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Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Topic: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger (Read 8239 times)
Pioneer
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Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
«
on:
July 03, 2006, 02:23:51 pm »
Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
I was reading about the Japanese Air Self Defense Force (JASDF) the other day.
One of the things I found interesting was the fact that when looking to modernise its fighter interceptor force in the late 1950,s / early 1960’s to replace its F-86 Sabre fighters. One of the designs it evaluated and came that close to putting into production was the Grumman F11F-2 (later changed to F11F-1F) Super Tiger light weight fighter.
The article stated that the Japanese had literally signed the licensed production contract with Grumman, when like many things military and business, at the eleventh hour the Japanese did a back flip and instead chose the Lockheed F-104 Starfighter in November1960.
I have not been able to find much on the Super Tiger design, apart from it being powered by a General Electric J79 turbojet engine and because of this being somewhat heavier in weight and supersonic.
Does anyone have any specification / technical data, pictures and a 3-view drawing of the F11F-2 / F11F-1F Super Tiger design?
P.S. I also believe that the Luftwaffe also evaluated the Super Tiger, but like Japan chose the F-104 Starfighter instead.
I wonder if the high accident and mortality rate of Luftwaffe F-104’s and their pilots would have been very different had they chosen the Super Tiger over the Starfighter??
The main reason that the Starfighter gained its infamous name ‘The Widow Maker’
Regards
Pioneer
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Archibald
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #1 on:
July 03, 2006, 02:40:03 pm »
Interesting thread! I heard about this story, but you give new details!
I also think that the Super Tiger would have not killed so much pilots. Its configuration was less radical than the Starfighter, I mean it had ordinary wings and more, no T-tail.
The T-tail was responsible of a big part of the Starfighter accidents... At high AoA, it was blanked by the wings, and the plane went into a spin (remember the right stuff ? this is a real accident, occured in 10th december 1963)
Aparently the F-104 also needed bribes to smashed the concurrence...
My personal opinion about the F-104 is that the fuselage was good, but the wing / tail combo was a disaster!
Later, Lockheed improved the Starfighter design into the CL-1200... with different wings and tail!!
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overscan
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #2 on:
July 03, 2006, 03:45:52 pm »
I have a 3 view of this I can post tonight.
[Edit] I was thinking of XF12F-1. XF11F-1F was simply reengined with J-79.
«
Last Edit: July 03, 2006, 06:34:08 pm by overscan
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Skybolt
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #3 on:
July 03, 2006, 05:42:14 pm »
Italy too evaluated the SuperTiger. The story is very well told in the Naval Fighters N.44 on the SuperTiger. Find it here
http://www.mozeyoninn.com/Ginter/NAVAL/NF44.htm
, but in a lot of other places too (Amazon, and B&N)
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fightingirish
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #4 on:
July 03, 2006, 06:36:05 pm »
Quote from: Pioneer on July 03, 2006, 02:23:51 pm
Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
.....I have not been able to find much on the Super Tiger design, apart from it being powered by a General Electric J79 turbojet engine and because of this being somewhat heavier in weight and supersonic.
Does anyone have any specification / technical data, pictures and a 3-view drawing of the F11F-2 / F11F-1F Super Tiger design?
....
Regards
Pioneer
Two threads at Key Publishing Ltd Aviation Forums:
http://forum.keypublishing.co.uk/showthread.php?t=4272
http://forum.keypublishing.co.uk/showthread.php?t=54481&highlight=F11F-2
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Slán,
fightingirish
Matej
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #5 on:
July 03, 2006, 08:53:21 pm »
Probably the most unusual using of F-11F Tiger was to place them in submarine Boeing AN-1, proposed under secret Flying Carpet project. Submarine had two independent hangars, each with four planes. Aircrafts were modified with folding wings, tail surfaces and ZELL rocket booster. Concept was tested when two Tigers were carried in hangars in SSG-574 Grayback submarine.
I was working on this web update, but project for some reasons freezed, so probably I will publish something already finished here.
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elmayerle
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #6 on:
July 04, 2006, 03:37:52 am »
Ginter Books has a whole volume dedicated just to the Super Tiger,
http://www.mozeyoninn.com/Ginter/NAVAL/NF44.htm
, that covers the story quite thoroughly, especially considering that the author is intimately familiar with the subject.
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overscan
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #7 on:
July 14, 2006, 08:14:27 am »
From Steve Ginter's book on the Super Tiger as detailed above. I recommend this book if you are interested in the Super Tiger!
