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Saab 29 Tunnan

The Saab 29 Tunnan, colloquially Flygande tunnan or just Tunnan (English: "The flying barrel", "The barrel"),[1] is a Swedish fighter that was designed and manufactured by Saab in the late 1940s. It was the second turbojet-powered combat aircraft to be developed in Sweden, the first being the Saab 21R, and it was the first Western European fighter to be produced with a swept wing post World War II, only being preceded in Western Europe as a whole by the Me 262 built during the war.[2][3] Despite its rotund appearance, from which its name is derived, the J 29 was fast and agile and served effectively in both fighter and fighter-bomber roles into the 1970s.

Saab 29 Tunnan
Role Fighter
National origin Sweden
Manufacturer Saab AB
First flight 1 September 1948
Introduction 1951
Retired 1976
Primary users Swedish Air Force
Austrian Air Force
Produced 1948–1956
Number built 661

Development

Sweden had fallen behind the rapid technical progress being made elsewhere, and Saab needed to catch up in terms of aerodynamics and jet propulsion.[4] Accordingly, project "JxR" was initiated in late 1945 and requirements were drawn up in October 1945.[5] A pair of proposals were presented by the Saab design team, led by Lars Brising. The first of these, codenamed R 101, nicknamed cigarren (the cigar) due to its shape, bore a strong resemblance to the American Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star. The second design, which was chosen, was the barrel-shaped design, codenamed R 1001, which proved to be both faster and more agile.[6]

The R 1001 concept had a straight wing, but after the engineers obtained German swept-wing research data, it was given a 25 degree sweep. Information on swept-wings came through Switzerland and included drawings for the Messerschmitt P.1101, P.1110, P.1111 and P.1112. SAAB's project manager, Frid Wänström, collected these documents in 1945 from Messerschmitt engineers who escaped to Switzerland at the end of the War. Among them were engineer and aerodynamicist Hermann Behrbohm, who joined Saab's J 29 team. These documents clearly indicated delta and swept-wing designs "reduc[e] drag dramatically as the aircraft approached the sound barrier."[7]

To make the wing as thin as possible, the undercarriage retracted into the fuselage, rather than the wings.[8][9] Wind tunnel testing at the Swedish Royal University of Technology and by the National Aeronautical Research Institute also influenced its aerodynamics.[10] These tests determined the required fuselage form to ensure it could attain the targeted critical Mach number, as well as supporting the use of a straight-through airflow to maximize thrust.[11] Automatically locking leading edge slots, interconnected with the flaps, were also deemed necessary for lateral stability during take-off and landing. To further verify the swept wing, a Saab Safir was modified with a full-scale wing as the Saab 201.[7][10] The finalized design, incorporating the new information was drawn up in January 1946.[12]

 
Saab S 29C Tunnan at Swedish Air Force Museum, Linköping
 
The cockpit of a J 29F, 2013

The original powerplant was to have been the de Havilland Goblin turbojet, however, in December 1945, the more powerful de Havilland Ghost became available. This was ideal as not only was the Ghost set up for a circular air intake, its diameter would fit within the planned fuselage.[5] Following negotiations between de Havilland and Saab, the Ghost engine was selected to power the type.[9]

Despite early doubts for the supply of an equivalent to the American 75S aluminium alloy, Svenska Metallverken was able to manufacture it, although significantly larger sections were used than typical for aircraft construction.[13] The structure employed heavy frames and stressed skin to meet conflicting requirements on space, strength, rigidity and accessibility.[8]

The Swedish Air Force requested verification of the performance and a production plan for the project in February 1946.[14] In Autumn 1946, the Swedish Air Force formally ordered three prototypes, with the type designation J 29.[14] Static testing of the full-scale mock-up revealed problems with pressure cabin leaks, and aileron behavior. A hydraulic system was installed to solve the latter issue.[8][14] However these delayed the first flight until after the hoped for date of 1 August 1948.[14]

The first flight by a Saab 29 prototype was on 1 September 1948, was made by S/L 'Bob' Moore,[8] who was later the first managing director of Saab GB, UK.[6] A problem with the landing gear affected the expected top speed of the aircraft.[15] Following the flight, Moore described the aircraft as "on the ground an ugly duckling – in the air, a swift." Because of the shape of its fuselage, the Saab J 29 quickly received the nickname Flygande Tunnan ("The Flying Barrel"), or Tunnan ("The Barrel") for short. While not appreciated by SAAB, its short form was eventually adopted officially.[16]

Four prototypes were built for the test program. The first two lacked armament, carrying heavy test equipment in their place instead. The third was armed with four 20 mm (0.79 in) cannons.[17] Air brakes on the fuselage and on the wings behind the rear spar and both conventional and combined aileron/flap arrangements were tested.[8] Flight tests revealed that the J 29 prototypes could exceed the maximum Mach number for which they had been designed and flight performance figures were typically in excess of predicted values.[17]

Production commenced In 1948 and in May 1951, Bråvalla Wing (F 13) received the first production aircraft.[2]

The Tunnan was produced in five main variants.

