nigō, heiki, 皇国二号兵器, imperial, weapon, japan, first, turbojet, powered, aircraft, developed, late, world, single, completed, prototype, flew, only, once, august, 1945, before, conf. The Nakajima Kikka 橘花 tachibana orange blossom initially designated Kōkoku Nigō Heiki 皇国二号兵器 Imperial Weapon No 2 was Japan s first turbojet powered aircraft It was developed late in World War II and the single completed prototype flew only once in August 1945 before the end of the conflict KikkaRole Ground AttackAnti shipManufacturer Nakajima KugishoDesigner Kenichi MatsumuraFirst flight 7 August 1945Status PrototypePrimary user Imperial Japanese NavyNumber built 1 prototype plus 24 more units under construction Contents 1 Design and development 1 1 Designation 2 Operational history 2 1 Postwar 3 Variants 4 Operators 5 Specifications Kikka 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Bibliography 8 External linksDesign and development editAfter the Japanese military attache in Germany witnessed trials of the Messerschmitt Me 262 in 1942 1 the Imperial Japanese Navy issued a request to Nakajima to develop a similar aircraft to be used as a fast attack aircraft Among the specifications for the design were the requirements that it should be able to be built largely by unskilled labor and that the wings should be foldable This latter feature was to enable the aircraft to be hidden in caves and tunnels around Japan as the navy began to prepare for the defense of the home islands Nakajima designers Kenichi Matsumura and Kazuo Ohno laid out an aircraft that bore a strong but superficial resemblance to the Me 262 2 The Kikka was designed in preliminary form to use the Tsu 11 a rudimentary motorjet style jet engine that was essentially a ducted fan with an afterburner Subsequent designs were planned around the Ne 10 TR 10 centrifugal flow turbojet and the Ne 12 which added a four stage axial compressor to the front of the Ne 10 Tests of this powerplant soon revealed that it would not produce anywhere near the power required to propel the aircraft and the project was temporarily stalled It was then decided to produce a new axial flow turbojet based on the German BMW 003 2 Development of the engine was troubled as it was based on little more than photographs and a single cut away drawing of the BMW 003 however a suitable unit the Ishikawajima Ne 20 was quickly built in 1945 By mid 1945 the Kikka project was making progress once again and at this stage due to the deteriorating war situation it is possible that the Navy considered employing the Kikka as a kamikaze weapon although this prospect was questionable due to the high cost and complexity associated with manufacturing contemporary turbojet engines Other more economical projects designed specifically for kamikaze attacks such as the simpler Nakajima Tōka designed to absorb Japanese stock of obsolete engines the pulsejet powered Kawanishi Baika and the better known Yokosuka Ohka were either underway or already in mass production Compared to the Me 262 the Kikka airframe was noticeably smaller and more conventional in design with straight wings lacking the slight sweepback of the Me 262 and tail surfaces 2 The triangular fuselage cross section characteristic of the German design was less pronounced due to smaller fuel tanks The main landing gear of the Kikka was taken from the A6M Zero and the nose wheel from the tail of a Yokosuka P1Y bomber Designation edit The Kikka is often identified as the J9N1 or occasionally J9Y1 which according to a researcher at the National Air and Space Museum is incorrect The official name given to the aircraft was 橘花 Kikka Like other Japanese aircraft intended for use in suicide missions it received only a name Imperial Japanese Naval aircraft were designated similar to U S Naval aircraft of the time frame A first letter denoting the role type of aircraft separated by a number that denotes where in the series of aircraft of the same role the aircraft resides followed by a second letter denoting the design and manufacturing firm and finally a second number denoting the aircraft subtype The first three characters remain constant through all the sub variants an aircraft might be built to 3 Operational history edit nbsp The Nakajima Kikka equipped with RATO rockets for lift offThe first prototype commenced ground tests at the Nakajima factory on 30 June 1945 The following month it was dismantled and delivered to Kisarazu Naval Airfield where it was re assembled and prepared for flight testing The first flight took place on 7 August 1945 the day after Hiroshima was bombed by atomic bomb with Lieutenant Commander Susumu Takaoka at the controls The aircraft performed well during a 20 minute test flight with the only concern being the length of the takeoff run For the second test flight four days later 4 days prior to Japan s declaration of surrender rocket assisted take off RATO units were fitted to the aircraft The pilot had been uneasy about the angle at which the rocket tubes had been set but with no time to correct them they decided to simply reduce the thrust of the rockets from 800 kg to only 400 kg Four seconds into take off the RATO was actuated immediately jolting the aircraft back onto its tail leaving the pilot with no effective tail control After the nine second burning time of the RATO ran out the nose came down and the nose wheel contacted the runway resulting in a sudden deceleration however both engines were still functioning normally At this point the pilot opted to abort the take off but fighting to brake the aircraft and perform a ground loop only put him in danger of running it into other installations Eventually the aircraft ran over a drainage ditch which caught the tricycle landing gear the aircraft continued to skid forward and stopped short of the water s edge 4 Before it could be repaired Japan had surrendered