The Super-Fighter That Was Betrayed By Its Engine | Vultee XP-54 [Aircraft Overview #68]

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2024
  • Today we’re taking a look at the Vultee XP-54, unofficially nicknamed the Swoose Goose, which was an experimental fighter that was developed at the start of the 1940s. It came from the same US Army specification that led to the development of the equally experimental Bell XP-52, Curtiss XP-55, and Northrop XP-56.
    Sources:
    Thompson.J (1992), Vultee Aircraft 1932 - 1947 - geni.us/BO3lFdE
    Jenkins.D.R & Landis.T.R (2008), Experimental & Prototype U.S Air Force Jet Fighters - geni.us/bGmq29E
    Want to join the community? Visit our Discord - / discord
    Want to support the channel? I have a Patreon here - / rexshangar
    ***
    Producing these videos is a hobby of mine - and apparently its now a full-time job too! I have a passion for history, and personally own a large collection of books, journals and other texts, and endeavor to do as much research as possible. However if there are any mistakes, please don't hesitate to reach out and correct anything :)
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 741

  • @RexsHangar
    @RexsHangar  Před rokem +89

    F.A.Q Section
    Q: Do you take aircraft requests?
    A: I have a list of aircraft I plan to cover, but feel free to add to it with suggestions:)
    Q: Why do you use imperial measurements for some videos, and metric for others?
    A: I do this based on country of manufacture. Imperial measurements for Britain and the U.S, metric for the rest of the world, but I include text in my videos that convert it for both.
    Q: Will you include video footage in your videos, or just photos?
    A: Video footage is very expensive to licence, if I can find footage in the public domain I will try to use it, but a lot of it is hoarded by licencing studies (British Pathe, Periscope films etc). In the future I may be able to afford clips :)
    Q: Why do you sometimes feature images/screenshots from flight simulators?
    A: Sometimes there are not a lot of photos available for certain aircraft, so I substitute this with digital images that are as accurate as possible.
    Feel free to leave you questions below - I may not be able to answer all of them, but I will keep my eyes open :)

    • @steveshoemaker6347
      @steveshoemaker6347 Před rokem

      Thanks again my friend...l really liked the look of this aircraft.....Shoe🇺🇸

    • @atomicshadowman9143
      @atomicshadowman9143 Před rokem

      NACA is pronounced En A Sea A. My father worked for them.

    • @Underwaystudios
      @Underwaystudios Před rokem

      Thank You Rex. What can you tell us about Sea Plane development and the US Coast Guard's use of them.

    • @anonymous12345678935
      @anonymous12345678935 Před rokem

      I would like to see a video of yours on flying the hump in WW2 specifically on the C46 commando's roll. Or design and development of the C46. My grandpa was a C46 hump pilot, so it holds special interest to me.

    • @brucegibbins3792
      @brucegibbins3792 Před rokem

      @@anonymous12345678935 that being true, you will be aware of the several video programmes detailing this courageous event that are already available to view.
      Yet, is there still more unaired material that we can learn more from?

  • @kringe700
    @kringe700 Před rokem +770

    "The Super-Fighter that was betrayed by its engine." A story as old as the aviation history itself.

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 Před rokem +39

      Seems to be quite a common theme.

    • @suzi_mai
      @suzi_mai Před rokem +15

      That p+w h 2600 looks a maintenance nightmare!

    • @whyjnot420
      @whyjnot420 Před rokem +14

      Heavier than air aviation at least. Arguably all of powered aviation. But not all of aviation history itself, which includes things that do by definition cannot have engines such as hot air balloons.
      That said I think the sentiment in the OPs statement is spot on.

    • @allangibson2408
      @allangibson2408 Před rokem +15

      It could easily have become an American version of the SAAB J21R…

    • @joshkamp7499
      @joshkamp7499 Před rokem +11

      Before avionics became the most important part of aircraft design, aviation was always limited almost exclusively by engines.

  • @olsonspeed
    @olsonspeed Před rokem +250

    Interesting concept that seemingly had a lot of potential. The Japanese Kyushu J7W Shinden is worthy subject for your attention.

    • @oldgringo2001
      @oldgringo2001 Před rokem +12

      Yeah, it was interesting. It even was the subject of a story arc in *Oh My Goddess!*. But like all the American pushers, it was too slow and too late.

    • @kalui96
      @kalui96 Před rokem +5

      Ace Combat Fan did a video about it on his "Know Your Plane" series. I'd still watch one on this channel though

    • @steveproctor1748
      @steveproctor1748 Před rokem +9

      The J7W1 was actually intended to be powered by a jet type engine. The propeller version was used basically for testing the concept. Propeller version would have been built and flown until the intended powerplant was ready, if it ever would have been. I always thought that the J7W1 was the most beautiful of all of the concept plane that anyone else ever made.

    • @olsonspeed
      @olsonspeed Před rokem +4

      @@steveproctor1748 I think it is a beauty contest between the Kyushu J7W1 and the Lockheed Starjet L-133. The Starjet project was sadly cancelled before it was flown.

    • @billalumni7760
      @billalumni7760 Před rokem +5

      Yes, please do a series on WWII pusher aircraft and add Dornier DO 335

  • @chesspiece81
    @chesspiece81 Před rokem +141

    The trajectory of the aircraft from when the Wright Brothers first flew in 1903 to what was being done by the end of WW2 is unbelievable. I heard once that the entire distance of the Wright Bros first flight could have been done inside Hughes H4 Hercules aka the Spruce Goose that was assembled and "flew" 44 years later.