The J 29A fighter was the first model to enter service, and was followed by the J 29B and J 29E fighters, and finally the afterburner-equipped J 29F fighter, which was the final variant built. There was also a dedicated reconnaissance variant, the S 29C.[2][18] Between 1950 and 1956, 661 Tunnans were completed, the largest production run for any Saab aircraft.[6]

Design

 
J 29F Tunnan 29666/T at Soderhamn /F 15 Aviation Museum, Söderhamn Airport

The Saab 29 Tunnan was the first Swedish aircraft to be specifically designed to use jet propulsion. Sweden's first jet fighter, the Saab 21R, had been modified from the piston-engined Saab 21.[11] It is a small, chubby aircraft with a single round air intake in the nose, with the pilot under a bubble canopy directly above the air intake duct on the upper-forward section of the fuselage. It has a very thin mid-mounted moderately swept two-spar wing which is a single structure attached to the fuselage by four bolts.[8] The undercarriage is hydraulically operated, and was designed to be suitable for use from rough airstrips.[8] To improve pilot survivability, the Tunnan used an ejection seat Saab developed in 1943, with an explosive jettisoning system for the canopy.[8]

The Tunnan is powered with a single 5,000 lb (2,300 kg) de Havilland Ghost turbojet[8] which have a top speed in excess of 650 mph (1,050 km/h), better performance than Sweden's de Havilland Vampires. The engine was bolted to the fuselage at three points and a special trolley was used to remove the engine for maintenance.[8] The final version had an afterburner, the first successful one used with a British jet engine.[19]

Improvements were made to the wing to incorporate a dog-tooth leading edge, raising the critical Mach number. From 1963 onwards, all frontline J 29Fs were equipped with AIM-9 Sidewinder infrared-seeking air-to-air missiles.[20]

Operational history

Sweden

 
Tunnan at the Swedish Armed Forces' Airshow

The J 29 was fast and agile, and set the world speed record on a 500 km (310 mi) closed circuit in 1954[21] at 977 km/h (607.05 mph). Two S 29C (reconnaissance variant) additionally set an international speed record of 900.6 km/h (559.4 mph) over a 1,000 km (620 mi) closed-circuit course in 1955.[3][21]

The crash record in early service was poor, mainly due to the inexperience with swept-winged aircraft and the lack of a two-seat, dual control Tunnan trainer variant: this meant that Swedish fighter pilots could only be trained using two seat variants of the de Havilland Vampire (a straight-winged jet), before going solo in a Tunnan. 99 pilots were killed during military practice flights in Sweden.[6]

In May 1967, the fighter versions of the Tunnan was retired from combat service; however, a number of aircraft were retained and reconfigured for use as countermeasures trainers and for target towing duties into the 1970s.[2] In August 1976, the last official military flight was performed at the Swedish Air Force's 50th anniversary air show.[2]

Austria

On 27 January 1961, the Swedish Government authorized the Air Board to sell 15 J 29F Tunnans to Saab for restoration and resale to the Austrian Air Force. In 1962, the sale of a further 15 J 29F aircraft to Austria was authorized.[22] This second batch was modified so a camera pod could be installed in the port side of the nose of each aircraft, which required the removal of two cannons. The interchangeable camera pod could be exchanged in roughly 30 minutes, and the cameras could be redirected in flight from the cockpit.[23] Due to the limitations of the 1955 Austrian State Treaty, these were never armed with air-to-air missiles.[24] The Tunnan remained in Austrian Air Force service until 1972.[6]

On 20 October 1964 at 9:48 a.m., two Austrian J 29Fs took off from the base in Linz (they belonged to the 2. Jagdbomber Staffel, the first Bu. No. 29559 "E" was piloted by Sergeant Johan Kemetinger, the second Bu. No. 29627 "L" was piloted by Staff Sergeant Alfred Erdler). In bad weather and a radio beacon mix-up, the pilots "smoked" and crossed the airspace of the then Czechoslovakia. Due to the bad weather, they could not even be intercepted by the emergency pair, who had to stay at the airport. The Austrian pilots thus got deep into the interior of the country and after finding that they had fuel for about the last 2 minutes of the flight, the pilots, believing that the field on which they landed was solid enough, landed in a field in the area of the village of Ořech in the Prague-West district. Coincidentally, just a few kilometres from the civilian Prague-Ruzyně airport.[25] One machine lost its landing gear on landing, the other overturned on a ditch, the pilot was trapped and had to be rescued by people working in the field. Both pilots were returned to their homeland after two days. The planes followed them later by rail.

UN operations in the Congo

 
UN J 29 fighters in the Congo

The Tunnan was the first Swedish jet aircraft to see combat. In response to an appeal by the United Nations (UN) for military support in September 1961, an initial force of five J 29Bs organized as the F 22 Wing of the Swedish Air Force, were stationed in the Republic of Congo as Sweden's contribution to a UN peacekeeping mission (ONUC).[26] They were subsequently reinforced by four more J 29Bs and two S 29C photo reconnaissance Tunnans in 1962.[22] The J 29s were the only combat aircraft operated on behalf of the UN. The Tunnans received UN identifying markings on their fuselages.[26]

Most missions involved attacking ground targets with cannons and unguided rockets but no aircraft were lost in action despite heavy ground fire. The consensus of the crews and foreign observers was that the Tunnan's capabilities were exceptional.[27][28] Their secessionist adversaries used a few Fouga Magisters and other aircraft with no air combat capabilities.

