The plane with a propeller in the middle... Martin 262 Convoy Fighter!

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  • Опубликовано: 14 дек 2022
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    World War 2 had revealed a flaw for the US Navy.
    Their convoy ships that resupplied fleets, armies, and bases across the world were vulnerable to enemy air attacks and required excessive protection from warships to ensure cargo reached their destinations. Difficult to do and an effective way for the enemy to tie up resources.
    The navy, still traumatized from the war with the nazis, feared that the soviets would play copycat and go after the lucrative cargo ships in the atlantic - if the cold war turned hot.
    So the answer would be a new type of plane - one that had the power of a normal fighter interceptor but didn't require a carrier to launch or land...
    A plane that could take off vertical - or VTOL from its tail!
    In 1949, the US Navy Bureau of Aeronautics began a competition to develop this new convey fighter that had the specific ability to be launched from smaller vessles and would protect them until carrier forces could arrive.
    This plane would have a new class, called the VF, standing for Convoy Fighter, and have several conditions.
    The first, obviously, was the ability to take off from the deck of a convey ship
    The second was the ability to fly close to sonic speeds at 45,000 feet. A pretty mean feat considering it had to go sea level to 45k in 5 minutes.
    Carry a single pilot with an ejectable pressurised cockpit
    Perform a combat role for at least 100 minutes to a range of 100 nautical miles
    And land to be rearmed and refueled.
    To get the best possible design they recruited five different aircraft contractors.
    The first, and the hero of our story was Gleen Martin company of Baltimore. In addition, there was also Lockheed, Northrop, Convair and Goodyear. Each with their own designs and concepts - one of which, the Convair pogo, we have already covered on the channel.
    So what was Martins design for the competition?

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @u0aol1
    @u0aol1 Год назад +2114

    i like plane

  • @annihilation777
    @annihilation777 Год назад +126

    It's an oddball but it just looks so damn cool. This is what a kid would draw in a notebook.

    • @amanhasfallenintotheriver4660
      @amanhasfallenintotheriver4660 Год назад +5

      The Germans made something like this first. Look up the Heinkel Wespe.

    • @TheMajkla
      @TheMajkla Год назад +2

      There's also Piaggio P.180 Avanti which looks like its engines were fitted wrong way around:) but it flies well.

    • @amg-ge5bn
      @amg-ge5bn 10 дней назад +1

      and the coleoptor

  • @scottgarriott3884
    @scottgarriott3884 Год назад +500

    So cool how wildly innovative engineers have been! Never heard of this particular craft!

    • @ronarmstrong835
      @ronarmstrong835 Год назад +16

      Look up the Heinkel Wespe.

    • @Snake-ms7sj
      @Snake-ms7sj Год назад +4

      Convair also had a VTO plane called the XFY Pogo. Quite a few VTO plane prototypes were made by several companies before the concept was deemed unpractical.

    • @kanaric
      @kanaric Год назад +7

      probably good reason why you haven't lol

    • @msumungo
      @msumungo Год назад +2

      Linus Torvalds once said: "Technology is never a problem. People are always a problem". And what he meant by this was that human creativity prevails even when the application is completely misunderstood.

    • @byloyuripka9624
      @byloyuripka9624 Год назад +2

      yeah its fictional so no $#¡T you havent heard of it...

  • @thatotherguy7596
    @thatotherguy7596 Год назад +94

    I think that Martin had a better grasp of the situation or at least, as you said, a more honest presentation.

    • @hillbilly4895
      @hillbilly4895 Год назад

      Yeah, the Navy doesn't care if you go bust trying to fulfill their fantasies.

  • @jtwilliams8895
    @jtwilliams8895 Год назад +186

    This idea was insane. Just think how long it took to get the Osprey operational, from the 1980s to the 2000s!

    • @TenShine1productions
      @TenShine1productions Год назад +15

      You think as well. By the time these sort of planes would have started mass production
      Helicopters would have been entering the scene and just swept them away.
      Same with the harriers

    • @christianlgolden
      @christianlgolden Год назад +1

      They did not care about safety as much; it would have been in the air in less than three years.

    • @robertheinkel6225
      @robertheinkel6225 Год назад +4

      Plus add in no computer controls.

    • @mirandela777
      @mirandela777 Год назад

      @@TenShine1productions - dude, helicopters were "in scene" before this crap, made by drug abuse sick engineers, received funding !

