Republic XF-103

Republic XF-103

infobox Aircraft
name = XF-103 Thunderwarrior
type = Interceptor
manufacturer = Republic Aviation Company



caption =Company artist's impression
designer =Alexander Kartveli and William O'Donnell
first flight =
introduced =
retired =
number built =
status = Cancelled at mock-up stage
unit cost =US$104 million for the programKnaack, Marcelle Size. "Encyclopedia of US Air Force Aircraft and Missile Systems: Volume 1 Post-World War II Fighters 1945-1973". Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History, 1978. ISBN 0-912799-59-5.]
variants with their own articles =
primary user =
more users =

The Republic XF-103 "Thunderwarrior" was an American project to develop a high speed interceptor aircraft to destroy Soviet bombers. Despite a prolonged development, it never progressed past the mock-up stage.

Design and development

In 1949, the USAF issued a request for an advanced supersonic interceptor, known as the "1954 Interceptor" project, or Weapon System WS-201A. It called for a supersonic aircraft with all-weather capability, intercept radar and air-to-air missile armament. Republic was one of six companies to submit proposals. On 2 July 1951 three of the designs were selected, Convair's scaled-up XF-92 that would become the F-102 Delta Dagger, a Lockheed design that evolved into the F-104 Starfighter, and Republic's AP-57. AP-57 was an extremely advanced design intended to be built almost entirely of titanium, capable of speeds up to Mach 3 at altitudes of at least 60,000 ft (24,400 m).

Technical description

Mach 3 performance in the 1950s was very difficult to achieve. Jet engines work by heating the incoming air to add energy to it. As speeds increase, the temperature of the incoming air increases through a variety of effects, which means the engine has to operate at ever-higher temperatures in order to provide net thrust. The limiting factor in this process is the temperature of the materials in the engines, in particular, the turbine blades just behind the combustion chambers. Using materials available at the time, speeds much beyond Mach 2.5 were extremely difficult to achieve.

The solution to this problem is the removal of the turbine. The ramjet engine consists mostly of a large tube, and is relatively easy to air-cool by forcing air around the engine. Experimental ramjet aircraft like the Lockheed X-7 were reaching speeds as high as Mach 4. There are numerous problems with the ramjet engine, however. Fuel economy, or specific fuel consumption in aircraft terms, of ramjet engines is extremely poor, which makes general operations like flying from one airbase to another expensive propositions. More problematic is the fact that ramjets rely on forward speed to compress the incoming air, and only start to operate efficiently above Mach 1.

Alexander Kartveli, Republic's Chief Designer, came up with a solution to these problems. He proposed using a Wright J67 turbojet (a license-built derivative of the Bristol Olympus) supplemented by an RJ55-W-1 ramjet behind it. Connecting the two were a series of movable ducts that could route air between the engines. At "low" speeds the aircraft was powered by the J67 and the RJ55 acting as a traditional afterburner, producing a total of about 40,000 lbf (180 kN) thrust. At high speeds, starting above Mach 2.2, the jet engine would be shut down and the airflow from the intake around the jet engine and directly into the XJ5. Although the net thrust was reduced by shutting down the jet, operating on the ramjet alone allowed the aircraft to reach much higher speeds.

Both of the engines were located behind a single very large ventral Ferri intake, which featured a prominent, swept-forward lip, a design feature employed on the Republic RF-84F and later F-105. The J67 was installed just behind the intake, angled with the intake below the centerline of the aircraft. The XJ55 was installed inline with the fuselage in the extreme rear, as if it were the exhaust of a conventional engine installation. There was a significant empty space above the J67 for ducting.

Wings and control surfaces

All of the control surfaces were pure delta wings. The main wing was swept at 55 degrees, and could be rotated around the spar to provide variable incidence. For takeoff and landing, the wing was "tilted up" to increase the angle of attack while keeping the fuselage more horizontal. The system also allowed the fuselage to fly "flat" to the airflow at various speeds, setting the trim angle independent of the aircraft as a whole. This decreased trim drag and thereby improved range.

The wing was "cut" at about two-thirds of the span, the portion outside of this line able to rotate independently of the rest of the wing in order to act as large ailerons, or as Republic called them, "tiperons". In order to keep the surface areas in front and behind the pivot point somewhat similar, the "cut line" was closer to the fuselage in front of the pivot. Large conventional flaps ran from the fuselage to the tiperons. Hard points for drop tanks were available at about 1/3 out from the wing root.

The horizontal stabilizers were seemingly undersized, and mounted below the line of the wing. The larger vertical fin was supplemented by a ventral fin for high-speed stability, which folded to the right (as seen from behind) during takeoff and landing to avoid hitting the ground. Two "petal" style air brakes were mounted directly behind the horizontal surfaces, opening out and up at about a 45 degree angle into the gap between the horizontal and vertical surfaces. A provision for a braking parachute is not evident on the mock-up or the various artwork, although this was a common addition for aircraft of the era.

Fuselage

The fuselage was completely smooth, with a high fineness ratio for low drag at supersonic speeds. The design was developed prior to the discovery of the area rule, and does not display any of the "wasp waisting" common to aircraft primarily developed after 1952. The fuselage contours were mainly cylindrical, but blended into the intake starting around the wing root, giving it a rounded, rectangular profile through the middle, before reverting to a pure cylinder shape again at the engine nozzle.

Cockpit

The cockpit design originally featured a canopy, but low drag requirements for high speed suggested that it be removed. The idea of using a periscope arrangement for forward viewing on high speed aircraft was then in vogue, the Avro 730 selecting a very similar system, and the Air Force demanded that it be used on the F-103. The system that emerged used two large oval windows on the cockpit sides, and a periscope system projecting an image onto a fresnel lens arrangement directly in front of the pilot. In 1955, the periscope concept was tested on a specially modified F-84G, which was flown on a long, cross-country flight with the pilot's forward vision blocked. [http://home.att.net/~jbaugher1/f103.html Republic XF-103, Joe Baugher] ] [ Jenkins 2004, p.23. The F-84G testbed (s/n 51-843) accumulated nearly 50 hours of flight testing with pilots reporting the periscope system worked extremely well.]