Swedish pilots refused some requests for close air support to ground troops, reasoning that the risk of civilian casualties was too high. In November 1962 the Swedish air commander refused a direct order to destroy the secessionist's Fouga Magisters since they were unarmed.[29]

The only aircraft lost was by a high-ranking officer who crashed during an aborted takeoff for a test flight. When ONUC ended in 1964, some of the Swedish aircraft were deliberately destroyed at their base, as they were no longer needed in Sweden, having been superseded by later variants, and the cost of returning them wasn't justified.[22]

Variants

 
S 29C in an aviation museum
J 29
Four prototypes built in 1948–50.[17]
J 29A
Fighter, 224 built from 1951 to 1954; later series had wing-mounted dive brakes moved to the fuselage, ahead of the main landing gear doors.[30]
J 29B
Fighter, 332 built 1953–55; featured 50% larger fuel capacity and underwing hardpoints to carry bombs, rockets and drop-tanks.[31]
A 29B
Same aircraft as the J 29B, when serving with attack units.[31]
S 29C
Reconnaissance ("S" was derived from Spaning; scouting or reconnaissance in Swedish), 76 built from 1954 through 1956; five cameras mounted in a modified nose (no armament was carried). Later modified with the improved wing design introduced on the J 29E.[19]
J 29D
Proposed fighter variant with afterburner. One proposal (alternative 2) fitted the type with 4x 30 mm Hispano HSS 825 guns.[32] One J 29A (number 29137) trialed with 30 mm HSS 825 mockups in 1952.[33] After trestle mount trials of the 30 mm HSS 825 in 1954 it was found that the weapon was unsafe and the idea to use it on the J 29D was scrapped.[34] A single J 29D prototype was built to test the afterburning Ghost RM 2A turbojet with 27.5 kN (2,800 kgp/6,175 lbf) afterburning thrust. Ultimately converted to J 29 F standard.[19]
J 29E
Fighter, 29 built in 1955; introduced an improved wing design with a leading edge dogtooth to increase the critical Mach number.[19]
J 29F
Fighter, 308 aircraft converted from available stocks of B and E model airframes from 1954 to 1956; featured the afterburning Ghost and dog-tooth wing; all remaining aircraft were further modified in 1963 to carry a pair of US-designed AIM-9B Sidewinder heat-seeking air-to-air missiles, built by SAAB under license as the Rb 24.[20]
J 29F (2. JaBoStaffel variant)
Reconnaissance modification for Austrian J 29F's serving with 2. JaBoStaffel. The modification allowed for the replacement of the left side guns with cameras in a green housing.[35]

Operators

 
Austrian J 29F Tunnan
  Austria
  Sweden
  United Nations ONUC

Surviving aircraft

Specifications (Saab J 29F Tunnan)

 
Saab J 29 Tunnan 3-view drawing

Data from The Great Book of Fighters,[38] The Saab J 29[39] J 29F pilots manual[40]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Length: 10.23 m (33 ft 7 in)
  • Wingspan: 11 m (36 ft 1 in)
  • Height: 3.75 m (12 ft 4 in)
  • Wing area: 24.15 m2 (259.9 sq ft)
  • Empty weight: 4,845 kg (10,681 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 8,375 kg (18,464 lb)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Svenska Flygmotor RM2B centrifugal-flow turbojet engine with afterburning, 27.0 kN (6,070 lbf) thrust

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 1,060 km/h (660 mph, 570 kn)
  • Range: 1,100 km (680 mi, 590 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 15,500 m (50,900 ft)
  • Rate of climb: 32.1 m/s (6,320 ft/min)

Armament

  • Guns:
  • Hardpoints:
  • 8 inner hardpoints for rocket/missile pylons; inner hardpoint only capable of carrying one smaller rocket due to the landing gear[42]
  • 2 outer hardpoints for drop tanks or incendiary bombs, however tests were conducted with carrying rockets on this hardpoint: 8 x 75 mm Bofors, 2-4 x 103 mm Bofors or 1 x 180 mm Bofors rocket could be carried per drop tank hardpoint via a dedicated pylon[42]
  • Rockets:
  • Missiles:
  • Bombs:
  • 200 kg (441 lb) brandb m/51 incendiary bomb; carried in on the drop tank hardpoint[41]
  • 600 kg (1,323 lb) drop tanks could be armed as incendiary bombs in the air or filled with napalm from the start; carried in on the drop tank hardpoint