    • @mikeholland1031
      @mikeholland1031 Год назад

      Canada had one in the 60's

  • @nightlurker
    @nightlurker Год назад +93

    Very like the German design VTOL aircraft of 1945. To me, the incredible part of this is the way Martin designed a take-off and landing system that could be retro fitted to most cargo ships, to handle a VTOL aircraft, it is amazing! It's a pity it was already outdated, as convoys were a thing of the mid-twentieth century.

    • @daleanderson7794
      @daleanderson7794 Год назад +6

      With its swept back wings and it’s duel counter-rotating propellers, it may have out performed the fighters of the time.

  • @ColdWarAviator
    @ColdWarAviator Год назад +261

    8:50 nice footage of the Marine version of the Cobra attack Helicopter! I was a Cobra crewchief in the army from 1984 to 1993. The Marine Cobra has two turbine engines (redundancy in case of engine failure out at sea) there are plenty of newer Attack helicopters now but I still think the bill ah-1 series were the best attack helicopters ever to come off the production line. They're simple, reliable, and they don't cost here as much as all of these fly by wire aircraft.

    • @fakshen1973
      @fakshen1973 Год назад +13

      There's nothing wrong with cost-effective when you're trying to deal with guys in sandals riding around in Toyotas.

    • @redsun9261
      @redsun9261 Год назад

      ​@@fakshen1973 You're wrong. You can play your high-tech toys untill the real war comes. And then you will need just about anything that can fly, shoot missiles and pop flares. State of the art tech is allmoust impossible to maintain and replace in all-out war.

    • @ColdWarAviator
      @ColdWarAviator Год назад +6

      @Karl with a K yeah I spent many a year going to field training exercises and watching the cobras light stuff up. I ended up my 9 years in the Army at Fort Eustis after I got back from korea. I got a slot as an instructor in the power train and rotor section and put my experience to good use training the next generation of mechanics and crew chiefs. I do miss being out on the flight line though.

    • @ColdWarAviator
      @ColdWarAviator Год назад +3

      @Karl with a K yeah recruiters have master's degrees in bending the truth. I know that when I went in they made a point of saying that the Army was the only branch of service that you could become a pilot without a college degree which is true, however I never got around to going to Warrant officer candidate school and all that stuff. I got out in 92 or 93 right after desert Storm. They had done away with all the separation bonuses so I was trying to figure out a way to make the separation a little bit more productive. I had landed the position of training NCO for the unit and one thing that I found out during that time. Was that if you exceeded the body fat percentage twice in one year that you would be given an honorable discharge and that since you were forced out they would give you a $3,000 separation bonus. LOL needless to say I was the first one to get that out of our unit as far as I know. LOL

    • @kdrapertrucker
      @kdrapertrucker Год назад +4

      Once had a sea cobra fly alongside my semi truck and track me with the gun turret as I was approaching a beach the Marines were conducting a landing exercise on. Pretty dang cool even if I was "killed"

  • @the3rdid485
    @the3rdid485 Год назад +50

    Smart of them to properly think about landing under real world conditions.

  • @michaelfrench3396
    @michaelfrench3396 Год назад +100

    Jared A. Zichek has a Google book all about this plane as well as the whole program that it was developed from. So if you like this video, and how could you not, give it a read. Another amazing job! You're setting the bar a little higher with each video👍👍

  • @timothygooding9544
    @timothygooding9544 Год назад +93

    that landing system alone is nuts, seems way more compact than even a normal helipad.
    Im not an expert with vtol stuff but what I've learned from simulations is that controlling your direction is FAR easier than trying to hover in a single location
    *also Im now imagining a game where you have like an airship or something and that system is used for parasite fighters or something*

    • @alltat
      @alltat Год назад +6

      On an airship you'd get the added benefit of being able to launch the planes by simply dropping them off the ramp.

    • @joshpullman1690
      @joshpullman1690 Год назад +4

      I think I just launched a few parasitic fighters in my pants at this idea 😂

    • @kevindevine5033
      @kevindevine5033 Год назад +1

      It was all nuts

    • @aforairplane
      @aforairplane Год назад +1

      👈👈😘😘✈️✈️✈️
      I make aircraft video's

    • @bobkoroua
      @bobkoroua Год назад

      Imagine a high sea ?

