How the 747 Got Its Hump
In the evolution of the airplane, Darwinian principles have applied unevenly.
- By Bill Sweetman
- Air & Space magazine, May 2003
(Page 4 of 6)
The C-130 did not spring from a clean sheet of paper. It owes a lot to some little-remembered airplanes that link it to the transport gliders of World War II and, via a forgotten experiment, to the Douglas DC-3 and its military derivative, the C-47. In 1943 and 1944, the U.S. Army Air Forces wanted to replace its C-47s with four-engine Douglas C-54 transports. This entailed replacing its transport gliders, as the steel-tube-and-fabric airplanes could not survive in tow at the C-54’s 250-mph cruising speed. As an experiment, USAAF engineers at Wright Field in Ohio stripped the engines from a war-weary C-47.
Not only could the modified airplane be towed faster, but it had a low stall speed and a good glide ratio, both of which promised to make glider landings much less dangerous.
So the Army ordered two new high-speed gliders from the Chase Aircraft Company. The XCG-18 and the bigger XCG-20 shared three features: a high wing, a short, body-mounted landing gear, and a high tail. There was no ramp, but the tail was designed to stay clear of the ground when the glider landed. The XCG-18 flew in December 1947, but the USAAF had become the U.S. Air Force, and the U.S. Air Force liked supersonic fighters and jet bombers, not poky trash-hauling gliders. Chase fitted it with two engines, producing the C-122, a handful of which were built for the Air Force. Like a dinosaur with feathers, the C-122 was a link between gliders and airplanes: It still had a towing hook and could hitch a ride from another airplane to extend its range. The bigger XCG-20 acquired engines—as the C-123—before it was built.
One of Germany’s largest wartime transports was the Junkers Ju 290, adapted from the Ju 90 airliner. The Ju 90 had a tail-wheel landing gear, with a nose-high ground attitude and sloping floor that made it hard to load cargo. Junkers engineers installed a powered ramp under the tail, which raised the airplane into a horizontal attitude as it opened. After the war, the USAAF tested a captured Ju 290 (nicknamed “Alles Kaput”), and the ramp subsequently appeared on the C-123.
Fairchild, which acquired Chase, built more than 300 C-123s. The C-123 still looks enough like a C-130 to double for the Lockheed airplane when a movie script calls for a military transport and the Air Force won’t cooperate. C-123 credits include Con Air, Outbreak, and most Vietnam war movies in which the bad guys are Americans.
The fossil record of the creatures leading to the C-130 is hard to find because it includes a few obscure aircraft. Tracing the lineage can be more difficult if the missing link was never built.
In March 2001, Boeing unveiled the concept for an airplane called the Sonic Cruiser. A canard (tail-first) design with a compound-sweep wing and engines carried on a “back porch” extension of the wing, it looked different from any airplane Boeing had ever built. The missing link, hiding in a NASA presentation in an obscure corner of the Internet, was a Boeing supersonic transport design that—except for a pointy nose and different engines—was clearly the Sonic Cruiser. It didn’t look like anything else out of Boeing, but the aft-set, compound-swept wings and the engine location made the aircraft look very much like a series of supersonic designs from the 1990s by Sukhoi, a Russian aircraft company with which Boeing has partnered to develop a regional jet airliner. Late in 2002, Boeing cancelled the Sonic Cruiser—but don’t be surprised if this resilient gene strand pops up somewhere else before too long.
The coelacanth is a creature that was so well adapted to its marine reef environment that it did not need to evolve despite more than 300 million years of existence. In St. Augustine, Florida, Northrop Grumman still builds the E-2C Hawkeye for the U.S. Navy and export customers. The long-wing, twin-engine airplane, with a radar dish sitting on its back like a friendly UFO, no fewer than four vertical tails, and its Grumman folding wing, which looks double-jointed but isn’t, is entirely suited to the task of carrying a radar off a carrier. The production line started moving in 1960 and shows no signs of stopping soon.
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Comments (7)
The Starship was a foreseeable disaster from the day it was conceived. Homebuilt toys like the VariEze have the luxury of being so small that their inefficiencies don't matter. [EDITOR'S NOTE: A VariEze won the CAFE foundation competition for Comparative Aircraft Flight Efficiency, in which it competed against similar-sized aircraft.]
The main flaw in the Scaled Composites idea is that they did not scale the engine installations correctly, either for the Starship or for Fairchild's NGT airplane proposed to the Air Force. Nor did Scaled Composites have a way to properly account for certification realities. No surprise there; they ha=ve never done a certified airplane.