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Citations

  1. ^ Project:s Saab Historic Milestones, Saab, 23 March 2014, Swedish naming of aircraft.
  2. ^ a b c d e Boyne 2002, p. 547.
  3. ^ a b "1940s." Saab, Retrieved: 27 March 2016.
  4. ^ Widfeldt 1966, p. 3.
  5. ^ a b Flight 1950, p. 556.
  6. ^ a b c d e Goebel, Greg. "The SAAB 29 Tunnan." Vector site, 1 July 2010. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
  7. ^ a b Erichs et al. 1988, p. 37.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Flight 1950, p. 558.
  9. ^ a b Widfeldt 1966, p. 4.
  10. ^ a b Flight 1950, p. 557.
  11. ^ a b Flight 1950, pp. 556–57.
  12. ^ Widfeldt 1966, pp. 4–5.
  13. ^ Flight 1950, pp. 557-558.
  14. ^ a b c d Widfeldt 1966, p. 5.
  15. ^ "Flygande Tunnan fyller 70 – Flygvapenbloggen". blogg.forsvarsmakten.se. Retrieved 2020-09-17.
  16. ^ "History: Saab 29 Tunnan: JAS 29 in the Swedish Air Force." Saab. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  17. ^ a b c Widfeldt 1966, p. 6.
  18. ^ Widfeldt 1966, pp. 6–12.
  19. ^ a b c d Widfeldt 1966, p. 8.
  20. ^ a b Widfeldt 1966, pp. 8–9.
  21. ^ a b "General Aviation World Records: Saab J 29." 2007-11-13 at the Wayback Machine Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI). Retrieved: 18 February 2009.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Widfeldt 1966, p. 10.
  23. ^ Widfeldt 1966, pp. 10-11.
  24. ^ Lombardi 2007, p. 165.
  25. ^ "Saab J-29F "Tunnan" von www.gotech.at".
  26. ^ a b Widfeldt 1966, p. 9.
  27. ^ "J 29 – SAAB 29 ”Flygande tunnan” (1951–1976)." Avrosys. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
  28. ^ "J 29 Tunnan." Everything2. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
  29. ^ "The UN's First "Air Force": Peacekeepers in Combat, Congo 1960–64". walterdorn.net. Retrieved 2022-07-10.
  30. ^ Widfeldt 1966, pp. 6–7.
  31. ^ a b Widfeldt 1966, p. 7.
  32. ^ Swedish archive document collection: FF materialavdelningen, serie E I, volym 9
  33. ^ "29137 J 29A". Retrieved 2021-06-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  34. ^ Thorsson, Nils (1975). Historik och kartläggning av vapenmateriel för flygplan. Arboga, Sweden. p. 21.
  35. ^ a b c SAAV 29 80 år. Stockholm, Sweden: Svensk flyghistorisk förening. 2018. pp. 22–25.
  36. ^ "FLYGETS UPPLEVELSECENTER – I UNDERJORDEN".
  37. ^ "Saab J 29F Tunnan." Musée de l'Air. Retrieved: 21 March 2015.
  38. ^ Green and Swanborough, 2001[page needed]
  39. ^ Widfeldt 1966, p. 12.
  40. ^ SFI J 29 F, speciell förarinstruktion.
  41. ^ Berns, Lennart. Flygande Tunnan, En antologi av Lennart Berns. Sweden. p. 144.
  42. ^ a b c d e f g Sjögren, Sven. FV Raketbeväpning 1944-1954, Raketbeväpning i svenska flygvapnet : en sammanställning över Försökscentralens (Provningsavdelningens) medverkan vid utveckling och utprovning av raketbeväpning åren 1944-1954.
  43. ^ a b Beskrivning över Flygvapnets raketmateriel. 1957.

Bibliography

  • Berns, Lennart and Robin Lindholm. "Saab J 29 Tunnan". International Air Power Review, volume 13/2004, pp. 152–73.
  • Boyne, Walter J. Air Warfare: An International Encyclopedia, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO, 2002. ISBN 1-5760-7345-9.
  • Erichs, Rolph et al. The Saab-Scania Story. Stockholm: Streiffert & Co., 1988. ISBN 91-7886-014-8.
  • Green, William and Gordon Swanborough. The Great Book of Fighters. St. Paul, MAN: MBI Publishing, 2001. ISBN 0-7603-1194-3.
  • Lombardi, Fiona. The Swiss Air Power: Wherefrom? Whereto? vdf Hochschulverlag AG, 2007. ISBN 3-7281-3099-0.
  • "Saab-29: Sweden's new jet fighter." Flight International, 4 May 1950. pp. 556–58.
  • Taylor, John W.R. "Saab J 29." Combat Aircraft of the World from 1909 to the present. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1969. ISBN 0-425-03633-2.
  • This Happens in the Swedish Air Force (brochure). Stockholm: Information Department of the Air Staff, Flygstabens informationsavdelning, Swedish Air Force, 1983.
  • Widfeldt, Bo. The Saab J 29. Leatherhead, Surrey, UK: Profile Publications Ltd., 1966.
  • Wilson, Stewart. Combat Aircraft since 1945. Fyshwick, AU: Aerospace Publications, 2000. ISBN 1-875671-50-1.
  • Winchester, Jim. "Saab J 29". Military Aircraft of the Cold War (The Aviation Factfile). Rochester, Kent, UK: The Grange, 2006. ISBN 1-84013-929-3.

External links

  • Military aviation: Swedish and worldwide
  • Saab J 29 Tunnan
  • Me P.1101 similar German aircraft design
  • The Saab 29 Tunnan on Vectorsite.
  • The photo: only flying Saab J29F in Swedish colours is operated by heritage flight of the Flygvapnet (Swedish Air Force) - 2012.