    • @stianberg5645
      @stianberg5645 Před rokem +40

      And 22 years after that, humans reached the moon.
      Kinda feel we lost momentum since then. On the other hand, we take flying for granted now and I guess that is a milestone as well.

    • @rubiconnn
      @rubiconnn Před rokem +13

      @@stianberg5645 The problem is that the difficulty of advancement does not scale linearly. It's easy to design aircraft that can travel 500 mph when they currently travel 100 mph. It is much much, much difficult to design an aircraft that travels 2500 mph when current aircraft travel 500 mph.

    • @henrikgiese6316
      @henrikgiese6316 Před rokem +5

      @Steel Ringer IIRC it didn't have enough engine power to get out of ground-effect flight (WIGE long before the Russians!) so it was arguably not a "real" aircraft. OTOH that was just a power problem. The short flight distance was AFAIK just because of the limited testing area.
      Incidentally, it was so large it might well have crossed the Atlantic as a WIGE... Now that's an interesting start for an alternate history!

    • @KuK137
      @KuK137 Před rokem +1

      @@stianberg5645 We 'lost' momentum thanks to ultra-rich bankster scum stealing public money. In 1960s, the top earner tax was 90%. Yes, this is not a mistake, you wanted to live like king, you were taxed properly and the state could afford stuff like technological progress or Apollo program easily. Now? These scum pay 10-12%, if that, even Buffet complained he pays less tax than his secretary without even trying. There is like FIVE TRILLION $ of stolen money in tax havens, no wonder we "lost" momentum...

    • @aendranireho6038
      @aendranireho6038 Před rokem +4

      @@rubiconnn There's also the question for the need of such fast aircrafts : modern fighter are actually slower than late Vietnam war fighters. We're also thinking of making airliner slightly slower.
      We can make hypersonic aircrafts, NASA has done it, they're just so expensive that beyond science and missiles, they're kinda useless. And very hard to fly for a human.

  • @Dragon_Werks
    @Dragon_Werks Před rokem +22

    The sole surviving Curtiss XP-55 Ascender (#2 of 3) has been restored and sits in the Kalamazoo (Michigan) Aviation History Museum, aka, The Kalamazoo Air Zoo. I've seen her up close and personal several times; she's a beauty.

  • @yes_head
    @yes_head Před rokem +50

    The fact that this plane began life before the USA was even in WWII showed how rapidly aviation design was moving back then.

    • @mikedrop4421
      @mikedrop4421 Před rokem +6

      It truly is incredible that we went from bi-planes to jets during one war.

    • @aserta
      @aserta Před rokem +3

      The thing that most people don't get is that most of our technologies existed in various formats before they became the thing they are. IN this case, all the basic tech regarding airplanes, was already in existence from cars, boats, and gliders. Then at some point, various people across the planet had the thought to put motors on gliders, then they figured out that beyond wing lift this air thing has another effect on bodies so they began skining them using tech like kayak making, then moved on to metal skins, and so on.
      As for the shape, well, we didn't invent anything regarding that, we just mimicked what nature already did. Slower airplanes have slower profiles, faster airplanes have faster profiles.
      The funny thing is that once you reach the limit of what you can piece together (the variations on a theme as they were) you reach a bottleneck. SO that's why airplanes can go only so fast, and have shapes that match those speeds, because for example, we still haven't figured how to not turn humans into goop that needs to be scooped up at high speeds, nothing past pressure suits and maybe training and meds.

    • @jimtaylor294
      @jimtaylor294 Před rokem +2

      Lockheed was working on a Jet Fighter prior to the US's entry to WWII as well... but the USAAF turned them down, claiming the design was "too advanced".

    • @cosmoray9750
      @cosmoray9750 Před rokem

      Eisenhower Farewell Address - Military Industrial Complex
      czcams.com/video/cyZoUfNsUl8/video.html

    • @RidinDirtyRollinBurnouts
      @RidinDirtyRollinBurnouts Před rokem +1

      Gigantic budgets that allowed for elaborate r&d along with a bunch of technologies and industries that came into being just in time for the aviation industry to take flight, pun intended

  • @bluetopguitar1104
    @bluetopguitar1104 Před rokem +84

    So many stories like this in ww2. A lot of teething problems with early jets but they had less complexity than late piston engines. A great "what could have been"

    • @edsutherland8266
      @edsutherland8266 Před rokem +8

      The Westinghouse J40 similarly sank a few otherwise promising designs, so it was far from unusual for engines to doom projects. The problem with the piston engines was that sizes & power outputs were so different, so it wasn’t always easy to just stick a rival power plant in. With early jets, there were often a few options in the same rough size class, so it was slightly easier.

    • @jkoysza1
      @jkoysza1 Před rokem +3

      @@edsutherland8266 As a Vietnam era Naval Flight Officer, I can confirm that reports of the weak performance of the Westinghouse J40 were still then passed around. Oh for an F7 with a 12,000 lb thrust turbojet!

