It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Forschung
Waynos, Thank you for proving your point. You pictures did come through this time on your previous post as well as this one.
The Germans did know and have the high-grade material for turbines but as with everything else, it was in short supply and expensive. None of those engines had the life of modern engines.
What was the horse power output of the British axel jet?
Radial engines do have seperate exhausts but perhaps the word you are looking for is "exhaust ports". Apparently, the Leduc engine, a radial, used each exhaust seperately as an exhaust and apparently the object that the Americans describe as a Phoo Bomb used a radial and each exhaust provided a seperate thrust, mounted in a different direction although there is not a great deal of documentation.
Originally posted by waynos
Right, I get you now. However I think it is fairly well established that the jet 'exhaust' is what comes out of the back of the engine and in this respect all jet engines have just one exhaust (re the diagram I posted before and the Nene photo in a post higher up). The only exceptions I can think of are the bifurcated Nene of the Sea Hawk, which involved the splitting of the single exhaust to emerge on either side behind the wing to avoid loss of thrust through a long jetpipe (a common problem in the 1940's) and the four poster arrangement of the Pegasus VTOL engine, which is an axial fan engine anyway and an arrangement soley aimed at producing vectored thrust.
I don't have a scanner and probably couldn't use it anyway. A multi-exhaust radial jet is what you would want for a flying saucer. One of the Avro designs (not the avrocar) used this idea. This drawing is published from time to time. I have the file Wright-Patterson sells regarding the Avro saucers which cost $110.00. In it are such designs. The Miethe saucer design published, for instance, in The German Saucer Story by Michael Barton, 1968, contains one such diagram. An earlier Meithe design contains and interally rotating (LeDuc) engine and has been published in obscure German magazines and newspapers. The Avro stuff is the best. The others are just diagrams. Vesco is the source of the radial LeDuc or whatever it is. Vesco, over the years, has proven accurate so he has to be taken seriously. There are probably a hundred junk-sites on the internet describing the work of Dr. Richard Meithe which show a diagram of a saucer with exhaust ports running around the edge. According to the Americans, the German Foo Fighter was round and was powered by a small jet engine--sounds like a radial to me.
I am not calling you a liar, it is only that I have never seen a multi exhaust centrifugal engine and I would be grateful for any examples or pictures you can give.
Originally posted by waynos
Right, I get you now. However I think it is fairly well established that the jet 'exhaust' is what comes out of the back of the engine and in this respect all jet engines have just one exhaust (re the diagram I posted before and the Nene photo in a post higher up). The only exceptions I can think of are the bifurcated Nene of the Sea Hawk, which involved the splitting of the single exhaust to emerge on either side behind the wing to avoid loss of thrust through a long jetpipe (a common problem in the 1940's) and the four poster arrangement of the Pegasus VTOL engine, which is an axial fan engine anyway and an arrangement soley aimed at producing vectored thrust.
I can't tell for certain about the Nene. The Heinkel-Ohain HeS 3B was a radial jet. Yes, ultimately, all these exhaust ports merged into one jet exhaust but the seperate combustion chambers themselves each had an exhaust. I am almost sure you consider these exhaust ports as an automobile has exhaust ports which are sometimes called a "header" which merge into a long exhaust pipe. The difference is that in the saucer engine of Miethe, for instance, each remained seperate and exhausted seperately or was fed into a ring around the saucer and exited through one of many ports as needed for direction and propulsion--this was the method used on one A.V.Roe design using a radial engine--all very complicated.
I am not calling you a liar, it is only that I have never seen a multi exhaust centrifugal engine and I would be grateful for any examples or pictures you can give.
from 'Jets45 Histories'
In December 1944 Four YP80As were deployed to Europe to boost the morale of the USAAF combat crews, the four YP-80A's were sent to England for tests and demonstrations were two crashed the first in mid December killing it's pilot and another in November 1945. Two were sent to Italy in April 1945, where they actually took part in operational sorties.
Originally posted by Figher Master FIN
Well, the junkers was one of their best planes.
Junkers had temporarily recruited two engineers, W.H. Evers and Alfred Gassner, from America to help design the new aircraft. These two had been pioneers in stressed-skin metal construction and Junkers was moving away from its traditional corrugated metal skin structure. (Evers was a German who had spent some time working in America, while Gassner was an American citizen who returned to the United States after his work on the Ju-88.)
it had a radar
and they even made 15 000 of them during the ww2.
Amercas air-force today has about 3500 planes...
Originally posted by hatstand
whilst on the topic of early jet engines, is it known that the early l116(?) prototype was to be fitted with an afterburning turbine engine in 1940? i believe an engine was built and tested and is on display in the states??
Originally posted by waynos
Yes, the first afterburning jet was supposed to be a Whittle W2/700 which was intended for the Miles M.52 but a Junkers Jumo 004 fitted with an afterburner beat it on a bench test in early 1945. As a result of the cancellation of the M.52 I think (but I am not certain) that the W2/700 was never built.
*wonders* Why did the Germans even boither with afterburning jets when they already had gravity displacement devices?
[edit on 8-6-2005 by waynos]
Originally posted by jumpspace
Forschung:
>...The nature of this engine is unknown...
Hmmm...for what I know, I'll give a little clue as of the nature:
The motor (powered by batteries or whatever) is placed vertically and is connected to a wheel that is on the horizontal plane that has around six "spokes". At the end of these spokes, there is a certain "configuration"...and this configuration is "pulsed" via a very large coil that is placed under this "configuration".
I couldn't find the schematics before but somewhere on the Internet they exist (or did exist).
Cheers
JS
the germans were using flying saucers from the early 1930's,
i heard many stories about flying saucers being shot down over germany around 1929,
germany was the most technically advanced nation in the world at that time followed by the u.k-who were ten years behind.