saab, tunnan, colloquially, flygande, tunnan, just, tunnan, english, flying, barrel, barrel, swedish, fighter, that, designed, manufactured, saab, late, 1940s, second, turbojet, powered, combat, aircraft, developed, sweden, first, being, saab, first, western, . The Saab 29 Tunnan colloquially Flygande tunnan or just Tunnan English The flying barrel The barrel 1 is a Swedish fighter that was designed and manufactured by Saab in the late 1940s It was the second turbojet powered combat aircraft to be developed in Sweden the first being the Saab 21R and it was the first Western European fighter to be produced with a swept wing post World War II only being preceded in Western Europe as a whole by the Me 262 built during the war 2 3 Despite its rotund appearance from which its name is derived the J 29 was fast and agile and served effectively in both fighter and fighter bomber roles into the 1970s Saab 29 TunnanRole FighterNational origin SwedenManufacturer Saab ABFirst flight 1 September 1948Introduction 1951Retired 1976Primary users Swedish Air ForceAustrian Air ForceProduced 1948 1956Number built 661 Contents 1 Development 2 Design 3 Operational history 3 1 Sweden 3 2 Austria 3 3 UN operations in the Congo 4 Variants 5 Operators 6 Surviving aircraft 7 Specifications Saab J 29F Tunnan 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Bibliography 10 External linksDevelopment EditSweden had fallen behind the rapid technical progress being made elsewhere and Saab needed to catch up in terms of aerodynamics and jet propulsion 4 Accordingly project JxR was initiated in late 1945 and requirements were drawn up in October 1945 5 A pair of proposals were presented by the Saab design team led by Lars Brising The first of these codenamed R 101 nicknamed cigarren the cigar due to its shape bore a strong resemblance to the American Lockheed P 80 Shooting Star The second design which was chosen was the barrel shaped design codenamed R 1001 which proved to be both faster and more agile 6 The R 1001 concept had a straight wing but after the engineers obtained German swept wing research data it was given a 25 degree sweep Information on swept wings came through Switzerland and included drawings for the Messerschmitt P 1101 P 1110 P 1111 and P 1112 SAAB s project manager Frid Wanstrom collected these documents in 1945 from Messerschmitt engineers who escaped to Switzerland at the end of the War Among them were engineer and aerodynamicist Hermann Behrbohm who joined Saab s J 29 team These documents clearly indicated delta and swept wing designs reduc e drag dramatically as the aircraft approached the sound barrier 7 To make the wing as thin as possible the undercarriage retracted into the fuselage rather than the wings 8 9 Wind tunnel testing at the Swedish Royal University of Technology and by the National Aeronautical Research Institute also influenced its aerodynamics 10 These tests determined the required fuselage form to ensure it could attain the targeted critical Mach number as well as supporting the use of a straight through airflow to maximize thrust 11 Automatically locking leading edge slots interconnected with the flaps were also deemed necessary for lateral stability during take off and landing To further verify the swept wing a Saab Safir was modified with a full scale wing as the Saab 201 7 10 The finalized design incorporating the new information was drawn up in January 1946 12 Saab S 29C Tunnan at Swedish Air Force Museum Linkoping The cockpit of a J 29F 2013 The original powerplant was to have been the de Havilland Goblin turbojet however in December 1945 the more powerful de Havilland Ghost became available This was ideal as not only was the Ghost set up for a circular air intake its diameter would fit within the planned fuselage 5 Following negotiations between de Havilland and Saab the Ghost engine was selected to power the type 9 Despite early doubts for the supply of an equivalent to the American 75S aluminium alloy Svenska Metallverken was able to manufacture it although significantly larger sections were used than typical for aircraft construction 13 The structure employed heavy frames and stressed skin to meet conflicting requirements on space strength rigidity and accessibility 8 The Swedish Air Force requested verification of the performance and a production plan for the project in February 1946 14 In Autumn 1946 the Swedish Air Force formally ordered three prototypes with the type designation J 29 14 Static testing of the full scale mock up revealed problems with pressure cabin leaks and aileron behavior A hydraulic system was installed to solve the latter issue 8 14 However these delayed the first flight until after the hoped for date of 1 August 1948 14 The first flight by a Saab 29 prototype was on 1 September 1948 was made by S L Bob Moore 8 who was later the first managing director of Saab GB UK 6 A problem with the landing gear affected the expected top speed of the aircraft 15 Following the flight Moore described the aircraft as on the ground an ugly duckling in the air a swift Because of the shape of its fuselage the Saab J 29 quickly received the nickname Flygande Tunnan The Flying Barrel or Tunnan The Barrel for short While not appreciated by SAAB its short form was eventually adopted officially 16 Four prototypes were built for the test program The first two lacked armament carrying heavy test equipment in their place instead