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Northrop X-4 Bantam

The Northrop X-4 Bantam was a prototype small twinjet aircraft manufactured by Northrop Corporation in 1948. It had no horizontal tail surfaces, depending instead on combined elevator and aileron control surfaces (called elevons) for control in pitch and roll attitudes, almost exactly in the manner of the similar-format, rocket-powered Messerschmitt Me 163 of Nazi Germany's Luftwaffe. Some aerodynamicists had proposed that eliminating the horizontal tail would also do away with stability problems at fast speeds (called shock stall) resulting from the interaction of supersonic shock waves from the wings and the horizontal stabilizers. The idea had merit, but the flight control systems of that time prevented the X-4 from achieving any success.

X-4 Bantam
X-4 Bantam
Role Tailless aircraft prototype
Manufacturer Northrop Corporation
First flight 15 December 1948
Status Retired
Number built 2

Development

Two X-4s were built by the Northrop Corporation, but the first was found to be mechanically unsound and after ten flights it was grounded and used to provide parts for the second.[1] While being tested from 1950 to 1953 at the NACA High-Speed Flight Research Station (now Edwards Air Force Base), the X-4's semi-tailless configuration exhibited inherent longitudinal stability problems (porpoising) as it approached the speed of sound. It was concluded that (with the control technology available at the time) tailless craft were not suited for transonic flight.[2]

It was believed in the 1940s that a design without horizontal stabilizers would avoid the interaction of shock waves between the wing and stabilizers. These were believed to be the source of the stability problems at transonic speeds up to Mach 0.9. Two aircraft had already been built using a semi-tailless design—the rocket-powered Me 163B Komet flown in combat by Nazi Germany's Luftwaffe in World War II, and the turbojet-powered British de Havilland DH.108 Swallow built after the war. The United States Army Air Forces signed a contract with the Northrop Aircraft Company on 11 June 1946, to build two X-4s. Northrop was selected because of its experience with flying wing designs, such as the N-9M, XB-35 and YB-49 aircraft.

The resulting aircraft was very compact, only large enough to hold two Westinghouse J30 jet engines, a pilot, instrumentation, and a 45-minute fuel supply. Nearly all maintenance work on the aircraft could be done without using a ladder or footstool. A person standing on the ground could easily look into the cockpit. The aircraft also had split flaps, which doubled as speed brakes.

Operational history

 
Preparing for flight

The first X-4 (serial number 46-676) was delivered to Muroc Air Force Base, California, in November 1948. It underwent taxi tests and made its first flight on December 15, 1948, with Northrop test pilot Charles Tucker at the controls. Winter rains flooded Rogers Dry Lake soon after, preventing additional X-4 flights until April 1949. The first X-4 proved mechanically unreliable, and made only ten flights. Walter C. Williams, the head of the NACA Muroc Flight Test Unit (now Dryden Flight Research Center) called the aircraft a "lemon".[1] The second X-4 (serial number 46-677) was delivered during the halt of flights, and soon proved far more reliable. It made a total of 20 contractor flights. Despite this, the contractor flight program dragged on until February 1950, before both aircraft were turned over to the Air Force and the NACA. The first X-4 never flew again, used as spare parts for the second aircraft.

The NACA instrumented the second X-4 to conduct a short series of flights with Air Force pilots. These included Chuck Yeager, Frank Kendall Everest, Jr., Al Boyd, Richard Johnson, Fred Ascani, Arthur Murray and Jack Ridley. The flights were made in August and September 1950. The first flight by an NACA pilot was made by John H. Griffith on September 28, 1950.

The initial NACA X-4 flights, which continued from late 1950 through May of 1951, focused on the aircraft's sensitivity to pitch. NACA pilots Griffith and Scott Crossfield noted that as the X-4's speed approached Mach 0.88, it began a pitch oscillation of increasing severity, which was likened to driving on a washboard road. Increasing speeds also caused a tucking phenomenon, in which the nose pitched down, a phenomenon also experienced by the Me 163A Anton prototypes in 1941. More seriously, the aircraft also showed a tendency to "hunt" about all three axes. This combined yaw, pitch and roll, which grew more severe as the speed increased, was a precursor to the inertial coupling which would become a major challenge in the years to come.