In the end, the Starship used more fuel than a Beechjet at the same speed, and was slower than the King Air on the same engines -- and its "lightweight" composites weighed more than aluminum. Some evolution.
The so-called "Fuddy-duddy" Beech designers could see the Starbarge for the disaster it was, but they got shoved aside by all the forward-looking geniuses from the desert and the Raytheon brass.
Had Rutan and Raytheon worked with the seasoned Beech designers to solve full-scale design and certification issues before committing to the airplane, it may have been a tremendous success. Instead, they forced a bunch of barely certifiable ideas onto a configuration that had only flown in a non-representative scaled form. Stuck with a Starship configuration that couldn't hold a candle to the Piaggio Avanti, Raytheon forged ahead as a matter of corporate pride, dropped $1.5 Billion into into it, and ended up giving high technology a black eye throughout the industry.
Posted by E. Ireland on October 30,2009 | 09:39 PM
Interesting twist on Starship. Have lived in Wichita, worked at Beech/Raytheon, & interviewed some folks listed in prior message, about the Starship. There MAY be SOME merit in that argument. But even if true (I'm not convinced) it's hardly the whole story.
For sure, ONE part that E.Ireland gets right is shortcomings in Raytheon corporate leadership, at the core of the Starship fiasco, & an indescribable string of mistakes & failures that turned famed, respected industry leader Beech Aircraft into complete rubble in just a few years' time.
Raytheon Corp. was utterly incompetent in general aviation aircraft -- an industry with which it had absolutely no familiarity.
Raytheon (almost exclusively a military electronics-and-missiles manufacturer) may have been attracted Beech's successful target-drone misslle division in Colo., & by Beech's hefty military contracts (for military adaptations of Beech's airplanes). But Raytheon rather obviously had no idea what they were getting into.
Raytheon had no solid grasp military aircraft manufacturing (sorry, missiles don't carry people & rarely survive their first flight -- thus really don't count), nor in the other two kinds of aircraft: general aviation & commercial (Beech was world leader in small turboprop airliners).
Posted by RH on October 13,2011 | 07:01 AM
And Massachusetts-based Raytheon execs & directors had no clue how to deal with Kansans. They smugly assumed their East-Coast ivy-league credentials & connections -- and talent at getting government money (being handed out like candy, then, to any & all defense contractors, with no real limits or sobriety, by the military-obsessed Reagan administration) -- was "proof enough" of Raytheon leaders' infinite superiority to the "country folk" of Kansas-based Beech (then struggling -- like all civilian planemakers in the 1980s -- through the depressed real-world civilian economy of the endless Reagan Recession.)
Raytheon's classically smug, Eastern naivete boiled down to: "If KANSAS people can do it, then surely WE can do it, too -- and so much better!"
Obnoxious, incompetent, & reckless -- Raytheon casually shipped unqualified "managers" to Wichita from Massachussetts, to "win their wings" -- a transient apprenticeship "in the sticks" -- before being given their "real" executive job back East.
A string of pinstriped fools paraded proudly through the Wichita corporate offices of Beech Aircraft (contemptuously renamed "Raytheon Aircraft" by its new parent). Most had no knowledge at all of civil aviation (nor any aviation, for that matter, let alone the very demanding, serious business of developing & manufacturing reusable, reliable, legal, manned aircraft.
Arrogant Raytheon execs alienated the long-loyal Beech customer base -- from individuals to regional airlines - bungled R&D, jammed up production, & fouled aircraft-support ops so much that Beechcraft owners had difficulty keeping their pricey planes flying.
Beech's own working computer system was scrapped in favor of Raytheon's SAP system; Beech actually had to shut down factories for a month to fix the mess; problems lasting months triggered many millions in cancelled plane orders. An endless string of desperate, fumbling software "fixes" never restored Beech to a smooth-running company.
Posted by on October 13,2011 | 07:17 AM
(forgot name/email)
Massachusetts-based Raytheon execs & directors had no clue how to deal with Kansans. They smugly assumed East-Coast ivy-league credentials & connections -- and talent at getting government money (then being handed out like candy to any & all defense contractors, with no real limits or sobriety, by the military-obsessed Reagan administration) -- was "proof enough" of Raytheon leaders' infinite superiority to the "country folk" of Kansas-based Beech (then struggling -- like all civilian planemakers in the 1980s -- through the depressed real-world civilian economy of the endless Reagan Recession.)
Raytheon's classically smug, Eastern naivete boiled down to: "If KANSAS people can do it, then surely WE can do it, too -- and so much better!"