The third was armed with four 20 mm 0 79 in cannons 17 Air brakes on the fuselage and on the wings behind the rear spar and both conventional and combined aileron flap arrangements were tested 8 Flight tests revealed that the J 29 prototypes could exceed the maximum Mach number for which they had been designed and flight performance figures were typically in excess of predicted values 17 Production commenced In 1948 and in May 1951 Bravalla Wing F 13 received the first production aircraft 2 The Tunnan was produced in five main variants The J 29A fighter was the first model to enter service and was followed by the J 29B and J 29E fighters and finally the afterburner equipped J 29F fighter which was the final variant built There was also a dedicated reconnaissance variant the S 29C 2 18 Between 1950 and 1956 661 Tunnans were completed the largest production run for any Saab aircraft 6 Design Edit J 29F Tunnan 29666 T at Soderhamn F 15 Aviation Museum Soderhamn Airport The Saab 29 Tunnan was the first Swedish aircraft to be specifically designed to use jet propulsion Sweden s first jet fighter the Saab 21R had been modified from the piston engined Saab 21 11 It is a small chubby aircraft with a single round air intake in the nose with the pilot under a bubble canopy directly above the air intake duct on the upper forward section of the fuselage It has a very thin mid mounted moderately swept two spar wing which is a single structure attached to the fuselage by four bolts 8 The undercarriage is hydraulically operated and was designed to be suitable for use from rough airstrips 8 To improve pilot survivability the Tunnan used an ejection seat Saab developed in 1943 with an explosive jettisoning system for the canopy 8 The Tunnan is powered with a single 5 000 lb 2 300 kg de Havilland Ghost turbojet 8 which have a top speed in excess of 650 mph 1 050 km h better performance than Sweden s de Havilland Vampires The engine was bolted to the fuselage at three points and a special trolley was used to remove the engine for maintenance 8 The final version had an afterburner the first successful one used with a British jet engine 19 Improvements were made to the wing to incorporate a dog tooth leading edge raising the critical Mach number From 1963 onwards all frontline J 29Fs were equipped with AIM 9 Sidewinder infrared seeking air to air missiles 20 Operational history EditSweden Edit Tunnan at the Swedish Armed Forces Airshow The J 29 was fast and agile and set the world speed record on a 500 km 310 mi closed circuit in 1954 21 at 977 km h 607 05 mph Two S 29C reconnaissance variant additionally set an international speed record of 900 6 km h 559 4 mph over a 1 000 km 620 mi closed circuit course in 1955 3 21 The crash record in early service was poor mainly due to the inexperience with swept winged aircraft and the lack of a two seat dual control Tunnan trainer variant this meant that Swedish fighter pilots could only be trained using two seat variants of the de Havilland Vampire a straight winged jet before going solo in a Tunnan 99 pilots were killed during military practice flights in Sweden 6 In May 1967 the fighter versions of the Tunnan was retired from combat service however a number of aircraft were retained and reconfigured for use as countermeasures trainers and for target towing duties into the 1970s 2 In August 1976 the last official military flight was performed at the Swedish Air Force s 50th anniversary air show 2 Austria Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2016 On 27 January 1961 the Swedish Government authorized the Air Board to sell 15 J 29F Tunnans to Saab for restoration and resale to the Austrian Air Force In 1962 the sale of a further 15 J 29F aircraft to Austria was authorized 22 This second batch was modified so a camera pod could be installed in the port side of the nose of each aircraft which required the removal of two cannons The interchangeable camera pod could be exchanged in roughly 30 minutes and the cameras could be redirected in flight from the cockpit 23 Due to the limitations of the 1955 Austrian State Treaty these were never armed with air to air missiles 24 The Tunnan remained in Austrian Air Force service until 1972 6 On 20 October 1964 at 9 48 a m two Austrian J 29Fs took off from the base in Linz they belonged to the 2 Jagdbomber Staffel the first Bu No 29559 E was piloted by Sergeant Johan Kemetinger the second Bu No 29627 L was piloted by Staff Sergeant Alfred Erdler In bad weather and a radio beacon mix up the pilots smoked and crossed the airspace of the then Czechoslovakia Due to the bad weather they could not even be intercepted by the emergency pair who had to stay at the airport The Austrian pilots thus got deep into the interior of the country and after finding that they had fuel for about the last 2 minutes of the flight the pilots believing that the field on which they landed was solid enough landed in a field in the area of the village of Orech in the Prague West district Coincidentally just a few kilometres from the civilian Prague Ruzyne airport 25 One machine lost its landing gear on landing the other overturned on a ditch the pilot was trapped and had to be rescued by people working in the field Both pilots were returned to their homeland after two days The planes followed them later by rail UN operations in the Congo Edit UN J 29 fighters in the Congo The Tunnan was the first