Douglas D-558-II

Douglas D-558-II

Douglas Skyrocket D-558-II
TypExperimentalflugzeug
Entwurfsland

Vereinigte Staaten 48 Vereinigte Staaten

HerstellerDouglas Aircraft Company
Erstflug4. Februar 1948
IndienststellungFlugerprobung am 12. Dezember 1956 beendet[1]
Stückzahl3
Eine Douglas D-558-II beim Abwurf von einer Boeing B-29

Die Douglas D-558-II Skyrocket (auch Douglas D-558-2) war ein Versuchsflugzeug der United States Navy. Es wurde von der Douglas Aircraft Company gebaut und war das erste bemannte Flugzeug, das die zweifache Schallgeschwindigkeit erreichte.

Die Maschine war ein druckbelüfteter Mitteldecker mit einem Einziehfahrwerk. Ziel war die Erforschung von aerodynamischen Effekten im transsonischen Bereich sowie beim Überschallflug. Die Tragflächen besaßen deswegen eine Pfeilung von 35°, das Höhenleitwerk von 40° und das Seitenleitwerk von 49°.

Geschichte

Der Erstflug erfolgte auf dem Muroc Army Airfield am 4. Februar 1948.

Es wurden drei Maschinen hergestellt, die sich in Details unterschieden. Insgesamt konnten 313 Flüge unternommen werden: 123 von der ersten mit der Bureau Number (BuNo) 37973 (NACA-143), 103 von der zweiten, BuNo 37974 (NACA-144) und 87 von der dritten Maschine, BuNo 37975 (NACA-145).

Die erste Maschine war zunächst mit einem Westinghouse J34-40-Strahltriebwerk von 13 kN Schub ausgerüstet und eigenstartfähig mit einem Startgewicht von 4.795 kg. Die Kraftstoffmenge belief sich auf 980 l Kerosin. Die Maschine erhielt 1954–55 ein Raketentriebwerk Reaction Motors XLR-8 mit vier Brennkammern und entsprach so antriebsseitig der NACA-144. In dieser Konfiguration wurde jedoch nur ein Flug (am 17. September 1956) durchgeführt.

Auch die zweite Maschine, NACA-144, besaß zunächst ein Strahltriebwerk. Während der Flugerprobung 1949 zeigten sich aerodynamische Effekte, das sogenannte Pitch-Up, im transsonischen Bereich. Trotz allem wurde die Maschine 1950 auf das Reaction Motors XLR-11 Triebwerk mit einem Schub von 27 kN umgerüstet und bis Mach 1,88 bei einer Flughöhe von 25.370 m ausgeflogen, wobei sich wiederum aerodynamische Instabilitäten zeigten. Dazu wurde die Maschine (wie schon 1946 die Bell X-1) von einer B-29-Version der US-Navy auf Höhe getragen und dann abgeworfen. Bei einem Startgewicht von 7.161 kg konnten 1.306 l Flüssigsauerstoff und 1.431 l Alkohol mitgeführt werden.

Es wurde beschlossen, die Maschine bis Mach 2 auszufliegen. Dazu wurde die Schubdüse modifiziert, der Treibstoff tiefgekühlt eingefüllt und die Oberfläche nochmals poliert. Scott Crossfield erreichte mit der so präparierten Maschine am 20. November 1953 in 21.900 m Höhe Mach 2,005 (entspricht in dieser Flughöhe einer Geschwindigkeit von 2078 km/h). Diese Geschwindigkeit wurde bei keinem anderen Flug mit der D-558-II überboten.

Der letzte Flug aller drei Maschinen wurde am 20. Dezember 1956 durchgeführt.

