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Wasp Major and Tornado(radial engine) Aircrafts: XF8B, XP-71, XP-69, XP-72

Started by ysi_maniac, July 11, 2008, 07:49:08 AM

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ysi_maniac

I love this big five-in-one beast. I would say it could do the same jobs the SkyRaider performed. The engine is just COOOOOOL :mellow:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_XF8B

SEA camo in vietnam era?
high visibility US NAVY scheme?
French or British in colonial wars? Suez Crisis?
:wub: :wub: :wub: :wub: :wub:

What do you think?

BTW: Valom manufactures its model, 1/72
Will die without understanding this world.

Brian da Basher



It's a beautiful aircraft. It would've been one of the hottest W.W. II U.S. fighters ever to grace a carrier's deck!

My vote is for a high-viz Navy scheme.

Brian da Basher

Doc Yo

 Give it the Yellow wings scheme it had mixing it up over the North Atlantic with Blackburn-Gotha FeuerBrands* in
'47.






* Assumes the Germans did a lot better in another First World War....

kitnut617

I have both offerings that Valom do, USAAF and USN versions (there's some subtle differences) and I have to say the kits are not bad.  USAAF one is NMF and the navy one dark sea blue
If I'm not building models, I'm out riding my dirtbike

sequoiaranger

...and used the tail off a B-17!!

Wow, that is a LARGE aircraft for a single-engined "fighter". Martin's Mauler and Douglas' Skyraider somehow beat out the Boeing project, and even the Mauler fell by the wayside.
My mind is like a compost heap: both "fertile" and "rotten"!

kitnut617

They're all about the same size sequoiaranger, IMHO I think the Boeing looks the best out of the bunch.  And it's got contra-props hmmmm!  :wub:  It was powered by the R-4360 4 row 28 cylinder engine though
If I'm not building models, I'm out riding my dirtbike

GTX

Ony last year, Schiffer  released a 376 pg book dedicated to this aircraft:



Regards,

Greg
All hail the God of Frustration!!!

jcf

Quote from: kitnut617 on July 11, 2008, 06:42:23 PM
They're all about the same size sequoiaranger, IMHO I think the Boeing looks the best out of the bunch.  And it's got contra-props hmmmm!  :wub:  It was powered by the R-4360 4 row 28 cylinder engine though
The Boeing F8B-1was larger than the AD-1(BT2D-1)and the AM-1(BTM-1).

The Martin AM-1 was also R-4360 powered, and contra-props were tested.

Jon

jcf

Quote from: sequoiaranger on July 11, 2008, 05:30:34 PM
...and used the tail off a B-17!!

Wow, that is a LARGE aircraft for a single-engined "fighter". Martin's Mauler and Douglas' Skyraider somehow beat out the Boeing project, and even the Mauler fell by the wayside.

The F8B wasn't in the BT (Bomber-Torpedo) competition that was won by the Douglas design.
The competitors were Douglas, Grumman, Curtiss, Martin and Kaiser-Fleetwings.

Jon

MAD

Quote from: Brian da Basher on July 11, 2008, 09:56:13 AM


It's a beautiful aircraft. It would've been one of the hottest W.W. II U.S. fighters ever to grace a carrier's deck!

My vote is for a high-viz Navy scheme.

Brian da Basher

It would have been very effective in the Korean War!!

M.A.D

kitnut617

Quote from: joncarrfarrelly on July 11, 2008, 10:11:52 PM

The F8B wasn't in the BT (Bomber-Torpedo) competition that was won by the Douglas design.
The competitors were Douglas, Grumman, Curtiss, Martin and Kaiser-Fleetwings.

Jon

I will have to find the Ginter book I bought when I got my two kits, I'm sure it starts of with reference to the competition with photos of all the competitors,  I think it said that Boeing didn't push it to hard as they were heavily involved with B-29 production by then. The F8B even had a bomb bay.
If I'm not building models, I'm out riding my dirtbike

famvburg


        I've got one on my 'to finish' shelf that's going to be done in SEA camo & be armed like a Skyraider. I have another to do in the 'nam era USN scheme as well. When I was a kid in the early '70s, Wings or Airpower mag did an article on the XF8B-1 & that's been one of my fav designs ever since.



Quote from: ysi_maniac on July 11, 2008, 07:49:08 AM
I love this big five-in-one beast. I would say it could do the same jobs the SkyRaider performed. The engine is just COOOOOOL :mellow:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_XF8B

SEA camo in vietnam era?
high visibility US NAVY scheme?
French or British in colonial wars? Suez Crisis?
:wub: :wub: :wub: :wub: :wub:

What do you think?

BTW: Valom manufactures its model, 1/72

jcf

Quote from: kitnut617 on July 12, 2008, 07:06:14 AM
Quote from: joncarrfarrelly on July 11, 2008, 10:11:52 PM

The F8B wasn't in the BT (Bomber-Torpedo) competition that was won by the Douglas design.
The competitors were Douglas, Grumman, Curtiss, Martin and Kaiser-Fleetwings.

Jon

I will have to find the Ginter book I bought when I got my two kits, I'm sure it starts of with reference to the competition with photos of all the competitors,  I think it said that Boeing didn't push it to hard as they were heavily involved with B-29 production by then. The F8B even had a bomb bay.

The F8B was in response to a requirement for a long-range fighter that could also carry a bomb-load, an Uber fighter-bomber(or bomber-fighter as called by some), sort of a Super-Corsair in terms of role. The contract was let in May of 1943, first flight was November 27, 1944.

The BT competition was for a new classification of aircraft, the Bomber Torpedo.
The prototype contracts were let as follows:
Curtiss XBTC-1 - December, 1943
Kaiser-Fleetwing  XBTK-1 - March, 1944
Martin XBTM-1 - May, 1944
During that period Douglas was directed to study modification of the XSB2D design for the same role, this became the BTD-1,
a design which was uncompetitive. In order to stay in the running the Douglas engineers went back to the drawing board and created the XBT2D which became famous as the AD-1.

Meanwhile at Curtiss reengining of the XBTC-1 with the R-4360 created the XBTC-2 and later the similar, but smaller and R-3350 engined XBT2C-1,
was ordered, this design actually flew before the XBTC.

While a contemporary of the new BT designs, the Boeing aircraft was not in direct competition... they were primarily bombers, it was primarily a fighter.
With a top speed of 432mph the big Boeing was also considerably faster than the others.

Jon

Jschmus

I wonder what might've happened if Boeing had stayed in the fighter business, rather than focusing on bombers and other large aircraft.
"Life isn't divided into genres. It's a horrifying, romantic, tragic, comical, science-fiction cowboy detective novel. You know, with a bit of pornography if you're lucky."-Alan Moore

ysi_maniac

I have changed the title to widen its scope:

What about this other Wasp Major Beast ? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curtiss_XP-71
Will die without understanding this world.