Convair XF-92, made by the Consolidated model shop at Lindbergh Field, San Diego. This model belonged to XF-92 design engineer Thomas Melvin Hemphill.
 

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variant of the early version tested at naca


EDIT: I think I have posted this elsewhere but might as well post it here. Supposedly a 1944 convair wind tunnel model.


source of the photo; http://archivesite.jetex.org/scripts/yabb2/nph-YaBB.pl?num=1258848483;start=all
 

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Very interesting first configuration with the v tail. Was dropped due to the wing stalling at just 5° aoa.

From "Killer Rays: Story of the Douglas F4D Skyray and F5D Skylancer" by Mark Frankel,
 

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Hi!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f0FTCMBrq6c
 
The last picture is interesting and a first for me: an F-92 with dual lateral intakes instead of a single nose intake? I'd like to know more about this.
 
Skyblazer said:
The last picture is interesting and a first for me: an F-92 with dual lateral intakes instead of a single nose intake? I'd like to know more about this.
The last picture you mention, I feel, shows the XF-92A and the upcoming YF-102 (pre-YF-102 if you will). -SP
 
Steve Pace said:
The last picture you mention, I feel, shows the XF-92A and the upcoming YF-102 (pre-YF-102 if you will). -SP

Except this particular image is clearly an XF-92 that has been doctored, not one of the YF-102 images.
The air intakes do not look at all like the ones that were actually built (you can see they blend in a lot more with the fuselage here). The cockpit is a little different, and the jet exhaust reaches far behind, unchanged from the XF-92 photo (whereas the YF-102 had a shorter rear with modified, not tubular, shape).
 
The last XF-92 image with funky side intakes is in Scott's XF-92 article (http://aerospaceprojectsreview.com/ev3n1.htm). I'm looking right at it.

Scott credits the photo to the SDAM via Mark Nankivil
 

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Thank you vey much for all the wonderful information regaring the early prototype of the XF-92 based on the work started by Alexander Lippisch into delta wing aircraft
 
This is a photograph of the XF-92A on display at an open house at Bees Air Force Base, New Hampshire, in May 1955. The design closely follows the delta wing theory of Dr. Alexander M. Lippish, so the style is very similar to the delta wing experimental glider MD-1 created during World War II. The large vertical stabilizer is located relatively forward. The unusually long tailpipe is due to the installation of afterburner on the J33 engine.

Source : FAMOUS AIRCRAFT OF THE WORLD CONVAIR F-102 DELTA DAGGER
 

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The design closely follows the delta wing theory of Dr. Alexander M. Lippish,
*SORT* *OF.* Yes, the planform & side views are very similar, but the airfoil sections are *very* different. Lippisch favored *fat* airfoils that would not have let this thing go transonic. The XP-92 and subsequent delta winged aircraft had *thin* wings with relatively sharp leading edges. These are not minor feature differences.
 
Hi!

 

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Seems Convair was smoking the same stuff LeDuc was...
And Miles with the M-52 ? Common, there were good reasons barrel-fuselage were considered in the late 1940's for high speed X planes.
 
Fiddled with white-balance in GIMP:
 

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