Die dritte Maschine, NACA-145, besaß sowohl das Strahltriebwerk mit 13 kN Schub als auch das Raketentriebwerk mit 27 kN Schub. Es wurde mit einer Reihe von Modifikationen des Tragflügels eingesetzt, um die Effekte des transsonischen Bereiches zu untersuchen und die Handhabung zu verbessern. Die so gewonnenen Daten wurden für die Kampfflugzeugentwicklung benötigt. Der letzte Flug der NACA-145 fand am 28. August 1956 statt. Das Startgewicht dieser Variante betrug 6.925 kg. Als Treibstoff konnten 984 l Kerosin, 644 l Flüssigsauerstoff und 727 l Alkohol mitgeführt werden.

Alle drei Maschinen sind erhalten geblieben. NACA-143 steht im Planes of Fame Museum in Chino (Kalifornien), NACA-144 ist im National Air and Space Museum in Washington D.C. ausgestellt, NACA-145 steht vor dem Antelope Valley College, Lancaster (Kalifornien).

Technische Daten (NACA 144)

  • Länge: 12,8 m
  • Spannweite: 7,6 m
  • Höhe: 3,8 m
  • Flügelfläche: 16,2 m²
  • Leermasse: 4273 kg
  • Startmasse: 7161 kg
  • Triebwerk: 1 × Reaction Motors XLR-8-RM-5 mit 27 kN Schub
  • Höchstgeschwindigkeit: 2078 km/h

Weblinks

Commons: Douglas D-558-II – Sammlung von Bildern, Videos und Audiodateien

Einzelnachweise

  1. Dennis R. Jenkins, Tony Landis, Jay Miller: American X-Vehicles. An Inventory – X-1 to X-50 – Centennial of Flight Edition. In: Monographs in Aerospace History. Band 31. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Office of External Relations, Washington DC 2003, S. 62 (archive.org [PDF]).

Auf dieser Seite verwendete Medien

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US Flag with 48 stars. In use for 47 years from July 4, 1912, to July 3, 1959.
D-558-II-NASA-E-1442.jpg
Viewed in this 1955 photograph is the NACA High Speed Flight Station D-558-2 #2 (144) Skyrocket, an all-rocket powered vehicle. The Skyrocket is parked on Rogers Dry Lakebed at Edwards Air Force Base. This aircraft, NACA 144/Navy 37974, was the first to reach Mach 2 (see project description).

The Douglas D-558-2 "Skyrockets" were among the early transonic research airplanes like the X-1, X-4, X-5, and X-92A. Three of the single-seat, swept-wing aircraft flew from 1948 to 1956 in a joint program involving the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), with its flight research done at the NACA’s Muroc Flight Test Unit in Calif., redesignated in 1949 the High-Speed Flight Research Station (HSFRS); the Navy-Marine Corps; and the Douglas Aircraft Co. The HSFRS became the High-Speed Flight Station in 1954 and is now known as the NASA Dryden Flight Research Center. The Skyrocket made aviation history when it became the first airplane to fly twice the speed of sound. The 2 in the aircraft’s designation referred to the fact that the Skyrocket was the phase-two version of what had originally been conceived as a three-phase program, with the phase-one aircraft having straight wings. The third phase, which never came to fruition, would have involved constructing a mock-up of a combat-type aircraft embodying the results from the testing of the phase one and two aircraft.

Douglas pilot John F. Martin made the first flight at Muroc Army Airfield (later renamed Edwards Air Force Base) in Calif. on February 4, 1948. The goals of the program were to investigate the characteristics of swept-wing aircraft at transonic and supersonic speeds with particular attention to pitch-up (uncommanded rotation of the nose of the airplane upwards)--a problem prevalent in high-speed service aircraft of that era, particularly at low speeds during take-off and landing and in tight turns.

The three aircraft gathered a great deal of data about pitch-up and the coupling of lateral (yaw) and longitudinal (pitch) motions; wing and tail loads, lift, drag, and buffeting characteristics of swept-wing aircraft at transonic and supersonic speeds; and the effects of the rocket exhaust plume on lateral dynamic stability throughout the speed range. (Plume effects were a new experience for aircraft.) The number three aircraft also gathered information about the effects of external stores (bomb shapes, drop tanks) upon the aircraft’s behavior in the transonic region (roughly 0.7 to 1.3 times the speed of sound). In correlation with data from other early transonic research aircraft such as the XF-92A, this information contributed to solutions to the pitch-up problem in swept-wing aircraft.

