The Burnelli Controversy
Was this designer a genius or his own worst enemy?
- By David Noland
- Air & Space magazine, November 1989
Burnelli (front) designed conventional aircraft like the 1916 Continental Pusher before turning to lifting-fuselage airplanes with the RB-1.
NASM
“This is the biggest story in aviation history,” says Chalmers H. “Slick” Goodlin. He puffs on his pipe and leans back in a 16th century oak chair in the living room of his sumptuous Coral Gables home. A suit of medieval armor sits astride a life-size wooden horse over behind the couch, and banyan trees are visible outside the window. Goodlin, a 66-year-old dealer in used jet airliners and a former test pilot from the glory days at Muroc, is talking about a subject that has consumed him—some would say obsessed him—for nearly four decades: the Burnelli lifting fuselage. This 69-year-old concept of aircraft design is one that Goodlin insists would revolutionize aviation today. “The government and the military-industrial complex have engaged in a diabolical conspiracy to kill the Burnelli concept,” he says. “The cost of that conspiracy has been hundreds of billions of dollars and thousands of human lives. It’s one of mankind’s greatest tragedies of the 20th century.”
One day in 1920, a clever young aircraft designer from Texas named Vincent J. Burnelli had a brainstorm. Seeking to increase lift for a larger version of the Lawson Airliner he’d designed the year before, Burnelli hit upon the idea of shaping the fuselage like an airfoil. Instead of simply dragging through the air and unnecessarily burdening the wings, reasoned Burnelli, his fuselage would generate its fair share of lift. Moreover, the lifting fuselage would reduce structural loads on the wing and provide the additional bonus of a cavernous cabin.
Burnelli’s first lifting-fuselage aircraft was the 32-passenger RB-1 biplane, which made its maiden flight in 1921. It had a broad slab of a body, curved like an airfoil across the top and bottom and tapering to a knife edge at the rear. The fuselage contributed more than 500 square feet of lifting surface, about a third of the total wing area, and was so wide that the two 550-horsepower Galloway Atlantic engines fit side by side in the nose. An improved version, the RB-2, could carry three tones of freight, an astonishing load in those days, and in 1925 the prototype hauled around a Hudson Essex automobile on an aerial sales tour. But the RB-2 was sluggish and slow, and Burnelli couldn’t get financing for production.
He continued to design and build airplanes based on his lifting-fuselage concept into the late 1940s, persuading various backers to fund six more prototype aircraft. None ever went into production, even though Burnelli had the support of big names like Hap Arnold, Clyde Pangborn, and Billy Mitchell. His unusual designs also caught the fancy of aviation buffs of the day, among them an airplane-crazy Pennsylvania boy named Chalmers Goodlin, who built a model of a Burnelli when he was 10 years old.
But the big contract remained elusive. Until his death in 1964 Burnelli continued to sketch designs for aircraft ranging from commercial jet transports to suborbital space planes, all employing his lifting-fuselage concept. The last Burnelli aircraft to fly was the CBY-3 Loadmaster, a squat, bulky twin-engine cargo transport that first took wing in 1947. The only surviving Burnelli, it now sits, forlorn and partially disassembled, in the grass out behind the New England Air Museum in Windsor Locks, Connecticut.
When Slick Goodlin met Vincent Burnelli in 1949, Goodlin too was feeling the sting of rejection by the aviation establishment. Two years earlier, Goodlin, then a dashing 24-year-old test pilot for Bell Aircraft, had made the first powered flights of the Bell X-1, the bright orange rocket plane that would later break the sound barrier and make a national hero out of Air Force pilot Chuck Yeager. Goodlin took the X-1 to the brink of Mach 1, but it was Yeager who stepped in for the epochal supersonic ride.
According to Yeager’s autobiography and the book The Right Stuff, Goodlin lost his shot as soon as he insisted on a $150,000 bonus to fly the X-1 past the sound barrier. When the Air Force balked, Yeager took over for $283 a month, his regular service pay.
