Thanks! Yeah, actually did save the pics from eBay. Unfortunately they didn't save as jpg's and were unable to be uploaded here. So I went back and took screenshots which I then uploaded with my post.Nice. I took the liberty of adding better quality images to your post.
Its a lovely model and some interesting documents, hope it finds a good home with a forum member![]()
This is a slide on general aircraft IRAD (Internal Research and Development) activities ongoing at Convair (San Diego). Convair bid on the VSX (S-3 Viking) program.ASW aircraft avionics? What does that mean?
Weird. The slide makes it look like it's all related to the 200 program.This is a slide on general aircraft IRAD (Internal Research and Development) activities ongoing at Convair (San Diego). Convair bid on the VSX (S-3 Viking) program.
New pictures showing the General Dynamics Convair Models 200, 201 and 218 Sea Control Ship fighters were uploaded to SDASM Flickr Archives today. Some of these drawings by the illustrator Roy Gjertson might have already posted in topic before.New pictures of the General Dynamics Convair Models 200, 201 and 218 Sea Control Ship fighters at SDASM Archives. B)
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Some pictures showing a Convair Model 200 wind tunnel or an engineering modell were posted recently at SDASM Flickr Archives. IMHO here the three most interesting pictures:
View: https://flic.kr/p/2p3Qm51
View: https://flic.kr/p/2p3Mwq8
View: https://flic.kr/p/2p2od2B
Some things I noticed: the model 200 had a significantly higher thrust at takeoff (~37.5 klbs) than it's maximum thrust in level flight (~28.1 klbs). The same is true for for many VTOL/STOVL designs like including the VFW VAK 191, Mirage III-V, Do 31, Yak-38 and Yak-141. Meanwhile the F-35B and Harrier both have the same max thrust at takeoff and level flight (Harrier because they don't have an AB, F-35 because its fan happens to add about the same thrust as its AB). I am not sure if/how much that helps in STO, but it does mean CTO and VTOL are a lot nearer. (edit1: I should say "installed thrust", obviously actual thrust differs depending on flight conditions) (edit4: I am fucking stupid, the Harrier had the water injection thingy which increased thrust by 50% for 90 seconds)
Additionally I don't quite buy the the "the lift engines are dead weight, therefore the F-35 lift fan is better" argument. RR/Allision were designing lift engines with a 20:1 TW back in the 70s. The lift fan system also weights a shitton ("dead weight"), very possibly more than lift engines would. The lift fan probably has other advantages, e.g. better fuel economy in VTOL or better lifecycle cost. edit3: D'oh, the lift system has also a cooler exhaust and doesn't melt carrier decks as easily.
And lastly, the F135 has a very low bypass ratio, which means that if you think about the whole engine system, the F-35B goes from a "high" bypass design in VTOL to a low bypass design in level flight. Meanwhile the Model 200 would go from low bypass at VTOL to "high" bypass at level flight. Not sure that meany anything though, never mind what it means.
Edit2: on another note, the 30klbs MTOW figure is obvious bullshit imho unless you are in a high and hot scenario. The harrier does that, with a significantly lower thrust and as a smaller plane.
Note that takeoff weight isn't necessarily related to bringback weight at all. It's pretty common for carrier aircraft to not be able to land with as much weight as they launch with.[...}
American Secret Projects lists a VTO gross weight of 25,000lbs and a CTO gross weight of 31,090lbs for the Model 200A (as an aside while the data chart does not list fuel capacity the write up earlier in the chapter credits the Model 200A with an internal fuel load of 5875lbs). It might be worth noting that the aircraft was intended to be able to land with one of the lift engines out.
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Edit: Realized the VTOL data page in American Secret Projects lists gross weight which is not necessarily the same thing as MTOW. I do wonder if the book used the terms interchangeably for some of the aircraft though the figures for the AV-8C seem light for that at 20,450lbs VTO and 24,250lbs CTO. Though given that the max speed for the AV-8C is listed as Mach 1.2 at altitude it was obviously differed somewhat from the subsonic AV-8B that was eventually built instead.
Greetings everyone, I discovered the Sea Control Ship concept by the company Rohr Marine Inc. in the SDASM Flickr Archives yesterday. Please take note of the Convair Model 200 aircraft stationed onboard.
View: https://flic.kr/p/2rHrHaQ