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Originally posted by MurrayB
reply to post by MurrayB
The Arrow's original design was done without knowledge of the area rule but it was altered after NACA told them about it. It is clear from the Arrow Mk. 1 brochure that the rule was only applied to the nose, engine inlets and tail but not to the waist. This means the Arrow had higher drag than other aircraft like the F-106 and this means it was slower with about 2/3 the range.
A great deal of theoretical work was done on the application of Area Rule to the CF-105 and during the early design stages certain changes were incorporated in the aircraft to take advantage of the results of our area rule work.
Eleven plastic models were made at 1/30th scale and cuts were taken on these to represent various Mach numbers. The cuts were then checked on a planimeter, the results fed into a digital computer, and plots were made around the aircraft at 0deg., 45deg., 90deg., 135deg. and 180deg.. Most of the results were obtained around a Mach number of 1.5 and, as a result of this extensive investigation, we sharpened the radar nose, thinned down the intake lips, reduced the cross-section area of the fuselage below the canopy, and added an extension fairing at the rear, to smooth out the bumps in the area rule curve (Fig. 6).
Originally posted by Aloysius the GaulHe states that area rule considerations were incorporated quite early on, and then improved with model testing.
Originally posted by waynos
reply to post by Dimitri Dzengalshlevi
Um at the beginning of your post condescendingly suggests a stating of the obvious is about to follow, and you are so completely wide of the mark on this it is I who ought be condescending to you, however I will resist.
No reason other than the USA was footing most of the bill for it. Like I said, when (if) this funding dries up the programme dies, don't delude yourself that 60 for Canada and 48 for Holland etc will in any way make up for the loss of four figure orders from the US services.
Originally posted by Dimitri Dzengalshlevi
No, I wasn't trying to be condescending but thanks for the assumption :
I said that the F-35 will still be exported because that's what I read at the time when this was a big deal. Why? Because it appears that the US government is planning on cancelling funding for one of the three F-35 variables (the two engine variant, whatever letter designation that is).
But you know what? I'm just going to give you this argument. I hope the F-35 program falls through and the US government has done nothing but waste money. This means that we won't be arming our own airforce primarily with F-35s, which I see as a victory.
Originally posted by waynos
Originally posted by Dimitri Dzengalshlevi
No, I wasn't trying to be condescending but thanks for the assumption :
if you don't mean it, don't write it. Reading is not assumption, "um" is something I would expect from a 12 year old girl. Literacy in the English language is a "good thing" and helps conversation enormously. Out of interest, what was the purpose of beginning with um?
Ok, but read it where? Nowhere official would be my bet. Also there is no twin engine version of the F-35. I presume you mean the F-35B STOVL version? The lift fan in that model is powered by the existing, single engine.
I don't recall posting that "um" comment to you, so what is your problem with it? I think somebody bickering about the linguistics of another person is akin to the maturity of a 12 year old. Are we on even terms now?
Originally posted by waynos
I find your position strange. Firstly, you don't need to recall it, you can see it. Secondly, where I am from, it is akin to starting with the comment "listen stupid" which is why I asked you the context in which you meant it, but you haven't replied. Does this mean that was your position and are now backtracking? Turning a minor query into a major argument is certainly not my intention, but you are being evasive. Finally, even terms? Not even close Dimitri. I think well leave that there as there is nothing more to be gained from carrying on.
Back on topic, Your personal view would seem to be the correct one in that nobody will get any F-35's if the USA itself doesn't buy any, so why were you the one postulating that production might carry on for export customers only? That's what prompted my first reply to you. Whoever posted, or thinks, that is indulging themselves in wishful thinking, nothing more.
Originally posted by Aloysius the Gaul
The area rule is applied everywhere - I think you are confusing 1 particular shape of a fuselage for the rule - the "wasp waist" is NOT the only fuselage shape that can be used when an aircraft is "area ruled".
The sole requirement of the area rule is that the cross section of the total airframe (including any external stores) changes as smoothly as possible - it does not matter whethe thesse changes are in the fuselage, the wing, or any odd bumps and lumps that might be incorporated to achieve it.
there's a good article on how area rules can be applied without a wasp waist at www.aerospaceweb.org...
If the Arrow was not area ruled is probably wouldn't even have gotten to Mach 1.5!
Originally posted by waynos
Also, the Arrow was very far from being the Turkey that Murray seems to think.
Originally posted by Aloysius the Gaul
reply to post by MurrayB
Wasp-waist is not the only way to "obey" the "area rule" - it was jsut one of het easiest to incorporate in teh 1950's and retrofit to existing airframes such as the F-102 when the original straight fuselage proved to be a problem, and keep with the "advanced F-102" that became the F-106.
The CF-105 followed the area rule without need for a wasp waist, as have many other a/c since - www.avroarrow.org...