  • @HamiltonStandard
    @HamiltonStandard Před rokem +24

    There is something timeless about this design. I am certain it could be perfected now. Those guys came soooo close. 👏🏻

    • @kdrapertrucker
      @kdrapertrucker Před rokem +2

      Yeah, you could put in a turboprop today, but at that time the first turboprop engines had problems with gearboxes.

  • @klausschwabshubris
    @klausschwabshubris Před rokem +119

    Amazing looking plane, it’s a shame for its deficiencies.

    • @xxxggthyf
      @xxxggthyf Před rokem

      Beauty like that deserves success doesn't it? Damn you reality! Damn you all to hell! 😃

    • @Jonathan.D
      @Jonathan.D Před rokem +3

      I kept waiting for Rex to say "Unfortunately, a careless army officer flicked a cigarette butt within sight of the aircraft and it went up in flames." 😄

    • @DavidSiebert
      @DavidSiebert Před rokem +3

      One of many problems was by the time it was ready it was not needed. The US had no need for a high-altitude interceptor by that point in the war. The P-47 did that job well if needed and the P-80 was being developed. If they had needed that plane they could have possibly used the Chrysler IV-2220 but why bother to put another engine and aircraft type into production at that point in the war?

    • @williamvbone5734
      @williamvbone5734 Před rokem +1

      Inspired by freedom until poverty loses

    • @Cythil
      @Cythil Před rokem +3

      I really like the looks of it. One of my favourite planes from the era looks wise. But it had stiff competition, even if it did not have any engine problems. (And the magnesium structure do freak me out a bit. Yeah... I paid attention in chemistry class, at least when we did pyrotechnics. ;) )

  • @tsbrownie
    @tsbrownie Před rokem +67

    Another great video. Note: As one with experience in burning magnesium, I would not call using a torch or similar to ignite it, "extremely flammable". Gasoline and oil can be set alight with a match, but an airframe of magnesium, not so much. In comparison, finely divided steel wool can be lit with a match, but one does not call steel extremely flammable.

    • @soberedsoldier2578
      @soberedsoldier2578 Před rokem +17

      From the context of the video, I believe he meant in the circumstances compared to other airframes. You mention magnesium requiring a decent amount of heat to ignite, and while that shouldn’t be extremely flammable on its own, in a combat vehicle it may be so. What I mean is the potential for engine or fuel fires are possible, and even more so in aerial engagements. If the engine catches fire, the normal aluminum airframe still retains most of its structural strength, whereas it sounds like magnesium would ignite the plane at a much more rapid pace. Though he really may have meant it in your sense, too. Interesting, nonetheless.

    • @calvingreene90
      @calvingreene90 Před rokem +7

      @@soberedsoldier2578
      Putting out burning steel wool and easy but with burning magnesium just put it someplace where it can burn itself out safely.

    • @kyle857
      @kyle857 Před rokem +5

      Magnesium alloys are widely used in jet engines, in the structures of military and civilian helicopters, and in hundreds of auto components, without flammability issues

    • @tsbrownie
      @tsbrownie Před rokem +12

      @@soberedsoldier2578 Magnesium melts at 650C, Aluminum at 660C. Oil/gas mixtures used in aircraft engines burn at over 2500C, aluminum ignites at around 2000 and whereas magnesium is lower, it does not matter since both will be burning. I've worked an aircraft accident where the engine melted out of the fuselage, after which the movement of CG aft caused it to stall. Both people died. BTW, shredded aluminum in oxygen was used in old flashbulbs (it was not magnesium as was popularly thought).

    • @soberedsoldier2578
      @soberedsoldier2578 Před rokem +5

      @@tsbrownie The more you know. Thanks for clarifying that for me! In that case, no idea why he said that then. Oh well.

  • @elennapointer701
    @elennapointer701 Před rokem +27

    I bet the aircrews would have come up with some choice nicknames for this thing had it gone into full production. That "ejection seat" is horrifying. Baling out at low level in some planes was possible (two members of John Hopgood's Dambuster Lancaster crew baled out at around 200ft as the plane disintegrated, and survived, albeit injured) but jumping from the Goose at low level would be a guaranteed death sentence. Mind you, with all that magnesium, the funeral pyre would have been bright.

    • @Colt45hatchback
      @Colt45hatchback Před rokem +3

      It would have been a terrifying thing to fly, cant bail out low, cant get out if you make a gear up landing, i find it more scary than an me163. At least its theoretically possible to get out of that haha

    • @kyle857
      @kyle857 Před rokem +5

      Magnesium alloys are widely used in jet engines, in the structures of military and civilian helicopters, and in hundreds of auto components, without flammability issues

    • @Rapscallion2009
      @Rapscallion2009 Před rokem +3

      @@kyle857 yes - it's not clear if "magnesium" refers to pure magnesium or alloys. Probably alloys as magnesium's known engineering properties are generally poor for most purposes.
      People used to refer to some car alloys as "mag alloys" as they were magnesium alloy wheels.

    • @DeliveryMcGee
      @DeliveryMcGee Před rokem +1

      @@Rapscallion2009 Still burns like a mofo if it gets hot enough. I've worked with firefighters, SOP for a magnesium fire is to just stand back and watch it burn, because water only makes it worse -- it's so hot it breaks the water into hydrogen and oxygen, which then burn back into water.