  • @Aaron007
    @Aaron007 Год назад +52

    Always love these videos! So cool to learn about these planes I sometimes haven’t even heard of

  • @TheRedshirt93
    @TheRedshirt93 Год назад +22

    Great video! I love the CG visualizations you do for all these "theoretical" aircraft. I would love to see you cover the other aircraft from this competition, as they all seem unique and creative!

  • @patrickstewart3446
    @patrickstewart3446 Год назад +36

    Wow! It’s like a Triebflügel but, you know, not as insane.
    😁

    • @marioacevedo5077
      @marioacevedo5077 Год назад +2

      Ironic that the Triebflügel was never mentioned.

    • @marcelusch
      @marcelusch Год назад +3

      It's more like a Heinkel He-L-IIIB-2 Lerche

  • @g3heathen209
    @g3heathen209 Год назад +8

    that tall plane with that narrow tail as a base would just fall over in any kind of sea on a ship.

  • @jgt2598
    @jgt2598 Год назад +7

    This reminds me in many ways of the concept of using the Empire State building as an airship dock or having smart highways where stationary human traffic controllers remote pilot groups of cars (that concept was from the 60s I believe). 20th century engineers had a habit of forgetting to consider the practicalities of having humans actually operate the designed systems in real-world scenarios.
    Kudos to Martin Co's engineers for realizing that pilots would have a lot of trouble trying to land on the deck of a swaying ship but that *manually* position-corrected platform concept was just wild! I mean, we could probably design something like this today with high-precision position sensors, wind compensation, and guidance algorithms running on a GHz processor doing trillions of calculations per second, but even that would be challenging. Doing that *manually* would have likely made this system one of the deadliest aircraft to land in military aviation history.

    • @D-B-Cooper
      @D-B-Cooper Год назад +1

      Empire State Building as an airship dock was not just a concept.

    • @georgejohnson7591
      @georgejohnson7591 Год назад +1

      The Harrier was all manual control remember.

  • @ecoideazventures6417
    @ecoideazventures6417 Год назад +1

    I dont know what is more mindblowing - this weird plane concept or the impeccable animation in this video?

  • @NekoNinja13
    @NekoNinja13 Год назад +6

    Honestly that whole landing procedure and mechanism was kind of beautiful. There's something very considerate about that makes me happy

    • @CountingStars333
      @CountingStars333 Год назад

      pilots with 60% death rate on landing is beautiful yes

  • @solar_bionic115
    @solar_bionic115 Год назад +13

    I can just see these things knocking each other over like domino's on the carrier deck

    • @nenuu91iscool
      @nenuu91iscool Год назад

      that would be hilarious

    • @amentco8445
      @amentco8445 Год назад

      funny but they would be mounted down in the best thought through part of the design, the moving landing platform.

  • @scootergeorge7089
    @scootergeorge7089 Год назад +1

    1:48 In Navy squadron speak, VF stands for "fixed wing, heavier than air, fighter aircraft."

  • @edsutherland8266
    @edsutherland8266 Год назад +4

    It was certainly a clever idea in theory. The huge problem with such projects is always the landing, the takeoff was the easy bit. Unfortunately, stopping a plane safely, then landing, is damn hard. The Harrier was really the only one that truly got all the ducks in a row during that era (the Soviet Yaks worked, but barely).

  • @alanrogers7090
    @alanrogers7090 Год назад +7

    There is a model kit company named "Fantastic Plastic". The Have models of the Martin A Variant as well as the Goodyear and Northrop versions. So, yeah, a series on all three would be appreciated.

  • @gredennight
    @gredennight Год назад +6

    1:29 i can feel fear in those poor F-18s

  • @EmperorDank
    @EmperorDank Год назад +2

    Would love to see the others in the competition, wacky planes are always fascinating!

  • @eucliduschaumeau8813
    @eucliduschaumeau8813 Год назад +4

    More videos about VTOL, STOL and other vertical or short takeoff and landing planes would always be a good thing. It is interesting that in the end, the short runway ended up being the best idea, even after ducted jet propulsion was a common thing. The intermediate technology is the hardest, but it creates wild innovation.

  • @kutkuknight
    @kutkuknight Год назад +5

    Damn that’s a cool design and so many interesting ways to solve all the issues that came up!

