Swedish 'Isaacson' Asymetric fighter?

Hi,

http://www.geocities.com/asymmetrics/bvzerst.htm

http://www.geocities.com/asymmetrics/index.html
 
Came across this 3-view in the July 1944 Air Trails Pictorial magazine, p. 43; there is not additional info provided. Anybody know anything more about it?
 

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Thanks, Bailey -- so, it looks like a graduate paper study produced to obtain an advanced engineering degree. Interesting features.
 
Hello

Something like the Loch Ness Monster

A B&V patent was published in 1939 , Mr Isacson probably used it for a graduation thesis in Sweden ,the "project " was published in Sweden(and Germany) ,and later in England (Flight 1943).
I believe ,there's a model by UNICRAFT
 

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Hi,

http://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,3382.0/highlight,asymmetric.html
 
A year ago on a French forum, I have found this nicely rendered Unicraft B u. V / Isaacson "Zerstoerer". They quite often post there various Luft '46-themed WIPs.
http://www.master194.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=33576&st=0&sk=t&sd=a&hilit=blohm+zerstoerer&start=200
 
Hi,

Does any-one know which project this is?

163041-12192.jpg


The picture comes from a Vami model kit box.

I'm thinking about the Hutter Zerstörer project, but it isn't quite the same.
 
This is the German Blohm & Voss Zerstörer-Projekt.
 

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Hi,


here is the BV Zerstörer drawing.
 

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I`m afraid that is not a german project. It is swedish. Please see our own thread:

http://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forum/index.php?topic=9936.0
 
Its not fake, isacson copied the design from a picture he saw of one of blos & voss's projects. The design was a heavy fighter and was named Tungt Jaktplan.

(2023-11-14 edit: missing letter in "(p)icture")
 
Last edited:
blockhaj said:
Its not fake, isacson copied the design from a icture he saw of one of blos & voss's projects. The design was a heavy fighter and was named Tungt Jaktplan.

Do you have a proof on that ?,it's really interested if it was not fake.
 
Whether it's fake or not. Don't contra props rather make the asymmetric offset engine layout less useful? Part of why the BV141's layout works is that it provides a natural counter to the engines torque.
 
The use of contra-rotating props here is to get twice as much blade area in a limited diameter. To get the same prop blade area in a single prop, the diameter would have to be larger or the number of blades would have to double. You can't get much more diameter without moving the nacelle farther from the fuselage and more than 4 blades wasn't done back then.
 
But whatever the reason for going with contra props, it seems a silly choice to combine them with an offset asymmetric layout like this. No? Switching the cockpit and front engine over would seem like a much more sensible solution.
 
hesham said:
blockhaj said:
Its not fake, isacson copied the design from a icture he saw of one of blos & voss's projects. The design was a heavy fighter and was named Tungt Jaktplan.

Do you have a proof on that ?,it's really interested if it was not fake.
Well im just gonna translate the quote. Sigurd started already in the 30's with classic free-flowing models, already winning several contests in autumn 1938, and then acquired an aeronautical education in Norrköping and during the war was known in foreign air press for a "project" "Tungt Jaktplan (heavy fighter)" which certainly was based on any Blohm & Voss patent that he saw and used for a degree project.
 
So its a real design but what he intended to do with it is unsure, but the blueprints exist and suggests that he did mean it as a real war plane.
 
Does anyone have the full blueprints which shows the crew and gun placement?
 
Was that any aircraft designed by this inventor ?.

Are you asking whether there were other aircraft designs by Sigurd Isacson? If so, the answer is: only in miniature, AFAIK.

Sigurd Isacson became a racer - both automotive and sailing. But he also designed a huge array of 'Prefab' flying model aircraft kits. The models listed on the Svenska Modellflygares OldtimerSällskap website are given below:

Rimfaxe (1939) model airplane
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/modell/818/

Nimbus (1941) model sailplane
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/en/modell/257/

Pantern (1942) model sailplane/glider
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/modell/261/

Vargen (1943) model basic glider
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/modell/301/
- Variation on Finnish Esa model glider

Reynold (1943) model sailplane -- to test low Reynolds number airfoils
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/en/modell/275/

Garm (1943) model sailplane
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/modell/223/
- aka Strömsettan (after kit maker, CH Ström, Göteborg)

Västanvind (1943) model airplane
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/modell/486/

Tigern (1943) model sailplane/glider
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/modell/296/

Sunnanvind (1944) model sailplane
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/en/modell/290/205/

Nordanvind (1945) model sailplane
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/modell/258/

Reynold V (1945) model sailplane
- A variation on the 1943 Reynold design

Tigern 2 (1946) model sailplane/glider
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/modell/297/
- Longer-span development of 1943 Tigern

Scout
(1946) model sailplane; twin-boomed
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/modell/120/

Auster (1947) scale model airplane (balsa-and-cardboard)

Dieselscout (1947) model motor-glider; twin-boomed
- Motor-glider Scout devel.; 2.5 cc diesel pusher

Segelscout (1948) model sailplane; twin-boomed
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/modell/175/
- Scout devel.; sailplane version of Dieselscout

Måsen
(195?) model airplane; no details
- Leads to 1953 Silver-Måsen (below)

Silver-Måsen (1953) model airplane
-- http://smos.homeunix.net/modellregister/modell/140/
- Preceded by the Måsen design (195?)

Uppvind (1959); no details (besides 1 metre span)

Anyone have any more Sigurd Isacson designs?
 

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