To correct the poor stability, project engineers decided to increase the flap/speed brake trailing edge thickness. Balsa wood strips were added between the upper and lower hinged "clamshell"-style flap/speed brake halves, causing them to remain open at a 5° angle. The first test of the blunt trailing edge was flown on 20 August 1951 by NACA pilot Walter Jones. A second test was made by Crossfield in October. The results were positive, with Jones commenting that the X-4's flight qualities had been greatly improved, and the aircraft did not have pitch control problems up to a speed of Mach 0.92.

The balsa strips were removed, and the X-4 then undertook a long series of flights to test landing characteristics. By opening the speed brakes, the lift-to-drag ratio of the aircraft could be reduced to less than 3:1. This was for data on future rocket-powered aircraft. The tests continued through October 1951, until wing tank fuel leaks forced the aircraft to be grounded until March 1952, when the landing tests resumed. NACA pilots Joe Walker, Stanley Butchard, and George Cooper were also checked out in the aircraft.

The thickened flap/speed brake tests had been encouraging, so balsa wood strips were reinstalled on both the flap/speed brake and the elevons. The first flight was made by Jones on 19 May 1952, but one of the engines was damaged during the flight, and it was August before a replacement J30 could be found. When the flights resumed, they showed that the modifications had improved stability in both pitch and yaw, and delayed the nosedown trim changes from Mach 0.74 to Mach 0.91. Above Mach 0.91, however, the X-4 still oscillated.

In May 1953, the balsa wood strips were again removed, and the X-4's dynamic stability was studied in the original flap/speed brake and elevon configuration. These flights were made by Crossfield and John B. McKay. This was the final project for the X-4, which made its 81st and final NACA flight on September 29, 1953. Both aircraft survived the test program. The first X-4, AF serial number 46-676, was transferred to the United States Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs, Colorado, before being returned to Edwards Air Force Base.[1] 46-676 has been restored as of August 2012, and is currently being held in storage pending placement in the Edwards Museum. The second X-4 went to the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio, where it remains on display.[1]

The X-4's primary importance involved proving a negative, in that a swept-wing semi-tailless design was not suitable for speeds near Mach 1, although Vought's F7U Cutlass proved to be something of a counterexample—the developed version was the first aircraft to demonstrate stores separation above Mach 1. Aircraft designers were thus able to avoid this dead end. It was not until the development of computer fly-by-wire systems that such designs could be practical. Semi-tailless designs appeared on the X-36, Have Blue, F-117, and Bird of Prey, although these aircraft all differed significantly in shape from the X-4. The trend during its test program was already towards delta and modified delta aircraft such as the Douglas F4D, the Convair F-102A derived from the XF-92A, and the Avro Vulcan.

Aircraft on display

Specifications (X-4)

 

Data from X-4 – The Bantam Explorer [4]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Length: 23 ft 3 in (7.09 m)
  • Wingspan: 26 ft 10 in (8.18 m)
  • Height: 14 ft 10 in (4.52 m)
  • Wing area: 200 sq ft (19 m2)
  • Airfoil: NACA 0010-64[5]
  • Empty weight: 5,507 lb (2,498 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 7,820 lb (3,547 kg)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Westinghouse J30-WE-7 / WE-9 turbojet engines, 1,600 lbf (7.1 kN) thrust each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 625 mph (1,006 km/h, 543 kn)
  • Range: 420 mi (680 km, 360 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 42,300 ft (12,900 m)
  • Rate of climb: 7,700 ft/min (39 m/s)

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Wilkinson, Stephan. "Northrop X-4". Air & Space Smithsonian. Vol.29 No.2. June/July 2014.
  2. ^ Sadoff, Melvin; Sisk, Thomas (13 December 1950). Summary report of results obtained during demonstration tests of the Northrop X-4 airplanes (Report). Washington: National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  3. ^ "Northrop X-4 Bantam".
  4. ^ Hallion 1977, p. 23.
  5. ^ Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". m-selig.ae.illinois.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2019.