and the war was over At this point the second prototype was close to completion and approximately 23 more airframes were under construction 1 Five of these were two seat trainers 5 Postwar edit nbsp A Kikka stationed at the Patuxent River Naval Air Base Maryland 1946 nbsp Nakajima Kikka in the Steven F Udvar Hazy CenterAfter the war airframes 3 4 and 5 and possibly other partial airframes were brought to the U S for study Today two examples survive in the National Air and Space Museum The first is a Kikka that was taken to the Patuxent River Naval Air Base Maryland for analysis This aircraft is very incomplete and is believed to have been patched together from a variety of semi completed airframes It is currently still in storage at the Paul E Garber Preservation Restoration and Storage Facility in Silver Hill Maryland The second Kikka is on display at the NASM Udvar Hazy Center in the Mary Baker Engen Restoration Hangar Correspondence in 2001 with Japanese propulsion specialist Kazuhiko Ishizawa theorized that Nakajima constructed the Museum s Kikka airframe for load testing not for flight tests This may explain why the engine nacelles previously fitted on the Museum s Kikka airframe are too small to enclose the Ne 20 engines 1 However Ishizawa later stated that a limited survey at the Paul E Garber facility concluded that this Kikka may not be a strength tester due to the presence of wiring hydraulics and controls 6 Furthermore Susumu Watanabe who was in charge of engine outfitting for the Kikka recalled that the engine nacelles of the strength tester were the same as the standard aircraft and that the strength tester was stressed until failure 7 Based on this information the mock nacelles were potentially added for display purposes after transit to the United States Two Ne 20 jet engines had been taken to the US and sent for analysis to the Chrysler Corporation in 1946 This was only revealed in 2005 by W I Chapman who was in charge of the project at the time A working engine was assembled with the parts of the two Ne 20s and tested for 11 hours and 46 minutes A report was issued on 7 April 1947 titled Japanese NE 20 turbo jet engine Construction and performance The document is now on display at the Tokyo National Science Museum Variants editNakajima Aircraft Company developed some variants of the aircraft Five of the planes under construction at the end of the war were to be completed as two seat trainers 5 Other follow on versions proposed included a reconnaissance aircraft and a fighter armed with two 30 mm Type 5 cannons with 50 rounds per gun The fighter was expected to be powered by a more advanced development of the Ne 20 known as Ne 20 Kai 6 37 kN 650 kgf which was planned to have approximately 30 more thrust than the Ne 20 8 Operators edit nbsp JapanImperial Japanese Navy planned Specifications Kikka edit nbsp Ne 20 engine taken from the second Kikka prototype on display at the Steven F Udvar Hazy Center in Chantilly VirginiaData from Kikka Monogram Close Up 19General characteristicsCrew 1 Length 9 25 m 30 ft 4 in Wingspan 10 m 32 ft 10 in Height 3 05 m 10 ft 0 in Wing area 13 2 m2 142 sq ft Airfoil K125 at root K309 at tip Empty weight 2 300 kg 5 071 lb Gross weight 3 550 kg 7 826 lb Max takeoff weight 4 312 kg 9 506 lb Powerplant 2 Ishikawajima Ne 20 axial flow turbojet engines 4 66 kN 1 047 lbf thrust eachPerformance Maximum speed 696 km h 432 mph 376 kn at 10 000 m 33 000 ft Range 948 km 589 mi 512 nmi Service ceiling 12 000 m 39 000 ft Time to altitude 6 000 m 20 000 ft in 12 minutes with bomb load Wing loading 269 kg m2 55 lb sq ft Thrust weight 0 27Armament Bombs 1 500 kg 1 102 lb or 1 800 kg 1 764 lb bombSee also editRelated development Nakajima Ki 201Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Bell P 59 Airacomet Lockheed P 80 Shooting Star Gloster E 28 39 Gloster Meteor Heinkel He 280 Messerschmitt Me 262 Mikoyan Gurevich MiG 9 Sukhoi Su 9 1946 Related lists List of aircraft of World War II List of jet aircraft of World War IIReferences editNotes edit a b c Lee Russell 28 September 2016 The History of Japan s First Jet Aircraft National Air and Space Museum Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 2017 11 17 a b c The International Encyclopedia of Aircraft 1991 p 24 Francillion 1995 pp 51 52 549 554 Monogram Close Up 19 Monogram Aviation Publications 1979 pp 4 a b Mikesh 1979 p 23 Ishizawa 2006 p60 Ishizawa 2006 p61 Ishizawa Kazuhiko 2006 Kikka The Technological Verification of the First Japanese Jet Engine Ne 20 in Japanese Tokyo Miki Shobo ISBN 978 4895224680 Bibliography edit Francillon Rene J 1995 1970 Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War London Putnam amp Company ISBN 0 370 30251 6 The International Encyclopedia of Aircraft Toronto Ontario Canada B Mitchell 1991 ISBN 0 88665 964 7 Ishizawa Kazuhiko Kikka The Technological Verification of the First Japanese Jet Engine Ne 20 Tokyo Miki Shobo 2006 ISBN 978 4895224680 Mikesh Robert C Kikka Monogram Close Up 19 Bolyston Massachusetts Monogram Aviation Publications 1979 ISBN 0 914144 19 7 Yamashita Takeo ed 秋水 と日本陸海軍ジェット ロケット機 Akimizu and Japan Army and Navy jets and rocket aircraft Tokyo Model Art Co Ltd 1998 別冊航空情報編集部 航空秘話復刻版シリーズ 2 知られざる軍用機開発 下 Tokyo Kantosha 1999 ISBN 4 87357 051 4 歴史群像編集部 歴史群像 2006 大戦末期 航空決戦兵器 橘花 火龍 秋水 キ74 幻のつばさ 2 Late War II Air Decisive Weapon Tachibana Fire Dragon Akimizu Ki 74 太平洋戦史シリーズ Pacific War History Series Vol 56 in Japanese Tokyo Gakken ISBN 4 05 604536 4 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nakajima Kikka The Nakajima Kikka entry at the Hikoki 1946 website Smithsonian NASM page on their Nakajima Kikka Nakajima Kikka Minijets org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nakajima Kikka amp oldid 1193789264, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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