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Dassault Super Mirage G8A

Started by GTX, April 01, 2006, 01:33:40 PM

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pometablava

More info about Aviation Magazine International.

First of all, there was a mistake. Number 510 is for the Nord advanced projects. I'm sorry

:o


The Mirage Mach 3 is on Number 516. 15 Juin 1969. pg 76. Nouveautés Le Bourget 1969

The original text is:

"Dans le cadre des recherches sur un avion "Mach 3" français, la firme Avions Marcel Dassault a établi, parmi d'autres projets, ce dessin d'un appareil biréacteur M-53, delta à geometrie fixe. Sera-t-il construit?..."

The answer is "no" :(

As you can see there is no references at all. No Mega-Mirage, no Mirage 6000. I knew about this references at this forum, for the first time. I remember Evan talking about it.
The AMD Mach 3 fighter drawing was posted by Tony Buttler at Air Enthusiast some years ago.

According to the text I also understand that this was not the only Mach 3 fighter study. It would be phantastic to learn more...somebody has to know about it. In June 1969 I was 6 months old, so engineers involved in that projects are in the same age range of my daddy and my daddy is alive. Why is so difficult to get info about unbuilt aerospace projects? :(


Tophe, if you want scan from Aviation Magazine just send me an email

Regards,

Antonio
Manzana in corpore sano

Archibald

Hello!! Well I'm not Tophe as you can see, but I'm interested in the N°516 you mentionned... If you can send me the scan :) ...
King Arthur: Can we come up and have a look?
French Soldier: Of course not. You're English types.
King Arthur: What are you then?
French Soldier: I'm French. Why do you think I have this outrageous accent, you silly king?

Well regardless I would rather take my chance out there on the ocean, that to stay here and die on this poo-hole island spending the rest of my life talking to a gosh darn VOLLEYBALL.

elmayerle

Come to think of it, if you could scan and email both the Nord Advanced Projects and the Mirage Mach 3 articles, I'd appreciate it.

Thanks,
Evan
"Reality is the leading cause of stress amongst those in touch with it."
--Jane Wagner and Lily Tomlin

Tophe

#48
Question to the Mirage experts and our favourite engineer: why haven't there been a double-delta wing on the last Mirages? The Mirage 2000 was mainly using the Mirage III delta recipe (much improved with fly-by-wire) but the General Dynamics team considered such a simple delta was not as good as the Draken's double delta for a modern fighter, so there must be reasons... Why Dassault team did not reach the same conclusion (before 1997? see above)? Who was right? (if the requirements were the same – I understand a maximum range could lead to a bigger wing, thus delta+ into double delta)...
( See my Mirage 2000XL & XL² at http://www.whatifmodelers.com/forum//index...40&#entry146072 )
[the word "realistic" hurts my heart...]

Archibald

Apparently the three "eurocanards" (just love this word! Much shorter to say than Rafale-typhoon-grippen) started with a cranked delta (first studies of the Typhoon between 1978 and 1987 had double delta if I remember well). Why they dropped it later is amystery for me, too...  
King Arthur: Can we come up and have a look?
French Soldier: Of course not. You're English types.
King Arthur: What are you then?
French Soldier: I'm French. Why do you think I have this outrageous accent, you silly king?

Well regardless I would rather take my chance out there on the ocean, that to stay here and die on this poo-hole island spending the rest of my life talking to a gosh darn VOLLEYBALL.

elmayerle

*shrug* I've no idea why Dassault hasn't used a double-delta wing on any flying aircraft.  There may be a good technical reason or it could be any number of more emotional ones ("That's identified with one of our competitors" or the simple NIH (Not Invented Here) syndrome for two examples).
"Reality is the leading cause of stress amongst those in touch with it."
--Jane Wagner and Lily Tomlin

Archibald

MArcel Dassault was saying that "si un avion est beau, il volera bien " (= If aplane look fine, it would fly well). this was not pure rethoric... The fin of the first Mirage IV and Mirage 2000 looked bad. Dassault forced its design bureau to change its shape, just because he had decided that the fin was ugly!!!
Thats why I agree with you when you say
Quoteof more emotional ones
Maybe it was because of the Draken, harsh competitor to the Mirage III at the beginning of the 60's ;)
In brief : cranked was ugly, and use by a competitor. that's probably why Dassault never used it  :wacko:  :blink:
King Arthur: Can we come up and have a look?
French Soldier: Of course not. You're English types.
King Arthur: What are you then?
French Soldier: I'm French. Why do you think I have this outrageous accent, you silly king?

