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Scientific and engineering progress sometimes seems limited
only by time, money, and motivation. Let's face it; if enough people want it
done we can build something as enormous and expensive as the Large Hadron
Collider (LHC), which spans through 27 km of tunnels and cost around $4.4
billion. Fun stuff.
(The Higg's Machine. Credit:
American Physical Society -->)
Of course, if we're talking money, few organizations have
more at their fingertips than our nations' militaries. And this abundance of
resources, coupled with patriotic and wartime motivations, often amounts to an
overabundance of enterprise and invention (i.e. military + money + zeal = big
and expensive guns). Luckily for us, we can enjoy learning about most epic of
undertakings in military engineering, even if they were flat-out failures.
In this edition, we look at three "visionary" mid-1900's
aircraft designs that, simply put, didn't work.
#1 - The Kalinin K7
The Kalinin K-7 was a Russian designed experimental heavy bomber
built in the early 1930s under the principle of "bigger is better". With wings
spanning 132.5 meters (a 747 is ~68.5m), this "flying fortress" was one of the
largest (if not the largest) planes to ever leave the ground. It used a total
of 20 engines which powered over 14 propellers. Inside the wings of the plane
was enough room to seat 120 passengers and a crew of 11. It featured as many as
12 gunner positions and could carry up to 16 tons of bombs, 112 fully equipped
paratroopers, or 8.5 tons of parachutable supplies depending on the range of
travel required.
(Credit: Gizmodo -->)
In its test flights, the K-7 reached a top speed of 140 mph
and an elevation of 13,000 ft. Unfortunately, a crash in 1933 during one of its
test flights killed 15 people as well as the plane's chances of ever reaching
completion. The crash was investigated by a committee of aviation experts, and
it was concluded that the aircraft failed due to surface vibrational issues due
to improper weight balancing.

(Credit: Gizmag)
For more reading:
Pilotfriend
Fiddler's
Green
Gizmodo
Gizmag
#2 - The XF-85 Goblin
Alongside one of the biggest planes to ever grace the skies,
let's look at one of the smallest. The XF-85 Goblin was a "parasite" fighter
designed by the US in 1948 to protect bombers that had to venture beyond the
range of their escorts. With only a 14'10" length and 21' wingspan, it was made
to be transported and released from the B-36 bomber through its payload doors;
after eliminating the threat with its four .50 caliber machine guns, it would
then reattach to a trapeze connection, fold its wings, and be lifted back into
the bomb bay. It had no landing gear, save for a steel skid and some small
wheel runners for emergencies.
(Credit: U.S. Air
Force -->)
Parasite fighters had been used in other forms, such as on
dirigible airships (bringing to mind the airship escape scene from Indiana Jones: The Last Crusade, with Dr. Jones' brilliant aerial
defense). However, none had ever been launched in this unusual fashion. A
B-29 superfortress (shown right) was used for test launches, since a B-36
prototype did not exist. Although the Goblin flew and handled well, the
turbulence around the "mothership" made it incredibly hard to recover using the
trapeze system in place. Eventually the project was scrapped in favor of a more
promising solution to bomber escorting: aerial refueling.
For more reading:
Boeing
Military Heat
National
Museum of the US Air Force
#3 Focke Wulf
Triebflugel
Perhaps one of the most creative and ridiculous aircraft
designs was the Focke Wulf Triebflugel. It was based off the principle of the
helicopter, in that it used three large spinning rotors. Beyond this, the
Focke-Wulf is very much its own creation. The rotors were designed to spin
around the fuselage, and were powered by small jets on the tips which would be
jumpstarted by rockets. Using ramjets made it possible to reach altitudes of
59,000 ft. It also could use a variety of cheap fuels, which would be important
for expanding the costly German war machine.
(Credit: Fiddler's
Green -->)
This 30' rotating wing fighter was devised in 1942 as a
convenient point defense fighter that needed only a small area for takeoff.
Unfortunately, designers failed to think about the practicality of landing such
a machine. The spinning rotors and jet exhaust made rear visibility nearly
impossible, which was essential for the vertical/backwards landing it was
designed for. Ejection of the pilot from the plane was also problematic for
obvious reasons. The project was terminated in 1944, mostly because it had been
in the development stage for far too long.

(Credit: greyfalcon.us)
For more reading:
GreyFalcon
Fiddler's
Green
Rocket
Dungeon
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