Obnoxious, incompetent, & reckless -- Raytheon casually shipped unqualified "managers" to Wichita from Massachussetts, to "win their wings" -- a transient apprenticeship "in the sticks" -- before being given their "real" executive job back East.
A string of pinstriped fools paraded proudly through the Wichita corporate offices of Beech Aircraft (contemptuously renamed "Raytheon Aircraft" by its new parent). Most had no knowledge at all of civil aviation (nor any aviation, for that matter, let alone the very demanding, serious business of developing & manufacturing reusable, reliable, legal, manned aircraft.
Arrogant Raytheon execs alienated the long-loyal Beech customer base -- from individuals to regional airlines - bungled R&D, jammed up production, & fouled aircraft-support ops so much that Beechcraft owners had difficulty keeping their pricey planes flying.
Beech's own working computer system was scrapped in favor of Raytheon's SAP system; Beech actually had to shut down factories for a month to fix the mess; problems lasting months triggered many millions in cancelled plane orders. An endless string of desperate, fumbling software "fixes" never restored Beech to a smooth-running company.
Posted by RH on October 13,2011 | 07:22 AM
Raytheon execs not only botched the Starship venture, but just about everything they touched -- turning that entire legendary, powerful, successful, "Big-3" general aviation manufacturer (Beech Aircraft) -- into a charred wreckage (by then, quite appropriately renamed "Raytheon Aircraft," to the disgust of the entire workforce).
Unable and/or unwilling to figure out how to innovate in the ferociously competitive, fast-changing world of general aviation (which introduces more new models every year than the military missiles industry does in most DECADES), Raytheon just imported other foreign manufacturers' working airplane designs, and assembly lines, moving them to Wichita.
It took Raytheon years to dump the wreckage on Wall Street -- at a fraction of its original value. Meanwhile, their snowballing airplane follies, & other Raytheon corporate fiascoes, began to drag down all of Raytheon.
It was, in this environment, and under this "leadership," that the Starship's development was "managed."
Posted by RH on October 13,2011 | 07:25 AM
Your Editor's Note states that "A VariEze won the CAFE foundation competition for Comparative Aircraft Flight Efficiency, in which it competed against similar-sized aircraft."
That may be true, but none of the airplanes in that competition were actually efficient. The VariEze drag coefficient is fair, but certainly not excellent; and its engine location seriously compromises propeller efficiency. Obviously, tiny airplanes don't use much fuel, but that's mostly because they are tiny, not because they are necessarily efficient.
The VariEze has an eye-catching shape, so there was a lot of interest in canard designs by researchers at NASA, universities, and industry. As a result, even by the time the Starship was announced it was known that drag of canard configurations could not be as low as the usual arrangement with the tail in the back.
Raytheon would have done much better to talk to Bruce Carmichael and Mike Arnold about how to do an efficient design. Arnold's AR-5 is a masterpiece of efficiency. It goes 216 mph with 65 horsepower, compared to the VariEze that gets just 195 mph with 100 horsepower.
Posted by E. Ireland on January 21,2013 | 03:03 PM
RH makes some excellent and accurate points about Raytheon's management of Beech.
Raytheon paid $800 Million for Beech in 1980, and reportedly paid only about $10 million for the moribund Mitsubishi Diamond in 1985 (renamed Beechjet, now Hawker 400), and another $273 Million for the two Hawker jets (BAE 800 & 1000) in 1993.
After thrashing the company with a series of bad product decisions and development debacles, Raytheon sold the Beech/Hawker carcass and a pile of blue sky to some investment bankers in March 2007 for an unbelievable $3.3 Billion. In turn, the bankers saddled the Hawker Beech company with an insurmountable debt load, making their bankruptcy inevitable -- and it is playing out now. Hawker Beech tried to sell itself to the Chinese for $1.8 Billion last year, but the deal fell through because, among other things, the company is worth only about half that much.
I know the Starship well, analyzed it carefully, crawled all over a few of them inside and out, and had several pilot and aerodynamics acquaintances from Beech tell me the horror stories I related above about the Starship's inefficiency.
I know their information has to be correct because the Starship is larger than the King Air and Beechjet models they were comparing; and, despite looking fast, the Starship has an inherently draggier shape, as noted in my above post. It has to be less efficient than the King Air and Beechjet, and it is.
In addition, composites are heavier than aluminum in airplanes this size and smaller. There is no certified, all-composite airplane under 20,000 lb Gross Weight that is lighter than its aluminum counterparts. There are a lot of good, solid technical reasons for this, and this fact was well known in the industry when the Starship was announced.
For more, see:
www.anav8r.com/page32.htm
Posted by E. Ireland on January 21,2013 | 05:54 PM