Well regardless I would rather take my chance out there on the ocean, that to stay here and die on this poo-hole island spending the rest of my life talking to a gosh darn VOLLEYBALL.

GTX

Yes,

I've heard that saying too - I wonder how he would explain this creation then from the early '30s (when is name was still Marcel Bloch)?



Regards,

Greg
All hail the God of Frustration!!!

elmayerle

Going by its competition in France, I'm almost tempted to suggest that it was to a requirement set down by the government.    Besides, it has that "government-designed" look to it. ;)
"Reality is the leading cause of stress amongst those in touch with it."
--Jane Wagner and Lily Tomlin

Archibald

QuoteYes,

I've heard that saying too - I wonder how he would explain this creation then from the early '30s (when is name was still Marcel Bloch)?



Regards,

Greg
^_^  That's a good argument.
Many french planes of the 30's have turrets everywhere.
If you like ultra-ugly french planes of the 30's (well, at the time, they were ALL ugly :P ) just look at the thread "cold war in the 30's" in alternative history. I'm digging a website named "Aviafrance". At the beginning, it was just for the fun (and because i know that Radish love the old planes fulls of turrets and spats). But now, I'm really searching the ugliest plane in the database :P
sometimes you just ask "how the hell could fly these things??!!!!  
King Arthur: Can we come up and have a look?
French Soldier: Of course not. You're English types.
King Arthur: What are you then?
French Soldier: I'm French. Why do you think I have this outrageous accent, you silly king?

Well regardless I would rather take my chance out there on the ocean, that to stay here and die on this poo-hole island spending the rest of my life talking to a gosh darn VOLLEYBALL.

NARSES2

#55
Quote from: Archibald,Jun 11 2006, 06:12 AM
Quote from: GTX,Jun 10 2006, 07:55 PMYes,



sometimes you just ask "how the hell could fly these things??!!!!
Brave men - same as those who expected to fly Heyford's to Berlin in 1938
Do not condemn the judgement of another because it differs from your own. You may both be wrong.

Archibald

Or the poor men who bomb panzer divisions at 180km/h with Amiot 143 in may 1940...  :unsure:  
King Arthur: Can we come up and have a look?
French Soldier: Of course not. You're English types.
King Arthur: What are you then?
French Soldier: I'm French. Why do you think I have this outrageous accent, you silly king?

Well regardless I would rather take my chance out there on the ocean, that to stay here and die on this poo-hole island spending the rest of my life talking to a gosh darn VOLLEYBALL.

GTX

What if the RAAF decided to pass on the F-111 and went with the Mirage G instead and then also went with Mirage F.1s as a Mirage III replacement?



regards,

Greg
All hail the God of Frustration!!!

rickshaw

Quote from: GTX on April 07, 2010, 12:46:12 AM
What if the RAAF decided to pass on the F-111 and went with the Mirage G instead and then also went with Mirage F.1s as a Mirage III replacement?

Timeline would be wrong.   Decision on the F-111 had been taken before the Mirage G had its first flight IIRC.
How to reduce carbon emissions - Tip #1 - Walk to the Bar for drinks.

Mossie

The F-111 didn't enter Australian service until ten years after it was ordered.  If the Mirage G development had been ordered by the French government, it would probably have been available in a similar time frame.  It wouldn't be too unusual for a customer to pull out & wait longer for an aircraft that it felt better suited it's needs, the UK did exactly that when they cancelled orders for F-111 to develop the MRCA/Tornado.
I don't think it's nice, you laughin'. You see, my mule don't like people laughin'. He gets the crazy idea you're laughin' at him. Now if you apologize, like I know you're going to, I might convince him that you really didn't mean it.