Bibliography

  • Hallion, Richard P (1977). "X-4 – A Bantam Explorer". Air Enthusiast Quarterly. No. Three. pp. 18–25. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Pelletier, Alain J. "Towards the Ideal Aircraft: The Life and Times of the Flying Wing, Part Two". Air Enthusiast, No. 65, September–October 1996, pp. 8–19. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • NASA-Dryden X-4 Fact Sheet

  This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

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This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations July 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Northrop X 4 Bantam was a prototype small twinjet aircraft manufactured by Northrop Corporation in 1948 It had no horizontal tail surfaces depending instead on combined elevator and aileron control surfaces called elevons for control in pitch and roll attitudes almost exactly in the manner of the similar format rocket powered Messerschmitt Me 163 of Nazi Germany s Luftwaffe Some aerodynamicists had proposed that eliminating the horizontal tail would also do away with stability problems at fast speeds called shock stall resulting from the interaction of supersonic shock waves from the wings and the horizontal stabilizers The idea had merit but the flight control systems of that time prevented the X 4 from achieving any success X 4 BantamX 4 BantamRole Tailless aircraft prototypeManufacturer Northrop CorporationFirst flight 15 December 1948Status RetiredNumber built 2 Contents 1 Development 2 Operational history 3 Aircraft on display 4 Specifications X 4 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 BibliographyDevelopment EditTwo X 4s were built by the Northrop Corporation but the first was found to be mechanically unsound and after ten flights it was grounded and used to provide parts for the second 1 While being tested from 1950 to 1953 at the NACA High Speed Flight Research Station now Edwards Air Force Base the X 4 s semi tailless configuration exhibited inherent longitudinal stability problems porpoising as it approached the speed of sound It was concluded that with the control technology available at the time tailless craft were not suited for transonic flight 2 It was believed in the 1940s that a design without horizontal stabilizers would avoid the interaction of shock waves between the wing and stabilizers These were believed to be the source of the stability problems at transonic speeds up to Mach 0 9 Two aircraft had already been built using a semi tailless design the rocket powered Me 163B Komet flown in combat by Nazi Germany s Luftwaffe in World War II and the turbojet powered British de Havilland DH 108 Swallow built after the war The United States Army Air Forces signed a contract with the Northrop Aircraft Company on 11 June 1946 to build two X 4s Northrop was selected because of its experience with flying wing designs such as the N 9M XB 35 and YB 49 aircraft The resulting aircraft was very compact only large enough to hold two Westinghouse J30 jet engines a pilot instrumentation and a 45 minute fuel supply Nearly all maintenance work on the aircraft could be done without using a ladder or footstool A person standing on the ground could easily look into the cockpit The aircraft also had split flaps which doubled as speed brakes Operational history Edit Preparing for flight The first X 4 serial number 46 676 was delivered to Muroc Air Force Base California in November 1948 It underwent taxi tests and made its first flight on December 15 1948 with Northrop test pilot Charles Tucker at the controls Winter rains flooded Rogers Dry Lake soon after preventing additional X 4 flights until April 1949 The first X 4 proved mechanically unreliable and made only ten flights Walter C Williams the head of the NACA Muroc Flight Test Unit now Dryden Flight Research Center called the aircraft a lemon 1 The second X 4 serial number 46 677 was delivered during the halt of flights and soon proved far more reliable It made a total of 20 contractor flights Despite this the contractor flight program dragged on until February 1950 before both aircraft were turned over to the Air Force and the NACA The first X 4 never flew again used as spare parts for the second aircraft The NACA instrumented the second X 4 to conduct a short series of flights with Air Force pilots These included Chuck Yeager Frank Kendall Everest Jr Al Boyd Richard Johnson Fred Ascani Arthur Murray and Jack Ridley The flights were made in August and September 1950 The first flight by an NACA pilot was made by John H Griffith on September 28 1950 The initial NACA X 4 flights which continued from late 1950 through May of 1951 focused on the aircraft s sensitivity to pitch NACA pilots Griffith and Scott Crossfield noted that as the X 4 s speed approached Mach 0 88 it began a pitch oscillation of increasing severity which was likened to driving on a washboard road Increasing speeds also caused a tucking phenomenon in which the nose pitched down a phenomenon also experienced by the Me 163A Anton prototypes in 1941 More seriously the aircraft also showed a tendency to hunt about all three axes This combined yaw pitch and roll which grew more severe as the speed