«
Last Edit: April 22, 2007, 05:35:49 pm by overscan
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overscan
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #8 on:
July 14, 2006, 08:26:21 am »
two seat and photo-rec versions
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Pioneer
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #9 on:
August 30, 2006, 03:40:12 pm »
Sorry gents
I failed to notice your effort in my request, regards to the Grumman Super Tiger, all the way back in July.
Great drawings!!!!!
I never new about the upper fuselage mounted Sidewinder AAM arrangement.
Interesting - almost Vought/LTV in a way
I like it
This could have been a very interesting and effective lightwight carrier-based and land-based fighter aircraft.
It could have been the answer to a credible fighter for the likes of Argentina, Australia, India, Brazil, France, Canada, and even the Dutch with thier lighter carriers
Regards
Pioneer
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Skybolt
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #10 on:
August 30, 2006, 10:36:13 pm »
The real stuff would have been as a land based fighter interceptor, to transition the European air forces to mach 2 aircraft having hopped the F-100 generation.. This the role for which it was evaluated by Germany, Japan, etc. They bought F-104 instead, IMHO a mistake: great point-interceptor but poor air superiority, dangerous striker (except as a nuclear hit and run light bomber, the role in which the Germans wanted it initially), I mean, dangerous to its pilot, and too steep a ramp tfor transitioning from the Sabre to mach 2. The more I study, the more I think the SuperTiger would have been perfect for a European role. And lot of growth potential, too, as a striker for example, and new engines, etc etc.
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harrier
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #11 on:
July 08, 2007, 05:22:45 pm »
One part of the Super Tiger lives on - it had a version of the diverterless inlet used on the F-35, as can be seen in some of the pics above, esp. '98J5' top view.
«
Last Edit: July 08, 2007, 05:25:00 pm by harrier
»
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"If there is a more tortuous tale in the history of aerospace than the long pursuit of a runway-free fighter, the author has not heard it." - Bill Sweetman.
elmayerle
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #12 on:
July 08, 2007, 05:29:57 pm »
I'd have to look over the drawings more closely. In any case, it doesn't have some of the aerodynamic aspects that make the diverter-less inlet work on the F-35. There's some definite tailoring that has to be done to the inlet shape and it's not visible here. Mind you, I'm not putting down the Super Tiger, a, IMHO, superb aircraft - save perhaps that it looks a bit low on fuel load, but I know the F-35 and its inlet well.
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harrier
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #13 on:
July 08, 2007, 06:10:03 pm »
I found this from a book by Ray Whitford, written in 1989, saying that the Super Tiger avoided the use of an intake splitter by using a fuselage bump to cause a pressure rise to divert the boundary layer away from the inlet. So it sounds like it did 'the necessary'. However, a decent photo of the Super Tiger would help to see what was built, but I can't find one online.
As the J-79 was a pure turbojet it could presumably tolerate greater distortion than a fan, so maybe less tailoring would be required.
«
Last Edit: July 08, 2007, 06:29:33 pm by harrier
»
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"If there is a more tortuous tale in the history of aerospace than the long pursuit of a runway-free fighter, the author has not heard it." - Bill Sweetman.
elmayerle
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Re: Grumman XF11F-2 Super Tiger
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Reply #14 on:
July 09, 2007, 03:33:43 am »
Quote from: harrier on July 08, 2007, 06:10:03 pm
I found this from a book by Ray Whitford, written in 1989, saying that the Super Tiger avoided the use of an intake splitter by using a fuselage bump to cause a pressure rise to divert the boundary layer away from the inlet. So it sounds like it did 'the necessary'. However, a decent photo of the Super Tiger would help to see what was built, but I can't find one online.
As the J-79 was a pure turbojet it could presumably tolerate greater distortion than a fan, so maybe less tailoring would be required.
That could well be. The J79 also had a fairly sophisticated compressor design which would help in dealing with distortion. These days, the design tools available allow one to design fans to cope with large amounts of distortion with equanimity. The fan on the F118 in the B-2 being a case in point, it's related to the fans on the F101, F110, and CFM56 but is tailored to deal with much higher distortion levels than any of those other engines, without using a variable compressor vane set-up like the J79 has.
From the comment you reported, it does sound like the F11F-2 did have the basic concept. The other features of the f-35 inlet may well be signature-reduction measures that the Super Tiger wouldn't need. I agree, though, that we need some better evidence. Anyone care have a copy of the Ginter Super Tiger book and can provide appropriate low-res scans?
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