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It was sort of a fighter pilot’s dream on an intercept [mission]. That capability has not been matched, and won’t be. We don’t have it anymore.”
Early Attempts at Swing Wings
All variable geometry wing aircraft are descendants of two experimental airplanes built on opposite sides of the Atlantic in the 1940s and 1950s.
The first is the Messerschmitt P 1101 a prototype airplane built by the Nazis that ranks as the first variable geometry jet fighter in history. It was found in May 1945 when a company of U.S. infantry seized a secret research laboratory in Oberammergau, a German town in the shadow of the Bavarian Alps. The design allowed its wings to be set at three angles on the ground to evaluate the reduction in drag and increase in speed in wind tunnels and, the Germans hoped, in flight tests. The wings could not morph in the air, however. It never flew.
It still made an impression. Robert J. Woods, the leader of a military intelligence unit called a Combined Advanced Field Team, evaluated the find, and later became co-founder and chief designer at Bell Aircraft Corp. He collected the identities of the experts who created the airplane and sent them, and the prototype, to America.
Woods convinced fellow management at Bell that the design had merit, and his efforts culminated in the 1951 first flight of the X-5, an experimental craft used by the U.S. military. Parts from the German airplane were cannibalized to create two X-5s. The X-5s were used to test wing angles, not as a prototype of a finished, operational variable wing aircraft. Unlike the 1945 model, they changed their wings while in flight, the first airplane able to do so. The research was later used to create the F-14.
Legendary British aircraft designer Sir Barnes Neville Wallis made a stab at swing-wing history and missed. Immediately after World War II he took the swing-wing concept and tried to make the idea functional. Working in the late 1940s, he experimented with a host of swept wing concepts he dubbed the Wild Goose. These included hand-launched designs and radio controlled aircraft capable of 100 mph speeds. Each had swept tail fins at the end of slender, laminar bodies. He tried the swing-wing concept for a civilian market with the Swallow, to be incorporated into a long distance airliner. The Swallow had a flattened fuselage that increased the lift of the wings. Models of the design flew in the mid-fifties and a 6-foot supersonic model broke Mach 2.5. The U.K. killed the program and Wallis tried to pitch the idea to America. According to the Barnes Memorial Trust, operated out of the Yorkshire Air Museum in Britain, Wallis commented that he “convinced the Americans too sincerely that this was a great idea, and so they decided to take it up for themselves instead of paying us a grant to do it in England.” None of his swept wing designs survived to production.


Comments
Greetings, It would make a better presentation, if the author of the article would give the full names of all the pilots. Some of might take more interest. I am, Jo G. Schneider of Houston, the one in TX.
Posted by Joan G. Schneider on July 3,2008 | 05:59PM
I enjoyed reading the tales of the F-14. I started work on it in October 1968 as a design engineer in the VFX proposal and eventually did quite a bit of work designing the wing center section, an all titanium EB welded box. I have recently written a paper for the ASME folks in Long Island who are trying to get the wing center section inducted as an "Engineering Landmark" at the Cradle of Aviation Museum in New York. I would be glad to share that story with this web site for others to read. Let me konw if you are interested. Carlos A. Paez Design Engineering Director (retired) Grumman Aerospace Corp. write to: carlpaez@cox.net
Posted by Carlos A. Paez on August 12,2008 | 09:42AM
I believe they meant a 20MM gatlin gun, not a 25 MM gun.
Posted by Denny on September 1,2008 | 08:45PM
"Like Sitting in a Cadillac," indeed. Tomcats were not new when I first climbed into the pilot's seat (in a hangar at NAS Cubi Pt, RPI), but as an Aviation Fire Control Tech, I was awed by the layout. Everything appeared to be precisely where the pilot would expect it to be. Controls and instruments were arrayed in a manner that required a pilot to move their arms, so they didn't hang from stick & throttle for extended periods. Everything wrapped around the pilot like a glove, and as mentioned, no voids. This was the only time I saw a flight deck design so intensely pilot-mission focused. Nearly everything before or since follows the traditional pattern of stabbing steam gauges into the firewall, and advisory lights arrayed on shelves at left and right--so utterly perpendicular. Fighter aircraft rarely receive favorable mention from me due to my career in the attack community. However, you will find my other favorable remark on the Tomcat (and the improbability of replacing Grumman Iron), posted in the AIAA Journal a few years ago--http://www.aiaa.org/aerospace/images/articleimages/pdf/beatjanuary04.pdf.
Posted by Brett Hawks on November 2,2008 | 12:10PM
Very nice comprehensive article. I enjoyed it. Brought back tons of memories. I was the designer and programmer on the first F14A Central Air Data Computer (CADC). Lots of challenges and unforgettable memories of the project and the first takeoff. I have documented the CADC effort at this webpage: http://FirstMicroprocessor.com I would love to see more stories on the F14 to include on the site. Ray
Posted by Ray Holt on July 17,2009 | 09:07AM