The three airplanes flew a total of 313 times--123 by the number one aircraft (Bureau No. 37973--NACA 143), 103 by the second Skyrocket (Bureau No. 37974--NACA 144), and 87 by airplane number three (Bureau No. 37975--NACA 145). Skyrocket 143 flew all but one of its missions as part of the Douglas contractor program to test the airplane’s performance.

NACA aircraft 143 was initially powered by a Westinghouse J-34-40 turbojet engine configured only for ground take-offs, but in 1954-55 the contractor modified it to an all-rocket air-launch capability featuring an LR8-RM-6, 4-chamber Reaction Motors engine rated at 6,000 pounds of thrust at sea level (the Navy designation for the Air Force’s LR-11 used in the X-1). In this configuration, NACA research pilot John McKay flew the airplane only once for familiarization on September 17, 1956. The 123 flights of NACA 143 served to validate wind-tunnel predictions of the airplane’s performance, except for the fact that the airplane experienced less drag above Mach 0.85 than the wind tunnels had indicated.

NACA 144 also began its flight program with a turbojet powerplant. NACA pilots Robert A. Champine and John H. Griffith flew 21 times in this configuration to test airspeed calibrations and to research longitudinal and lateral stability and control. In the process, during August of 1949 they encountered pitch-up problems, which NACA engineers recognized as serious because they could produce a limiting and dangerous restriction on flight performance. Hence, they determined to make a complete investigation of the problem.

In 1950, Douglas replaced the turbojet with an LR-8 rocket engine, and its pilot, William B. Bridgeman, flew the aircraft seven times up to a speed of Mach 1.88 (1.88 times the speed of sound) and an altitude of 79,494 feet (the latter an unofficial world’s altitude record at the time, achieved on August 15, 1951). In the rocket configuration, a Navy P2B (Navy version of the B-29) launched the airplane at approximately 30,000 feet after taking off from the ground with the Skyrocket attached beneath its bomb bay. During Bridgeman’s supersonic flights, he encountered a violent rolling motion known as lateral instability that was less pronounced on the Mach 1.88 flight on August 7, 1951, than on a Mach 1.85 flight in June when he pushed over to a low angle of attack (angle of the fuselage or wing to the prevailing wind direction).

The NACA engineers studied the behavior of the aircraft before beginning their own flight research in the airplane in September 1951. Over the next couple of years, NACA pilot A. Scott Crossfield flew the airplane 20 times to gather data on longitudinal and lateral stability and control, wing and tail loads, and lift, drag, and buffeting characteristics at speeds up to Mach 1.878.

At that point, Marine Lt. Col. Marion Carl flew the airplane to a new (unofficial) altitude record of 83,235 feet on August 21, 1953, and to a maximum speed of Mach 1.728.

Following Carl’s completion of these flights for the Navy, NACA technicians at the High-Speed Flight Research Station (HSFRS) near Mojave, Calif., outfitted the LR-8 engine’s cylinders with nozzle extensions to prevent the exhaust gas from affecting the rudders at supersonic speeds. This addition also increased the engine’s thrust by 6.5 percent at Mach 1.7 and 70,000 feet.

Even before Marion Carl had flown the Skyrocket, HSFRS Chief Walter C. Williams had petitioned NACA headquarters unsuccessfully to fly the aircraft to Mach 2 to garner the research data at that speed. Finally, after Crossfield had secured the agreement of the Navy’s Bureau of Aeronautics, NACA director Hugh L. Dryden relaxed the organization’s usual practice of leaving record setting to others and consented to attempting a flight to Mach 2.