  • @oakbrookconsultants
    @oakbrookconsultants Před rokem +24

    Loving the videos, Rex. Just a note on the name "Swoose" that others may have already pointed out. Swoose was pinched from a cartoon which featured a half-swan, half-goose, hence Swoose. It was first used for a salvaged B17 in the Pacific theatre that was a combination B17c and e, hence it was neither one thing or the other, a hybrid. By the sound of it whoever called the Vultee that thought much the same about it!

    • @michaelwilson6483
      @michaelwilson6483 Před rokem +2

      So why not just call it a swoose. Or was it quarter swan 3 quarter goose?

    • @Caseytify
      @Caseytify Před rokem +1

      Fun Fact: the pilot of that fortress had a daughter he later named Swoosie, in honor of the plane. She later became an actress known as Swoosie Kurtz.

  • @caiuscosades6423
    @caiuscosades6423 Před rokem +12

    This plane that looks like it came from Crimson Skies is actually a treat to fly on FSX IMO.

  • @AudieHolland
    @AudieHolland Před rokem +3

    That photo showing the XP-54 being maintenanced and checked by all those personnel, really hammers back the message that after each failed project, there are many professionals that tried their utmost, worked off their asses, to try and make it succeed.

    • @papat7435
      @papat7435 Před 2 měsíci

      "worked off their asses".... The expression is "Worked their asses off". But your version is cute.

  • @kyle857
    @kyle857 Před rokem +24

    I love pusher aircraft. I know they often had problems with cooling and other issues, but they were often beautiful. This one combines aspects of two of my favorite fighters, the XP55 and P38. The XP55 is a monster of a plane in War Thunder. At least in Sim mode.

    • @oldgringo2001
      @oldgringo2001 Před rokem +5

      Yeah, pushers are prolific in video games. They look like they should be faster. But they ain't in real life. I'm old enough to remember what a B-36 sounded like when it took off overhead, six turning and four burning. Even with four jet engines bolted on and five cannon-armed turrets, it didn't have a chance in hell against a Mig-15. But it was great for Texas, where they were built!
      Back in 1988 I sat through a lecture about where they were going to build the Superconducting Supercollider. After the lecture, I talked to the physicist who had delivered it, and set him straight: If it was built at all, it would be built in Texas. Why? Because thanks to the Electoral College, the Federal Government is a life support system for Texas.
      And guess what, I was absolutely right. The best thing that came out of the failed project was the hilarious Herman Wouk novel *A Hole in Texas*. Billions of dollars for a hole in the ground. Well, a BIG hole in the ground.

  • @elgato9445
    @elgato9445 Před rokem +1

    Excellent Rex. Love how you present info on these obscure aircraft.

  • @arkboy3
    @arkboy3 Před rokem +1

    Gorgeous vid! Yet another to re-watch.

  • @noonehere1793
    @noonehere1793 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for shedding light on the many XP’s built during the war years….not much is generally known about these many interesting aircraft except to us die hard old timers! Well done.👍👍

  • @duncangrainge
    @duncangrainge Před rokem

    Great production Rex. Very interesting. Thanks.

  • @stephenremington8448
    @stephenremington8448 Před rokem +7

    Great looking unusual plane, shame it didn't work out.
    Interestingly Vultee joined up with Consolidated to become Convair and built the mighty legend, the B-36.
    About magnesium, it has commonly been used in the aviation industry for parts of planes, especially in the engines, from the Bf109 up to Airbus and British Aerospace, the main concern has always been corrosion. People know the thing from school, the magnesium ribbon put in a flame, but solid magnesium is a lot harder to burn, it has to be heated to melting point with continued sustained heat to catch fire. Aluminium has the same sort of melting point, aluminium powder has been used in rocket propulsion.

    • @grafixbyjorj
      @grafixbyjorj Před rokem +6

      Exactly this. If you already have a fire bad enough to light bulk magnesium, magnesium isn't your problem 🙂

  • @jasons44
    @jasons44 Před rokem

    Love your stuff 1930's and 1946-1960 fighter and bombers

  • @thebalsaboy
    @thebalsaboy Před rokem +2

    I’ve seen this before on the internet, thanks for posting this on this aircraft.

  • @reynaldoandannieangnged6434

    You've discussed one of my favourite planes!!! 😄👏👏👏 Thanks Rex.
    Since the day it piqued my interest, I have made a complete redesign as a modern, low cost, ground attack version powered by Lycoming/Honeywell t-55 spinning a 4-bladed wide prop taken straight out of skyraider.

  • @Chuckles..
    @Chuckles.. Před rokem

    Wow these planes are cool. Would definitely like to know more the Curtiss-Wright XP-55, great vid, thanks.

  • @nosorab3
    @nosorab3 Před rokem +2

    "Lemme just swooce right in."
    ~The USAF

  • @JHamList
    @JHamList Před rokem +1

    man all those old aircraft engines are a thing of exquisite beauty

  • @jacksavage4098
    @jacksavage4098 Před rokem

    Great work again.

  • @Straswa
    @Straswa Před rokem +2

    Great vid Rex, I enjoy your vids on concept planes. Nice to learn about the aircraft that could have been.

  • @rudywoodcraft9553
    @rudywoodcraft9553 Před rokem

    New stuff for me excellent video thanks!

  • @AvoozlPlays
    @AvoozlPlays Před rokem +2

    "Mr. Burns: We'll take the spruce moose! Hop in!"

