How would that ever be a good choice?
I have a wild wild theory about that. In the future with laser weapons, even when enemy plane is not in hard kill range pilots will try to use their laser for soft kill, screw Geneva....
How would that ever be a good choice?
woah, there's a good amount of roll there!Your ride is landing...
woah, there's a good amount of roll there!
Flight control for tailless is a pain. No surprise there really.
The J-36 appears to take a completely different design approach to achieve a supersonic tailless aircraft.
I conjecture that the J-XDS moving wingtips perform more "actively" during these slow speed landing approaches much like how even a civilian aircraft's control surfaces become more active with adjustment inputs during landing phase. Cruise phase, they rarely need to move.
I think as speed picks up and the J-XDS is in its typical operational speed during combat, the wingtips move much less. Particularly during cruise phase. It would be interesting to see J-XDS in combat maneuvering. We have a footage of the J-XDS doing a slight pull at an angle for about 10 seconds and barely see any wingtip deflection (although it is a bit hard to see).
It looks like on landing approach as the mach goes from 0.7 to landing speed, that speed range forces the wingtips to adjust with far more input action.
Does anyone have the original file? Looks like it was taken down.
AMT on the failed Nanhang-2 supersonic drone (1959) design purpose is completely different from J-XDS’s AMT, of course.
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