“That account is false,” says Goodlin vehemently, the bitterness still evident. “I had a handshake deal with Bob Stanley of Bell that I would make the first supersonic flight before we turned the plane over to the Air Force. He agreed I’d get $150,000 for the supersonic flights. But the Air Force wanted a man in uniform to break the sound barrier—better PR. And to make Yeager look like a hero, they made up the story about me refusing to fly.”





Comments (6)
The article covers both sides of the debate pretty well considering the lack of commentary from Boeing and the military, and total absence of flight data from testing. One seeming contradiction that is rather obvious to me is that doubling the payload, even on passenger aircraft, would indicate a twofold increase in payment for freight or passengers with significantly less cost accrued due to extra fuel expenditure due to slower airspeeds. This would negate the contention that there is no profit increase in using the lifting body design, if it truly is capable of such a claim.
Surely we should also be considering the safety of passengers in our aircraft design, especially commercial airliners, and since speed translates more than proportionally to fatality during a crash, lowering landing and takeoff speeds could significantly reduce airline fatalities. Especially considering that the vast majority of fatal accidents happen during these two events. I notice that the article only talks about this consideration from a public outcry standpoint, completely ignoring the fact that most of the public expects its air carriers and government regulators to already be looking out for their safety and well-being. After all, you can't complain about a problem that you don't know exists. Wouldn't it be embarrasing to explain that a much safer design has been available for 70 years but that, since the public didn't know about it, the industry didn't feel compelled to act on it? Better late than never is the applicable rule here.
It is time for all parties in this debate to start doing some relevant scientific research and engage much less in the turf war that seems to be waging. It would truly be shameful, although predictable, if we were to find the claims of the Burnelli design faction to be true, in whole or in part, and the resistance to the design be purely motivated by greed or giant egos. Only testing will tell.
Dan Mannion, ARFF Captain, BFD
Posted by Daniel Mannion on April 6,2010 | 06:12 PM
My father covered transportation stories for the Washington Post before WWII and was a friend of Vincent Burnelli. I recall as a young boy visiting Mr. Burnelli at his residence outside of Washington, D.C. I was fascinated by his models of past and speculative designs that surrounded him in the small apartment. Several were of balsa and I spent my time launching them from his steps onto the grass. I remember feeling bad about breaking the wing on one but he didn't mind. Many of the models and photographs in Mr. Goodlin's collection, dating back to the war years, bear an uncanny resemblance to some of the designs now being suggested by designers at Boeing. Although he never received credit in life, I would hope that those who denied his concepts and now embrace them, give credit to his vision.
Posted by Tom Barrows on July 18,2010 | 09:17 PM
My understanding is that the big drawback of lifting-body designs is increased cross-section, resulting in greater drag. Wings have been getting thinner since the early days of aviation, when mechanics could travel through a wing to access an engine. If lifting bodies worked, we would have them. Conspiracy? What's the gauge of aluminum in your foil hat?
Posted by Denton Warn on July 20,2010 | 10:52 PM
I found this page, with the same idea. Mine came with the idea of a flying hovercraft. Why not, it could work, a flat bottom airfoil should make good platform for a hovercraft system. Not knowing very much about airplane design, or for that matter hovercraft, I set about to learn what I could, very little research, or photos (that I could find). I'll keep trying, there has been nothing to suggest that this will not work, if anything it seems as if it's to good to have been over looked. If any can help Feel free to contact me.
Posted by ray sigler on December 5,2012 | 12:03 PM
Burnelli CBY-3 is now undergoing a complete restoration at NEW ENGLAND AIR MUSEUM. June 2013
Posted by Fred Tieman on June 2,2013 | 12:41 PM
Yes, if just part of what Burnelli designs promised wre true, then we must look at the industry with some suspicion.
I have heard this story related in many ways over the years, and everytime I ask myself.. is it posible that mayjor Aircraft manufacturers ignored and boohoo'd and better and safer deisgn aircraft than the cylinder style aircraft we have today ?
Well, as I get older, and find the world is not as logical and upfront, or even legitmate as one would hope.
And the posibility this is a industry conspiracy increases.. just look at the Howrd Hughes story, that was Govt and Aircraft industry doing exactly what we are now denying could ever happen , conspireing to exclude certains partie's or people.
Posted by Jason Leggo on June 12,2013 | 11:02 PM