  • @terryjacob8169
    @terryjacob8169 Год назад +5

    I'v seen this concept in some artist's impressions of a few last ditch WW2, drawing board, Luftwaffe projects. Obviously drawings and data made it to America and US manufacturers, such as Martin, after Germany's defeat in 1945.

    • @rawhidelamp
      @rawhidelamp 10 месяцев назад

      You saw the Focke-Wulfe, Treibflugel, and its not very similar given that the engines on the nazi plane are wing mounted

  • @lampy5490
    @lampy5490 Год назад +4

    Bloody lethal to the pilot and home ship, never mind the enemy! Also; nice French Navy Corsairs on the US carrier! 😀

  • @Zoydian
    @Zoydian Год назад +4

    Love this airplane, and the way you brought it 'back to life' is totally awesome!!

  • @BiggisDickis
    @BiggisDickis Год назад +29

    Always knocking it out of the park with these animations

  • @cortofredudu
    @cortofredudu Год назад +3

    Really nice video. I didn't knew US had also tried a vertical take off plane.
    I only knew about the French Coleoptere plane

  • @TollHammer
    @TollHammer Год назад +1

    Awesome,earned a sub. Love to see the Northrop and Goodyear designs.

  • @WildBillCox13
    @WildBillCox13 Год назад +1

    Supersonic propellers was the problem with the XF84H "Thunderscreech". Turns out that prop tips moving above Mach 1 create both ear damaging levels of sound and nauseating infrasonic resonance with both deck and airframe. Really bad for ground crews and pilots.

  • @randybentley2633
    @randybentley2633 Год назад +4

    My aviation-loving heart, just aches, that this mechanical marvel never soared the skies above...

    • @skunkjobb
      @skunkjobb Год назад +2

      My aviation-loving heart is happy it never did. It would only have led to the death of many pilots and a few damaged ships too. It was simply put a bad idea.

    • @MrElis420
      @MrElis420 Год назад

      @@skunkjobb It's funny reading ccomments like that, like no, this thing was a piece of shit from the start I'm glad it's not flying.

  • @apieceofbread9022
    @apieceofbread9022 Год назад +6

    This could be way more useful in drone tech. The landing difficulty would totally be eliminated and they can downsize/upscale the project.

  • @AircraftEnthusiast_7900
    @AircraftEnthusiast_7900 Год назад

    This has become my favorite video and designed aircraft.
    Thank you very much for making this.

  • @SendChris
    @SendChris Год назад

    Wow, this is some great content. Kudos Neil!

  • @michaelwills1926
    @michaelwills1926 Год назад +3

    The post war years were amazing times for some incredible engineering.

  • @normoloid
    @normoloid Год назад +5

    Another interesting model that would be awesome to see built with modern tech, I bet it would be just as the original designers dreamed of.

    • @limbeboy7
      @limbeboy7 Год назад

      Yea with drone tech shouldn't be too hard. Only problem is with powerful engines comes vibrations. Which can shake the whole plane at unexpected times

    • @dogeness
      @dogeness Год назад

      A turboprop VTOL fighter today would be hopelessly obsolete. And jet-powered ones already exist - harriers and f-35b

    • @normoloid
      @normoloid Год назад

      @@dogeness Sure, but it still would be pretty cool project and who knows, maybe just fine for light attack role, in the end it is a significant advantage always if the aircraft doesn't need a long strip.

    • @Justanotherconsumer
      @Justanotherconsumer Год назад

      @@dogeness roles like the MQ-8B’s could be done well by a more plane-like prop drone.

    • @aforairplane
      @aforairplane Год назад

      👈👈😘😘✈️✈️✈️
      I make aircraft video's

  • @carlhardiman8102
    @carlhardiman8102 Год назад +1

    Enjoyed this segment, always all of the content 👍, yes, bring the other concepts.

  • @pontuswendt2486
    @pontuswendt2486 Год назад +1

    AMAZINGNES!!! And yes, please do the other aircrafts!

  • @dirckthedork-knight1201
    @dirckthedork-knight1201 Год назад +3

    That landing system was genious

  • @Gift0r
    @Gift0r Год назад +3

    Even if this would have been developed further, the supersonic propeller might have been it's undoing. The one other plane that tried this, the Republic XF-84H, worked overall, however the ungodly noise of the propeller made the ground crews physically sick. On a ship, where you cannot hide from that noise, it probably would have been unfeasible.