Swedish jet aircraft to see combat In response to an appeal by the United Nations UN for military support in September 1961 an initial force of five J 29Bs organized as the F 22 Wing of the Swedish Air Force were stationed in the Republic of Congo as Sweden s contribution to a UN peacekeeping mission ONUC 26 They were subsequently reinforced by four more J 29Bs and two S 29C photo reconnaissance Tunnans in 1962 22 The J 29s were the only combat aircraft operated on behalf of the UN The Tunnans received UN identifying markings on their fuselages 26 Most missions involved attacking ground targets with cannons and unguided rockets but no aircraft were lost in action despite heavy ground fire The consensus of the crews and foreign observers was that the Tunnan s capabilities were exceptional 27 28 Their secessionist adversaries used a few Fouga Magisters and other aircraft with no air combat capabilities Swedish pilots refused some requests for close air support to ground troops reasoning that the risk of civilian casualties was too high In November 1962 the Swedish air commander refused a direct order to destroy the secessionist s Fouga Magisters since they were unarmed 29 The only aircraft lost was by a high ranking officer who crashed during an aborted takeoff for a test flight When ONUC ended in 1964 some of the Swedish aircraft were deliberately destroyed at their base as they were no longer needed in Sweden having been superseded by later variants and the cost of returning them wasn t justified 22 Variants Edit S 29C in an aviation museum J 29 Four prototypes built in 1948 50 17 J 29A Fighter 224 built from 1951 to 1954 later series had wing mounted dive brakes moved to the fuselage ahead of the main landing gear doors 30 J 29B Fighter 332 built 1953 55 featured 50 larger fuel capacity and underwing hardpoints to carry bombs rockets and drop tanks 31 A 29B Same aircraft as the J 29B when serving with attack units 31 S 29C Reconnaissance S was derived from Spaning scouting or reconnaissance in Swedish 76 built from 1954 through 1956 five cameras mounted in a modified nose no armament was carried Later modified with the improved wing design introduced on the J 29E 19 J 29D Proposed fighter variant with afterburner One proposal alternative 2 fitted the type with 4x 30 mm Hispano HSS 825 guns 32 One J 29A number 29137 trialed with 30 mm HSS 825 mockups in 1952 33 After trestle mount trials of the 30 mm HSS 825 in 1954 it was found that the weapon was unsafe and the idea to use it on the J 29D was scrapped 34 A single J 29D prototype was built to test the afterburning Ghost RM 2A turbojet with 27 5 kN 2 800 kgp 6 175 lbf afterburning thrust Ultimately converted to J 29 F standard 19 J 29E Fighter 29 built in 1955 introduced an improved wing design with a leading edge dogtooth to increase the critical Mach number 19 J 29F Fighter 308 aircraft converted from available stocks of B and E model airframes from 1954 to 1956 featured the afterburning Ghost and dog tooth wing all remaining aircraft were further modified in 1963 to carry a pair of US designed AIM 9B Sidewinder heat seeking air to air missiles built by SAAB under license as the Rb 24 20 J 29F 2 JaBoStaffel variant Reconnaissance modification for Austrian J 29F s serving with 2 JaBoStaffel The modification allowed for the replacement of the left side guns with cameras in a green housing 35 Operators Edit Saab J 29 Swedish Air Force Historic Flight RAF Waddington Airshow 2013 Austrian J 29F Tunnan AustriaAustrian Air Force 1 JaBoStaffel 1st fighter bomber squadron 35 2 JaBoStaffel 2nd fighter bomber squadron 35 SwedenSwedish Air Force F 3 Malmslatt 22 F 4 Froson 22 F 6 Karlsborg 22 F 7 Satenas 22 F 8 Barkarby 22 F 9 Save 22 F 10 Angelholm 22 F 11 Nykoping 22 F 12 Kalmar 22 F 13 Norrkoping 22 F 15 Soderhamn 22 F 16 Uppsala 22 F 21 Lulea 22 United Nations ONUCSwedish Air Force F 22 Congo 22 Surviving aircraft EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2021 J 29F 29624 displayed at the Aeroseum in a cavern at Gothenburg Save airport 36 J 29F 29640 preserved at Midlands Air Museum Coventry UK J 29F 29665 at the Musee de l Air located at the former Paris Le Bourget Airport in France 37 J 29F 29566 on display at the Museum of Military History in Vienna AustriaSpecifications Saab J 29F Tunnan Edit Saab J 29 Tunnan 3 view drawing Data from The Great Book of Fighters 38 The Saab J 29 39 J 29F pilots manual 40 General characteristicsCrew 1 Length 10 23 m 33 ft 7 in Wingspan 11 m 36 ft 1 in Height 3 75 m 12 ft 4 in Wing area 24 15 m2 259 9 sq ft Empty weight 4 845 kg 10 681 lb Max takeoff weight 8 375 kg 18 464 lb Powerplant 1 Svenska Flygmotor RM2B centrifugal flow turbojet engine with afterburning 27 0 kN 6 070 lbf thrustPerformance Maximum speed 1 060 km h 660 mph 570 kn Range 1 100 km 680 mi 590 nmi Service ceiling 15 500 m 50 900 ft Rate of climb 32 1 m s 6 320 ft min Armament Guns 4 x 20 mm 0 79 in akan m 47C license produced Hispano Mark V autocannon with 180 rounds per gunHardpoints 8 inner hardpoints for rocket missile pylons inner hardpoint only capable of carrying one smaller rocket due to the landing gear 42 2 outer hardpoints for drop tanks or incendiary bombs however tests were conducted with carrying rockets on this hardpoint 8 x 75 mm Bofors 2 4 x 103 mm Bofors or 1 x 180 mm Bofors rocket could be carried per drop tank hardpoint via a dedicated pylon 42 Rockets 75 mm 3 0 in srak