  • @silentone11111111
    @silentone11111111 Před rokem

    Love info on the rare and failed . Great vid

  • @dallesamllhals9161
    @dallesamllhals9161 Před rokem +3

    Man! I need to play good good OLD Crimson Skies(2000) again. x86! NOT the console only sequel...

    • @tempestfury8324
      @tempestfury8324 Před rokem +1

      That was a really fun game! The production of it was really top notch!

  • @HootOwl513
    @HootOwl513 Před rokem +3

    ''Half Swan. Half Goose, Alexander is a Swoose...'' Novelty hit by Kay Kyser and
    His Orchestra..
    ''Swoose'' was also the pet name of an early model B-17.

  • @peterjohn3123
    @peterjohn3123 Před rokem

    Nice video 👍👍

  • @CraigLYoung
    @CraigLYoung Před rokem

    Thanks for sharing 👍

  • @jasonz7788
    @jasonz7788 Před rokem

    Great work Sir thank you

  • @oddshot60
    @oddshot60 Před rokem +1

    Glad to hear you are on the mend. I really enjoy the a/c you choose and your story telling style. Do you need research material? I have more than a couple gigs of .pdf's of it. Happy to try to work out a way to get it out to you.

  • @aaronseet2738
    @aaronseet2738 Před rokem

    Never heard of this type of aircraft before. Fascinating.

  • @lewiswestfall2687
    @lewiswestfall2687 Před rokem

    great video

  • @aurorch9942
    @aurorch9942 Před rokem +5

    The layout reminds me of the Saab 21 (J21)

    • @sharg0
      @sharg0 Před rokem +1

      Which later got a jet engine and renamed to 21R (64 built)

  • @FlyingBuzzard
    @FlyingBuzzard Před rokem

    Great info

  • @jodypitt3629
    @jodypitt3629 Před rokem +1

    Hi Rex, your commentary has reminded me of the "Thunderbird 6" movie where "Brains" loses his temper over proposed models of this new addition to the International Rescue fleet being repeatedly rejected.

  • @BobSmith-dk8nw
    @BobSmith-dk8nw Před rokem +62

    The F-104 also had a downward firing ejection seat because of it's high vertical tail. In air craft designed to take off and rapidly climb to altitude to intercept Warsaw Pact intruders - this was not considered a problem.
    Then - some of the nations buying them - such as Germany - wanted the F-104's to serve as ground attack aircraft as well ...
    Of course ... all aircraft must land and take off - which pretty much by definition happens at "low altitude" and thus people eventually saw the need for Zero Altitude Ejection Seats.
    .

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 Před rokem +2

      That seat is SO sci-fi.
      I expected to see the same lift for the astromech droid.

    • @RedXlV
      @RedXlV Před rokem +13

      Clarification: Some nations, such as Germany, had a requirement for a ground attack jet. And Lockheed bribed their officials into selecting a high-altitude interceptor for the role.

    • @calvingreene90
      @calvingreene90 Před rokem +4

      An upward firing soft launch rocket ejection seat replace the downward ejection seat. Please note that the word soft is comparable to acceleration of a gun type ejection seat.

    • @calvingreene90
      @calvingreene90 Před rokem +1

      @@RedXlV
      The F-104G was a good ground attack plane.
      Lockheed was burned on the bribery scandal because they were the winner and American not European. Everyone was offering bribes.

    • @jimtaylor294
      @jimtaylor294 Před rokem +7

      ^ Nope. The F-104 was not good in the GA role, as illustrated by the fact it was not even popular with the USAF, as a Day Interceptor.
      (a role that unlike GA, requires different [and heavier] avionics, and a larger weapons load)
      The F-104 had an underpowered engine (one reason for its lightweight build), couldn't carry the radar the USAF wanted, and originally had none of the features of an All Weather Interceptor.
      The FRD regime in Bon was bribed into accepting an inferior product; one that various Luftwaffe pilots would pay for with their lives, and also resulted in a weaker air defence against airspace incursons by the GDR/USSR, than alternatives could have provided.

  • @thetopsecretpentagonsclass6350

    Wow its look like a drone, nice video!.

  • @jonbezeau3124
    @jonbezeau3124 Před rokem

    The 3D model was a really nice touch!

  • @rayceeya8659
    @rayceeya8659 Před rokem +1

    This reminds me of the scene in Pentagon Wars where they go into the development of the Bradley.

  • @kimroos8110
    @kimroos8110 Před rokem +8

    SAAB J21(J=Jakt=Pursuit) served whit the Swedish Air Force from 1945 to 1954. Same designphilosophy and using the same engine as the German Bf 109, built under licence. Was the first aircraft to use an ejection seat devoloped but not patented by Bofors. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAAB_21

    • @Draugh39
      @Draugh39 Před rokem

      It was layer developed into the jet version J21r, which looked a bit like the de Havilland Vampire.

  • @projectlessweforget
    @projectlessweforget Před rokem +2

    It would be interesting to see the Curtiss XP-55 in a future video because it makes a appearance in the War Thunder video.
    The game gives a vague history of the aircraft to players and I thought it was a captured Japanese Shinden, until now when I watched this video.
    I picked this aircraft because it was designed by Curtiss which I'm working on a book on the Curtiss P-40 Warhawk and I find it interesting that Curtiss participated in the contest while continuing with the development of the XP-40 (I don't know if the company did both at the same time before the US officially entered WW2) and I say officially because of the Flying Tigers that helped defend China from Japan until the attack on Pearl Harbor that changed the future of the mercenary group known as the Flying Tigers and the ultimate disbandment of the group (I got off tracked).
    Please consider making a video on the Curtiss XP-55 Ascender in the future and keep up the excellent work.