    • @davidyoung8521
      @davidyoung8521 Год назад +1

      Counter rotating props are very loud. This is a really cool design. Maintaining something like this on a carrier would be difficult. Too tall for the hanger deck?

    • @fork2309
      @fork2309 Месяц назад

      To say it made the ground crew sick is an understatement. The noise straight up gave a dude a seizure.

  • @brianniegemann4788
    @brianniegemann4788 Год назад +2

    I thought this plane only existed in Captain America movies. Edit: the landing capture system is very clever! Just hover while the ship grabs you.

  • @alanhoff2762
    @alanhoff2762 Год назад +1

    Enjoyed your coverage and I am a aviation nut too. I have never seen or heard of the aircraft shown here. The Navy Tigershark was a great aircraft that just got lost in the end of horrible war. I never heard if the Tigershark ever entered service.

  • @petewinter7759
    @petewinter7759 Год назад +4

    I think that in practice this thing would have worked about as well as a handbrake on a canoe !

  • @wombatairlines
    @wombatairlines Год назад +5

    I wonder what the diameter of those props should’ve been, taking that it was supposed to take off and land without the wings generating lift. And the second interesting question is the length of the gear to accommodate for those middle fuselage props that you can’t tilt upwards after you put the plane to rest horizontally. Crazy design 😁

    • @mirandela777
      @mirandela777 Год назад

      Crazy is not enough, add stupid and idiotic. And yeah, the propellers diameter must have been several meters - just look at a chopper rotor.... really stupid idea... extremely stupid.

    • @5naxalotl
      @5naxalotl Год назад

      yes they seem to be built for speed not static thrust

  • @foadazari66
    @foadazari66 Год назад

    Thank you so much for this video. I really enjoyed watching it.

  • @nerdwatch1017
    @nerdwatch1017 Год назад +1

    I could see a smaller version of this design as drones today!! Maybe. Man 10 small drones of these able to do swarm like maneuvering. With large guns on them!! DAMN!!!!

  • @ashtonlipscomb1295
    @ashtonlipscomb1295 Год назад +6

    the propellers would shred a person when trying to eject from this plane

    • @diltzm
      @diltzm Год назад +4

      Prototype B = pilot blender

  • @paoloviti6156
    @paoloviti6156 Год назад +6

    What an interesting airplane and particularly of an airplane I never heard about, and it is funny because I'm quite a aviation buff! That said, it is curious that Martin 262 Convoy Fighter used the same number of the Messerschmitt 262A! Interesting but honestly I believe it would be very difficult to developed properly possibly around the turboprop, an issue that engines manufacturers had big problems to contend with between the forties early 1950. Cool and really a good job 👍👍👍

    • @christopherneufelt8971
      @christopherneufelt8971 Год назад +1

      Hi Paolo. I don't find it curious since the serialization of new technology always get some common numbers. Saying that, there is however an issue of the Great Patent Heist, where the propeller transmission of that aircraft was a German patent that was literally stolen (notice that even in a war, some legislation still holds, in order to avoid ugly (I mean UGLY) situations), I think from the vertical take-off equivalent aircraft or from a future variant of Messerschmitt F109 (?). Take care.

    • @totalnerd5674
      @totalnerd5674 Год назад +1

      I noticed that too! Interesting...

    • @paoloviti6156
      @paoloviti6156 Год назад

      @@christopherneufelt8971 thanks for replying! Yes, it was indeed a coincidence regarding the sterilisation of common numbers. In this Franz Anselm that managed to design the Jumo 004B and put in production, he soon managed to immigrate to USA and hired to set up a new turbine division for Lycoming. He concentrated on producing engines for helicopters His first design, the T53,[1] would go on to be one of the most popular turboshaft engines in history, powering many helicopters. In the 1960s he finally led the development of a new design for tank use, which developed into the AGT-1500, used on the M1 Abrams. One hell of an Austrian! 👋👋

    • @christopherneufelt8971
      @christopherneufelt8971 Год назад +1

      @@paoloviti6156 Hi Paolo. These people were the last generation of innovators. Since that time we have few or not at all innovation in critical markets. I know that from my own profession, engineer. A friend of mine that worked in aerospace industry back in the 70s told me that besides the Germans being innovators, they were asked frequently to help with engineering mathematics and analytical geometry, since many aspects of their designs were impossible to comprehend analytically.
      Have a great weekend!