m 55 Bofors 75 mm 3 0 in rocket Frida 42 air to air rocket with contact fuze high capacity warhead 43 2 4 rockets per pylon up to a total of 24 80 mm 3 1 in prak m 46C RP 3 with sloped fins of Swedish design 42 43 air to ground rocket with 80 mm 3 1 in armour piercing warhead 1 rocket per pylon up to a total of 8 145 mm 5 7 in psrak m 49 Bofors 103 mm 4 1 in rocket 42 air to ground rocket with 145 mm 5 7 in shaped charge warhead 1 2 rockets per pylon up to a total of 14 150 mm 5 9 in srak m 51 Bofors 103 mm 4 1 in rocket 42 air to ground rocket with 150 mm 6 in high explosive warhead 1 2 rockets per pylon up to a total of 14 180 mm 7 1 in hprak m 49 Bofors 180 mm 7 1 in rocket 42 air to ground rocket with semi armor piercing high explosive warhead 1 rocket per pylon up to a total of 4Missiles Rb 24 AIM 9B Sidewinder air to air missile carried on the third hardpoint from the centerBombs 200 kg 441 lb brandb m 51 incendiary bomb carried in on the drop tank hardpoint 41 600 kg 1 323 lb drop tanks could be armed as incendiary bombs in the air or filled with napalm from the start carried in on the drop tank hardpointSee also EditAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Dassault Ouragan Dassault Mystere Hawker Hunter Mikoyan Gurevich MiG 15 Mikoyan Gurevich MiG 9 Lavochkin La 15 North American F 86 Sabre FMA IAe 33 Pulqui II Republic F 84F Thunderstreak Focke Wulf Ta 183Related lists List of fighter aircraft List of military aircraft of SwedenReferences EditCitations Edit Project s Saab Historic Milestones Saab 23 March 2014 Swedish naming of aircraft a b c d e Boyne 2002 p 547 a b 1940s Saab Retrieved 27 March 2016 Widfeldt 1966 p 3 a b Flight 1950 p 556 a b c d e Goebel Greg The SAAB 29 Tunnan Vector site 1 July 2010 Retrieved 4 December 2010 a b Erichs et al 1988 p 37 a b c d e f g h i j Flight 1950 p 558 a b Widfeldt 1966 p 4 a b Flight 1950 p 557 a b Flight 1950 pp 556 57 Widfeldt 1966 pp 4 5 Flight 1950 pp 557 558 a b c d Widfeldt 1966 p 5 Flygande Tunnan fyller 70 Flygvapenbloggen blogg forsvarsmakten se Retrieved 2020 09 17 History Saab 29 Tunnan JAS 29 in the Swedish Air Force Saab Retrieved 21 March 2015 a b c Widfeldt 1966 p 6 Widfeldt 1966 pp 6 12 a b c d Widfeldt 1966 p 8 a b Widfeldt 1966 pp 8 9 a b General Aviation World Records Saab J 29 Archived 2007 11 13 at the Wayback Machine Federation Aeronautique Internationale FAI Retrieved 18 February 2009 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Widfeldt 1966 p 10 Widfeldt 1966 pp 10 11 Lombardi 2007 p 165 Saab J 29F Tunnan von www gotech at a b Widfeldt 1966 p 9 J 29 SAAB 29 Flygande tunnan 1951 1976 Avrosys Retrieved 4 December 2010 J 29 Tunnan Everything2 Retrieved 4 December 2010 The UN s First Air Force Peacekeepers in Combat Congo 1960 64 walterdorn net Retrieved 2022 07 10 Widfeldt 1966 pp 6 7 a b Widfeldt 1966 p 7 Swedish archive document collection FF materialavdelningen serie E I volym 9 29137 J 29A Retrieved 2021 06 13 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Thorsson Nils 1975 Historik och kartlaggning av vapenmateriel for flygplan Arboga Sweden p 21 a b c SAAV 29 80 ar Stockholm Sweden Svensk flyghistorisk forening 2018 pp 22 25 FLYGETS UPPLEVELSECENTER I UNDERJORDEN Saab J 29F Tunnan Musee de l Air Retrieved 21 March 2015 Green and Swanborough 2001 page needed Widfeldt 1966 p 12 SFI J 29 F speciell forarinstruktion Berns Lennart Flygande Tunnan En antologi av Lennart Berns Sweden p 144 a b c d e f g Sjogren Sven FV Raketbevapning 1944 1954 Raketbevapning i svenska flygvapnet en sammanstallning over Forsokscentralens Provningsavdelningens medverkan vid utveckling och utprovning av raketbevapning aren 1944 1954 a b Beskrivning over Flygvapnets raketmateriel 1957 Bibliography Edit Berns Lennart and Robin Lindholm Saab J 29 Tunnan International Air Power Review volume 13 2004 pp 152 73 Boyne Walter J Air Warfare An International Encyclopedia Volume 1 ABC CLIO 2002 ISBN 1 5760 7345 9 Erichs Rolph et al The Saab Scania Story Stockholm Streiffert amp Co 1988 ISBN 91 7886 014 8 Green William and Gordon Swanborough The Great Book of Fighters St Paul MAN MBI Publishing 2001 ISBN 0 7603 1194 3 Lombardi Fiona The Swiss Air Power Wherefrom Whereto vdf Hochschulverlag AG 2007 ISBN 3 7281 3099 0 Saab 29 Sweden s new jet fighter Flight International 4 May 1950 pp 556 58 Taylor John W R Saab J 29 Combat Aircraft of the World from 1909 to the present New York G P Putnam s Sons 1969 ISBN 0 425 03633 2 This Happens in the Swedish Air Force brochure Stockholm Information Department of the Air Staff Flygstabens informationsavdelning Swedish Air Force 1983 Widfeldt Bo The Saab J 29 Leatherhead Surrey UK Profile Publications Ltd 1966 Wilson Stewart Combat Aircraft since 1945 Fyshwick AU Aerospace Publications 2000 ISBN 1 875671 50 1 Winchester Jim Saab J 29 Military Aircraft of the Cold War The Aviation Factfile Rochester Kent UK The Grange 2006 ISBN 1 84013 929 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saab 29 Tunnan Military aviation Swedish and worldwide Saab J 29 Tunnan Me P 1101 similar German aircraft design The Saab 29 Tunnan on Vectorsite The photo only flying Saab J29F in Swedish colours is operated by heritage flight of the Flygvapnet Swedish Air Force 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saab 29 Tunnan amp oldid 1136943273, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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