  • @RaeSyngKane
    @RaeSyngKane Před rokem +10

    Was there ever a successful fighter fielded with independently aim-able guns like those seen here? I feel like we’ve seem quite a few of them in the reject pile.

  • @gryph01
    @gryph01 Před rokem

    Love your videos! Please consider doing an episode on Bush planes line the Dehavilland Beaver and Noorduyen Norseman.

  • @gregbolitho9775
    @gregbolitho9775 Před rokem

    Thanks!

  • @theorangeofallahpbuh1840

    This whole design seems terrifyingly needlessly complex. The dangerous ejection system, the unnecessary seat lowering system, the cabin pressurisation, and the moving guns. I'm surprised it wasn't thrown out because of the cost and complexity.

    • @sockmonkey6666
      @sockmonkey6666 Před rokem

      Yeah they broke one of the cardinal rules of aircraft development. When you need something soon, never try out a bunch of brand-new ideas on the same plane or you're gonna run outta time troubleshooting everything.

    • @theorangeofallahpbuh1840
      @theorangeofallahpbuh1840 Před rokem +1

      @@sockmonkey6666...and especially if those features are unnecessary at best.

  • @mattw785
    @mattw785 Před rokem

    A great site!

  • @donjones4719
    @donjones4719 Před rokem +8

    0:18 Anyone else get the vibe of the Japanese "Baka Bomb" from this simple view? The long bomb-like body with the glazed cockpit sticking up out of it, and the twin tails, makes for a surprising resemblance.

    • @russward2612
      @russward2612 Před rokem

      I was getting a kamikaze torpedo vibe, but I do see what you mean.

  • @donjones4719
    @donjones4719 Před rokem +5

    I knew 2 out of the 4 planes from this contract/specification - not this one. A very interesting story. When the original engine was cancelled, why wasn't Vultee allowed to switch to the Allison engine? It would get the plane flying, the design's aerodynamics were the real thing that needed to be explored.

    • @sgthop
      @sgthop Před rokem +2

      @Cancer McAids I'm...not entirely sure what you're getting at. The 1710 was quite a bit lighter, but they could have pretty easily adjusted the CG while they were in the prototype phase. It probably came down to the fact that it was just not feasible in budget or timeline to continue work with the design, considering the much faster P-51 first flew three years prior, and had already been in service for a year by the time the XP-54 first flew.

  • @rockyraab8290
    @rockyraab8290 Před rokem +3

    As a former Air Force O-2 guy, that one strikes a chord. If only it had held on long enough to have a turbine engine installed, it might have been a terrific "fast FAC" plane. Or at least "faster FAC."

    • @vumba1331
      @vumba1331 Před rokem

      Exhaust from the jet would've had a ball with the stab, that would need to be relocated, tops offins?

    • @rockyraab8290
      @rockyraab8290 Před rokem +1

      @@vumba1331 I should have said "turboprop" Sorry if you thought I meant a jet engine.

  • @egocyclic
    @egocyclic Před rokem +5

    My grandfather worked in management for Fisher Body throughout WWII. Now that you’ve apparently moved into reviewing rubbish American aircraft, I would pleased if you were so inclined to detail the dumpster fire that was the P-75 Eagle.

  • @Rapscallion2009
    @Rapscallion2009 Před rokem +1

    Definitely I can see elements of the P38 in there. The tails, particularly.
    It looks like something from Crimson Skies, though.

  • @slick4401
    @slick4401 Před rokem

    I don't know about you, guys, but I think it looks awesome.

  • @rolanddutton4723
    @rolanddutton4723 Před rokem +2

    I've always loved this one, it looks like something from Anime. I'm sure there's a Japanese aircraft of similar configuration but I can't remember the name (with push/pull props).
    A video on the XP-67 Bat would be cool. It also came from R40C and is one of the most beautiful aircraft ever built imo.

  • @ZZstaff
    @ZZstaff Před rokem

    Thank you

  • @larsrons7937
    @larsrons7937 Před rokem

    Incredible that they started developing this aircraft and continued until stopping only near the end of the war.
    And even more incredible the long row of problems they faced, most of which were not fault of their own.
    2:39 That plane down to the left looks a bit like the German Me-163 only with piston engine instead of rocket engine.

  • @Gillymonster18
    @Gillymonster18 Před rokem +2

    Excellent video. I feel a lot of Allied aviation development stories get passed over in favor of Axis (German) experiments. I was about to look for your videos on the other XPs until you said they’re coming in the future. Really looking forward to them.

  • @CreamTheEverythingFixer
    @CreamTheEverythingFixer Před rokem +2

    Saab was able to make something similar to this design work in 1945, the Saab 21. However it was pretty short lived as it ceased production within 4 years was decommissioned in 9 as the Saab 21R variant had a jet engine.

  • @wlewisiii
    @wlewisiii Před rokem +12

    I look forward to the video on the Ass-Ender. It always seemed like the best of the options and might have been a success with a rear mounted R2800 engine.