In addition to adding the nozzle extensions, the NACA flight team at the HSFRS chilled the fuel (alcohol) so more could be poured into the tank and waxed the fuselage to reduce drag. With these preparations and employing a flight plan devised by project engineer Herman O. Ankenbruck to fly to approximately 72,000 feet and push over into a slight dive, Crossfield made aviation history on November 20, 1953, when he flew to Mach 2.005 (1,291 miles per hour). He became the first pilot to reach Mach 2 in this, the only flight in which the Skyrocket flew that fast.

Following this flight, Crossfield and NACA pilots Joseph A. Walker and John B. McKay flew the airplane for such purposes as to gather data on pressure distribution, structural loads, and structural heating, with the last flight in the program occurring on December 20, 1956, when McKay obtained dynamic stability data and sound-pressure levels at transonic speeds and above.

Meanwhile, NACA 145 had completed 21 contractor flights by Douglas pilots Eugene F. May and Bill Bridgeman in November 1950. In this jet-and-rocket-propelled craft, Scott Crossfield and Walter Jones began the NACA’s investigation of pitch-up lasting from September 1951 well into the summer of 1953. They flew the Skyrocket with a variety of wing-fence, wing-slat, and leading-edge chord extension configurations, performing various maneuvers as well as straight-and-level flying at transonic speeds. While fences significantly aided recovery from pitch-up conditions, leading edge chord extensions did not, disproving wind-tunnel tests to the contrary. Slats (long, narrow auxiliary airfoils) in the fully open position eliminated pitch-up except in the speed range around Mach 0.8 to 0.85.

In June 1954, Crossfield began an investigation of the effects of external stores (bomb shapes and fuel tanks) upon the aircraft’s transonic behavior. McKay and Stanley Butchart completed the NACA’s investigation of this issue, with McKay flying the final mission on August 28, 1956.

Besides setting several records, the Skyrocket pilots had gathered important data and understanding about what would and would not work to provide stable, controlled flight of a swept-wing aircraft in the transonic and supersonic flight regimes. The data they gathered also helped to enable a better correlation of wind-tunnel test results with actual flight values, enhancing the abilities of designers to produce more capable aircraft for the armed services, especially those with swept wings. Moreover, data on such matters as stability and control from this and other early research airplanes aided in the design of the century series of fighter airplanes, all of which featured the movable horizontal stabilizers first employed on the X-1 and D-558 series.
D-558-2 Dropped from B-29 Mothership - GPN-2000-000251.jpg
The D-558-2 #2 is launched from the P2B-1 in this 1956 NACA High-Speed Flight Station photograph.

The D-558 Phase Two aircraft was quite different from its Phase One predecessor, the Skystreak. German wartime aeronautical research records, reviewed in 1945 by Douglas Aircraft Company personnel, pointed to many advantages gained from incorporating sweptback wing design into future research aircraft. These findings along with wind tunnel studies performed by the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) at Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory, resulted in the modification of the straight wing D-558-1 Skystreak contract to include investigation of sweptback wings.

Three redesigned aircraft were built by Douglas Aircraft Company under a contract from the Navy Bureau of Aeronautics and named D-558-2 Skyrocket. Originally all three were designed for ground take-off and used mixed power propulsion systems, consisting of a turbojet engine for take-off and a rocket engine, for greater speed in flight.

The early flight tests were made using only the turbojet engine with the rocket engines added, when available. As the flight program evolved, only one D-558-2 ended-up powered by a mixed rocket and turbo-jet propulsion system.

From the experience gained during the X-1 rocket program and from Skyrocket mixed propulsion flights, the Navy and the NACA proceeded to have all three of the D-558-2 aircraft modified for air launching from a Navy-operated P2B-1 Superfortress (Navy version of the Air Force B-29), later becoming NACA 137.

Although not designated an "X vehicle," the D-558-2 was essentially an X-vehicle aircraft in design and function, and contributed much to aeronautics research.