increased was a precursor to the inertial coupling which would become a major challenge in the years to come To correct the poor stability project engineers decided to increase the flap speed brake trailing edge thickness Balsa wood strips were added between the upper and lower hinged clamshell style flap speed brake halves causing them to remain open at a 5 angle The first test of the blunt trailing edge was flown on 20 August 1951 by NACA pilot Walter Jones A second test was made by Crossfield in October The results were positive with Jones commenting that the X 4 s flight qualities had been greatly improved and the aircraft did not have pitch control problems up to a speed of Mach 0 92 The balsa strips were removed and the X 4 then undertook a long series of flights to test landing characteristics By opening the speed brakes the lift to drag ratio of the aircraft could be reduced to less than 3 1 This was for data on future rocket powered aircraft The tests continued through October 1951 until wing tank fuel leaks forced the aircraft to be grounded until March 1952 when the landing tests resumed NACA pilots Joe Walker Stanley Butchard and George Cooper were also checked out in the aircraft The thickened flap speed brake tests had been encouraging so balsa wood strips were reinstalled on both the flap speed brake and the elevons The first flight was made by Jones on 19 May 1952 but one of the engines was damaged during the flight and it was August before a replacement J30 could be found When the flights resumed they showed that the modifications had improved stability in both pitch and yaw and delayed the nosedown trim changes from Mach 0 74 to Mach 0 91 Above Mach 0 91 however the X 4 still oscillated In May 1953 the balsa wood strips were again removed and the X 4 s dynamic stability was studied in the original flap speed brake and elevon configuration These flights were made by Crossfield and John B McKay This was the final project for the X 4 which made its 81st and final NACA flight on September 29 1953 Both aircraft survived the test program The first X 4 AF serial number 46 676 was transferred to the United States Air Force Academy Colorado Springs Colorado before being returned to Edwards Air Force Base 1 46 676 has been restored as of August 2012 and is currently being held in storage pending placement in the Edwards Museum The second X 4 went to the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton Ohio where it remains on display 1 The X 4 s primary importance involved proving a negative in that a swept wing semi tailless design was not suitable for speeds near Mach 1 although Vought s F7U Cutlass proved to be something of a counterexample the developed version was the first aircraft to demonstrate stores separation above Mach 1 Aircraft designers were thus able to avoid this dead end It was not until the development of computer fly by wire systems that such designs could be practical Semi tailless designs appeared on the X 36 Have Blue F 117 and Bird of Prey although these aircraft all differed significantly in shape from the X 4 The trend during its test program was already towards delta and modified delta aircraft such as the Douglas F4D the Convair F 102A derived from the XF 92A and the Avro Vulcan Aircraft on display EditThe surviving X 4 tail number 6677 is on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton Ohio 3 The surviving X 4 seriel number 46 676 is on display at the Flight Test Museum on Edwards Air Force Base Edwards CA https flighttestmuseum org aircraft inventory list Specifications X 4 Edit Data from X 4 The Bantam Explorer 4 General characteristicsCrew 1 Length 23 ft 3 in 7 09 m Wingspan 26 ft 10 in 8 18 m Height 14 ft 10 in 4 52 m Wing area 200 sq ft 19 m2 Airfoil NACA 0010 64 5 Empty weight 5 507 lb 2 498 kg Max takeoff weight 7 820 lb 3 547 kg Powerplant 2 Westinghouse J30 WE 7 WE 9 turbojet engines 1 600 lbf 7 1 kN thrust eachPerformance Maximum speed 625 mph 1 006 km h 543 kn Range 420 mi 680 km 360 nmi Service ceiling 42 300 ft 12 900 m Rate of climb 7 700 ft min 39 m s See also EditAircraft of comparable role configuration and era DH 108 Swallow Messerschmitt Me 163 Lippisch P 15Related lists List of X 4 flightsReferences Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Northrop X 4 Notes Edit a b c d Wilkinson Stephan Northrop X 4 Air amp Space Smithsonian Vol 29 No 2 June July 2014 Sadoff Melvin Sisk Thomas 13 December 1950 Summary report of results obtained during demonstration tests of the Northrop X 4 airplanes Report Washington National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics Retrieved 28 June 2021 Northrop X 4 Bantam Hallion 1977 p 23 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Bibliography Edit Hallion Richard P 1977 X 4 A Bantam Explorer Air Enthusiast Quarterly No Three pp 18 25 ISSN 0143 5450 Pelletier Alain J Towards the Ideal Aircraft The Life and Times of the Flying Wing Part Two Air Enthusiast No 65 September October 1996 pp 8 19 ISSN 0143 5450 NASA Dryden X 4 Fact Sheet This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Northrop X 4 Bantam amp oldid 1135789725, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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