    • @mpetersen6
      @mpetersen6 Před rokem +1

      I've always wondered about a turbojet with the airframe cleaned up.
      Another possible engine if it worked could have been the Wright 42 cylinder Tornado.

    • @RamonInNZ
      @RamonInNZ Před rokem +1

      @@mpetersen6 aka British Vampire...

    • @sgthop
      @sgthop Před rokem

      @@mpetersen6 The Swedes kinda did this with the J21s.

    • @ericgrace9995
      @ericgrace9995 Před rokem

      I'm sorry but you really can't call an aircraft intended for military service an "Ass-Ender". You are begging for ridicule, misnaming and abuse.

    • @sgthop
      @sgthop Před rokem +1

      @@ericgrace9995 It's a play on the given name, Ascender.

  • @shiekyerbooti4068
    @shiekyerbooti4068 Před rokem +1

    I’m not sure how confident I’d feeling about jumping out of a pusher aircraft.

  • @axl0506
    @axl0506 Před rokem

    Rex's lessons are also great to learn sophisticated English - Greetings from Germany

  • @poggergen1937
    @poggergen1937 Před rokem +12

    Can you make a video on the XP-55, XF5F or the XP-50?
    (and for those who will ask, yes, I know of these aircraft from war thunder, however I am curious about them.)

  • @brotherjim3051
    @brotherjim3051 Před rokem

    Be cool to see one about the Caproni C.3 model and the Macchi floatplanes.

  • @stevetournay6103
    @stevetournay6103 Před rokem +1

    The XP-54 was one of those few aircraft that looked better parked than flying!

  • @zaegustfen6085
    @zaegustfen6085 Před rokem +1

    Oh, now I know what I'm going to do in Simple Planes ;)

  • @Unfassbarer
    @Unfassbarer Před rokem

    Danke!

  • @salvagedb2470
    @salvagedb2470 Před rokem +1

    Bloody shame they never kept an example , but the Hand drawn illustrations were top rate as were the Hand built wind tunnel Model , a cracker of a Plane in Design but the Cockpit an rear Fan just make a daunting " Damned if you do etc "..it might have lived if it ever got Jets..but still makes for a great Kit , or a Bash..Rex thankyou.

  • @tenchraven
    @tenchraven Před rokem +2

    The XP-54 was beautiful. But I think the concerns about the magnesium frame are over blown. Yes, scraped down magnesium will burn, but the same applies to aluminum and that isn't a whole lot harder to catch on fire. Both have an ignition point below that of av gas or burning ordinance if you are talking shavings, but if you have big chunks they aren't going to burst into flames randomly or even just from some bullet holes. Of course, both will burn as part of a crash. And a garbage engine can lead to that.

  • @mrb.5610
    @mrb.5610 Před rokem +5

    A rough landing, undercart collapses so you can't get out through the bottom hatch .... and then the magnesium airframe catches fire .....
    Lovely !

    • @3ducs
      @3ducs Před rokem

      Like striking a match.

    • @mrb.5610
      @mrb.5610 Před rokem

      @@3ducs The friction from a belly landing would probably have set it off !

  • @vascoribeiro69
    @vascoribeiro69 Před rokem

    It was huge. I made one for X-Plane 9, and an alternative with contra prop engine.

  • @George_M_
    @George_M_ Před rokem

    Whoever approved this design was insane. I'm amazed the thing flew, regardless of it's uselessness for the military.

  • @patrickradcliffe3837
    @patrickradcliffe3837 Před rokem +2

    5:41 the Me-108 had Magnesium skins and did not immolate itself in a crash.

  • @christofferwillenfort4035

    It is very simmilar in apearence to the SAAB j21 (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAAB_21) but the SAAB made 400MPH on only 1,455HP. (from a Daimler-Benz DB 605B )

  • @anthonysantiago1999
    @anthonysantiago1999 Před rokem

    Sad that so many stories of only single prototype aircraft are left for destruction rather than kept for future testing.. Great story as usual..

  • @cuda7133
    @cuda7133 Před rokem +1

    It's a shame that more of these experimental aircraft were not saved for display.... 😢

  • @timewaster504
    @timewaster504 Před rokem

    The plane being made out of magnesium is crazy. When that burns it is so bright it can blind you temporarily. Thank goodness they never had to deal with that.

  • @ModelMinutes
    @ModelMinutes Před rokem

    Such a beautiful looking aircraft, shame it didn’t really work. Would make a fun model though

  • @duneydan7993
    @duneydan7993 Před rokem

    Would you look at that! Another plane I need to add to my "weird/beautiful/funny aircrafts to try to build in Kerbal Space Program" list.
    Thanks Rex!

  • @stevenborham1584
    @stevenborham1584 Před rokem

    Elegant as a Girraf, no doubt the first of the designs that lead to monstrosities like that of the Douglas egg-beater powered flying barns and Hugh's twin boom job that would have impressed the designers of the Dreamliner.

  • @jasonleclare2273
    @jasonleclare2273 Před rokem +2

    While this plane lacked in luck, it certainly didn't lack anything in style and looks.

    • @suzi_mai
      @suzi_mai Před rokem +1

      This would make an excellent rc plane.