    • @paoloviti6156
      @paoloviti6156 Год назад +1

      @@christopherneufelt8971 hello Christopher, very true that those guys like Franz Anselm were truly the last generation of innovators and yes it is very true that they were very often asked to help with very complicated, mathematical and other important issues. They were highly brilliant and educated people. Now they are only doing it by "the book" scared by responsibilities therefore they are not great innovators. A case in the point was the development of the engines of the
      Concorde the Olympus 593 Mk 610 that ran into serious problems, I don't remember exactly what, but Rolls-Royce did a very good thing: they recalled their best engineers that retired, because of their age, of course if they were still capable, to help them. Thanks to those wonderful old men they virtually saved both the Concorde and Rolls-Royce. Guys that UK should always be proud of. I wish you to a happy weekend and more importantly a merry Xmas with your family ☃️

  • @9999AWC
    @9999AWC Год назад +1

    Drew a plane with similar fuselage props on it a few years ago. Had no idea the US explored such an idea, though my design wasn't meant to be VTOL.

  • @svartmetall
    @svartmetall Год назад +1

    The prop-in-the-middle part was actually from a Focke-Wulf paper project from late in the war, though IIRC that wasn't a tailsitter. Like a lot of such German designs, it ended up being built by the US after the war.

  • @Happy_Fun_Ball
    @Happy_Fun_Ball Год назад +7

    I’d love to see you and Mustard do a video together

  • @robert506007
    @robert506007 Год назад +5

    Damn how many of these tail sitters did they have.

  • @davidk6264
    @davidk6264 Год назад +2

    these old ideas are perfect for the drone age.

  • @clevelandexplorer2221
    @clevelandexplorer2221 Год назад

    Yes please, to see about the other competitors :) cool video, thanks for sharing

  • @evilrooster9960
    @evilrooster9960 Год назад +4

    So you could say it was the Martin Experimental 262.... or ME-262 Lol

  • @RepJock88
    @RepJock88 Год назад +5

    Would you like more plane to go with your propeller?

  • @TeenWithACarrotIDK
    @TeenWithACarrotIDK Год назад +1

    I had an idea for a plane like this before. This plane is super cool.

  • @patmancrowley8509
    @patmancrowley8509 Год назад

    Yes, please. I'd love to see these prototypes flying. Thanks.

  • @ericbrammer2245
    @ericbrammer2245 Год назад +1

    The Ryan 'Verti-Plane' VTOL Jet Delta-wing used a Variant (if not 'Copy-of') Martin's sea-borne 'plane catcher', in their XV-14, a few years later.

  • @sgfx
    @sgfx Год назад

    Today's technology is a marvel! It is truly remarkable that this aircraft, this strange bird, has been brought to life in such a way that it can now soar through the skies. It is a dedication to the ingenuity and hard work of those who, so many years ago, designed this and present it to the committee with such clever solutions..

  • @davidmok108
    @davidmok108 Год назад

    The absolute eye catching 3D modeling!!!

  • @curbowman
    @curbowman Год назад

    WOW! If this aircraft was a wild project, I can't wait to know more about the other competitors.

  • @cesaravegah3787
    @cesaravegah3787 Год назад

    Propellers tips moving at supersonic speeds would be a major problem, the shock wave would create all kind of trouble, helicopter designers are very aware of it.

  • @petenoseworthy2939
    @petenoseworthy2939 Год назад

    It would be nice to see them all once a competition so interesting

  • @sebastianucero7535
    @sebastianucero7535 Год назад +2

    And that's why onboard helicopters are useful.
    Thank you for another great video.

  • @constantinosschinas4503
    @constantinosschinas4503 Год назад +1

    Was waiting till the end for some explaination of how this thing would keep balance while hovering.

  • @archvilethe87th60
    @archvilethe87th60 Год назад +1

    This kind of VTOL propulsion seems like it'd be very handy for a modern UAV of some kind.

  • @Chimpunk729
    @Chimpunk729 Год назад +2

    Never seen this before. Always thought the most bizzare carrier plane was the gutlass cutlass until i see this 😅

  • @Gripen39C
    @Gripen39C Год назад

    A very fascinating design and given today's r/c build capabilities, we could actually build a scaled version to test what it would have been like along with the other competitors. it would be fantastic to see (albeit in scaled version) what the performance would have been like.