  • @kyle857
    @kyle857 Před rokem +4

    Magnesium alloys are widely used in jet engines, in the structures of military and civilian helicopters, and in hundreds of auto components, without flammability issues

    • @hatman4818
      @hatman4818 Před rokem

      ... Because theyre alloys. I dont think mettalurgy was quite there yet in WW2.

    • @kyle857
      @kyle857 Před rokem

      ​@@hatman4818 It was. The plane wasn't made of straight magnesium.

  • @kronop8884
    @kronop8884 Před rokem +1

    One of the few pusher designs ever to see service was the SAAB J21 fighter, that turned out to be less of a fighter but a stabile attack platform instead, incidentally it is possibly the only piston engined aircraft to be successfully be jet converted and entered service as the J21R.
    The J21 also required SAAB to develop their own ejection seats roughly at the same time as Germany did during WWII

    • @larryjacobsen4079
      @larryjacobsen4079 Před rokem

      The first Russian jet fighters looked like piston-engine converted to jets (Mig-9 and Yak-15)

    • @kronop8884
      @kronop8884 Před rokem

      @@larryjacobsen4079 True, Yak-15 (based on the Yak-3 fuselage) and the Swedish Saab 21R were the only two jets to be successfully converted from piston-power to enter production.
      Mig-9 was a clean sheet design afaik

  • @Ass_of_Amalek
    @Ass_of_Amalek Před rokem

    16:06 that little tailless fighter with swept wings and canards is cool, it looks like it could be fast. the prop seems kinda small though, as it does on the plane that's the topic of this video.

  • @skyislands8887
    @skyislands8887 Před rokem

    What a beautiful looking craft and magnificently presented., thank you
    Well noted on several occasions.... just one problem... another problem arose....etc
    When magnesium was mentioned my first thaught was a flying incendiary.
    The designers were ahead of their time but seemed to extend beyond what was possible to build on the day, rather ooking at what could a future possibly, e.g the pressurised cockpit.
    What would have transpired if jet engines were available for this plane?

  • @cal-native
    @cal-native Před rokem

    Gorgeous, innovative design, ahead of its time. I kept cringing as they went through engine choices, knowing that none were successful. Was wondering to myself how it would have performed with some of the early jet engines.

    • @louisavondart9178
      @louisavondart9178 Před rokem +1

      Yep, a Goblin 3 engine would have made it comparable to a Venom fighter is my guess.

  • @reynaldoandannieangnged6434

    And Rex, you've progressed from pictures, drawings and some footage to 3d rendering.

  • @nathangreer8219
    @nathangreer8219 Před rokem

    My grandfather was denied service in WW2 due to a heart defect. He spent the war in Southern Cal on the assembly line at Vultee, building Valiants.

  • @glennpettersson9002
    @glennpettersson9002 Před rokem +3

    I wonder how hard it would have been to keep working on the design given all those difficulties and then watching the rest of the industry slowly make it redundant.

  • @finncarlbomholtsrensen1188

    In Germany the very/too advanced Heinkel 177 bomber also had two engines coupled along the propeller axle in each wing and when "Dicke Herman", Herman Göring saw the engine, he became furious, as he knew they would be very difficult to maintain in the field. It also had a very advanced cooling system below the plates on the wings, making the plates flex in the cold, high altitudes. But it was faster than the fighters, so it didn't need much protective armament by that.

  • @WildBillCox13
    @WildBillCox13 Před rokem

    "Tail sitters and the Allison YT40". "The Westland Whirlwind". "Early G.E. turbojets".
    Whirlwind (and a lot of others) had more problems than just its engines, but an undeveloped or "bad" engine design kills more aircraft proposals than the opposite.

  • @herbertshallcross9775

    It might be interesting to know more about results and even comments from it's flight testing. Designers keep "seeing" theoretical potential for higher efficiencies of pusher propellors, but few pushers have become successful aircraft. The clean air the flight surfaces and fuselage skins are supposed to benefit from because the propellor isn't trashing the air seems to be largely offset by the propellor not seeing clean air entering the prop disk. Many pushers (notably the Beech Starship) are god-awful noisy because of the propellor cutting through the different pressure areas from the lifting surfaces. and generating that noise has to have an impact on efficiency. The Molt Taylor Mini-Imp and the Lesher Teal seem to have made pushers work, but even though plans were offered tor the Mini-Imp, I don't think many were constructed.

  • @bjornpilot
    @bjornpilot Před rokem

    The XP54 is a design very close to the successful Saab J21/A21. It was produced in a couple of hundred examples and the only major problem was cooling on ground.

  • @alessiodecarolis
    @alessiodecarolis Před rokem +2

    Without all these problems perhaps it could've worked, don't understand why using magnesium for the build, the downward ejection seat was really idiotic (oh wait, the early F104s), the design was similar to the SAAB 21, with the difference that it worked. So well that it was modified in the SAAB 21R, the first swedish jet fighter, and it had an ejection seat from the early versions. Perhaps also the P54 could've been modified with a jet engine.

  • @jeffbrinkerhoff5121
    @jeffbrinkerhoff5121 Před rokem

    "Swoose" was a popular song of the Era about a creature that was a cross between a swan and a goose. Additionally the actress Swoosie Kurtz is the daughter of heroic ww2 aviator Frank Kurtz who had a hybrid plane cobbled together from a couple wrecks to get back in action. That plane was very successful and as the progeny of 2 different designs was dubbed the "Swoose" like the bird in the song.