  • @leifkhas7425
    @leifkhas7425 Год назад +1

    This looks like a good idea for a drone fighter

  • @ericrotsinger9729
    @ericrotsinger9729 Год назад

    It's crazy ideas like this that gave way to crazy ideas that worked.

  • @nDjinn1
    @nDjinn1 14 дней назад

    When you said "they assumed some of the worst conditions known to man" I knew you were going to have a clip of the Royal Navy in the North Sea

  • @rudigod
    @rudigod Год назад

    Wary interesting design . I strongly believe it will find its plaice on future drone carrier concepts .

  • @digarian007
    @digarian007 Год назад +1

    Yes, please cover the Northrop proposal, if you are provided and/or find enough data. Keep up the EXCELLENT work!!

  • @majmac1968
    @majmac1968 Год назад

    Would definitely like to see the other aircraft in the competition having enjoyed your logo video already.

  • @KRW628
    @KRW628 Год назад

    FASCINATING!! Thank you.

  • @sanketsenapati350
    @sanketsenapati350 9 дней назад

    Just a video ago I was pondering what if I attach contro props on an aircraft like this. And this video popped up as suggesting.

  • @byrondot
    @byrondot Год назад

    If the B model was produced, possibly pilots avoid to fly on it, because the propollers right behind the cockpit. If you eject on that layout, immediately you became sliced meat. Nice video!

  • @randomdeadpool
    @randomdeadpool Год назад

    This reminds me a lot to the german Heinkel "Wespe" and "Lerche" concepts of WW2

  • @jkleylein
    @jkleylein Год назад +1

    I was more intrigued by the centrally mounted propeller. That would be a challenge to pull off. I suppose it's not much different in concept than counter-rotating props on a wing mounted engine, though.

  • @colewalters5336
    @colewalters5336 Год назад

    Yes please cover the other aircraft in this competition.

  • @Tclans
    @Tclans Год назад +1

    Cover the others too please.
    Thisbe wildly interesting.

  • @_Makanko_
    @_Makanko_ Год назад

    Great stuff!

  • @Name-ot3xw
    @Name-ot3xw Год назад

    Love the air stairs required for that thing

  • @RR-us2kp
    @RR-us2kp Год назад

    Yes I want to see the other aircraft of this competition

  • @MatchingUser
    @MatchingUser Год назад +2

    Truly one of the planes of all time

  • @dhollongstreet4725
    @dhollongstreet4725 Год назад

    I seem to remember that plane on the cover of a popular mech mag once.

  • @danelias8658
    @danelias8658 Год назад

    Please cover the other aircraft in the competition: fascinating to learn what the engineers thought up

  • @jasonn9086
    @jasonn9086 Год назад +1

    Definitely want to see more.

  • @WolfeSaber9933
    @WolfeSaber9933 Год назад

    8:15 Interesting how they are going with the old tin can Victory ship line as a concept.

  • @abistonservices9249
    @abistonservices9249 Год назад +1

    At first thought, i thought this impossible, that's why i watched, but then realised with proper gearing on a toothed ring it could be done, not sure how fast the blades could turn though!

  • @edwardfletcher7790
    @edwardfletcher7790 Год назад +2

    I don't see how this plane would protect the ships from the biggest threat, U-Boats....

  • @agrobison3386
    @agrobison3386 Год назад +1

    Hydra is not going to be pleased that someone stole their design.

  • @jeffpiatt3879
    @jeffpiatt3879 Год назад

    Really cool! Someone needs to build a functioning radio control model of this!

  • @markfrost8745
    @markfrost8745 Год назад

    The VF must have been an internal Martin designation, as calling the plane VF-whatever would have created confusion. VF is a fighter squadron designation, VA is an attack squadron designation and VAW (E-2) is the early warning squadron designation, etc. V stands for fixed wing, F stands for fighter, A for attack and AW stands for airborne warning.

  • @davingilsdorf213
    @davingilsdorf213 Год назад

    I built that (in basic form) in trailmakers 1 ago and thought it was just something I hade come up with and closely resembled the German vtol jet thing but I geus I was wrong.

  • @commander31able60
    @commander31able60 Год назад

    in retrospect, the fact that enough people thought this would work that it received a designation is insane.

  • @VangelisKontogeorgakos
    @VangelisKontogeorgakos Год назад

    Martin 262 would operate from French vessels, that would carry Corsairs too? Joking aside, the Corsair was such a beast of an aircraft!