Kartveli was opposed to this layout, and continued to press for the use of a "real" canopy. Design documents throughout the program continued to include this as an optional feature, along with performance estimates that suggested the different would be minimal.Dennis Jenkins, Tony Landis, [http://books.google.com/books?id=xu8HAAAACAAJ&dq=valkyrie "Valkyrie: North American's Mach 3 Superbomber"] , Specialty Press Publishers & Wholesalers, ISBN 1580070728]

A unique supersonic escape capsule (SEC) was designed for the XF-103. The pilot's seat was located in a shell with a large movable shield in front that was normally slid down into the area in front of the pilot's legs. In the case of depressurization, the shield would slide up in front of the pilot, sealing the seat into a pressurized "pod". Basic flight instruments inside the capsule allowed the aircraft to be flown back to base, and a window in the front of the shield allowed the periscope system to be used. In an emergency the entire capsule would be ejected downward, along with a small portion of the aircraft fuselage that provided a stable aerodynamic shape. To enter and exit the aircraft, the ejection module was lowered on rails out of the bottom of the aircraft, allowing the pilot to simply walk into the seat, sit down, and raise the module. The SEC was fully pressurized, allowing the pilot to continue operating the aircraft without a pressure suit when the capsule was "locked up". [Pace 1991, p. 128]

Avionics and armament

The entire nose of the aircraft was taken up by the large Hughes radar set, which offered (then) long detection ranges. Guidance and fire control were to be provided by the same MX-1179 package being developed for all of the WS-201 designs. Hughes had won this contract with their Hughes MA-1 fire control system, which was under development. Weapons were carried in bays located on the sides of the fuselage behind the cockpit, which opened by flipping upward and thereby rotating the missiles out of their bays. It was to be armed with six GAR-1/GAR-3 Falcon (then known as MX-904), with a likely arrangement of three or four each GAR-1s and GAR-3s, fired in pairs (one each radar and infrared guided) to improve the odds of a hit. The XF-103 also was to feature thirty-six 2.75-inch "Mighty Mouse" FFARs.

Cancellation

A full-scale mock-up was built and inspected in March 1953. A contract for three prototypes followed in June 1954. Work on the prototypes was delayed by continued problems with the titanium construction, and more notably by continued problems with the engine. The contract was later reduced to a single prototype. In the end, the J67 never entered production and the aircraft it had been chosen for were forced to turn to other engine designs, or were cancelled outright. Republic suggested replacing the J67 with the Wright J65, a much less powerful engine, entirely unrealistic for an aircraft of this size.Fact|date=April 2007 The project was eventually cancelled on 21 August 1957 with no flying prototypes ever being completed.

The design was given a brief reprieve as part of the Long-Range Interceptor - Experimental (LRI-X) project that led to the XF-108 Rapier. Part of this project was the development of the advanced Hughes AN/ASG-18 pulse-doppler radar and the GAR-9 missile. Republic proposed adapting the F-103 as a testbed for these systems, although it wouldn't be able to come close to meeting the range requirements of LRI-X. Some work was carried out adapting the mockup to house the 40 inch antenna, which required the nose section to be scaled up considerably. Nothing ever came of the proposal, and testing of the ASG-18/GAR-9 was carried out on a modified B-58 Hustler instead.

pecifications (XF-103, as designed)

aircraft specifications
plane or copter?=plane
jet or prop?=both
ref=
crew= one pilot
capacity=
payload main=
payload alt=
length main= 77 ft
length alt= 23.5 m
span main= 34 ft 5 in
span alt= 10.5 m
height main= 16 ft 7 in
height alt= 5.1 m
area main= 401 ft²
area alt= 37.2 m²
airfoil=
empty weight main= 24,949 lb
empty weight alt= 11,317 kg
loaded weight main= 38,505 lb
loaded weight alt= 17,466 kg
useful load main=
useful load alt=
max takeoff weight main= 42,864 lb
max takeoff weight alt= 19,443 kg
more general=
engine (jet)= Wright XJ67-W-3
type of jet= turbojet
number of jets=1
thrust main= 15,000 lbf
thrust alt= 66.7 kN
thrust original=
afterburning thrust main=
afterburning thrust alt=
engine (prop)= Wright XRJ55-W-1
type of prop=ramjet
number of props=1
power main= 18,800 lbf
power alt= 83.6 kN
power original=
max speed main=Mach 3 (as a turbojet) / Mach 5 (ramjet-only)
max speed alt=
cruise speed main=
cruise speed alt=
stall speed main=
stall speed alt=
never exceed speed main=
never exceed speed alt=
range main=
range alt=
ceiling main= 80,000 ft +
ceiling alt= 24,390 m +
climb rate main= 19,000 ft/min
climb rate alt= 5,800 m/min
loading main=96 lb/ft²
loading alt=470 kg/m²
thrust/weight=0.57:1 (afterburner only); 0.95:1 (afterburner and ramjet)
power/mass main=
power/mass alt=
more performance=
* Combat radius: 245 mi (394 km)
* Ferry range: 1,545 mi (2,486 km)
armament=
* 36 × 2.75-in (70 mm) FFAR rocketsand
* 6 × GAR-1/GAR-3 AIM-4 Falcon or
* 4 × GAR-1/GAR-3 AIM-4 Falcon missiles
* 2 × Nuclear-Tipped air-to-air missiles
avionics=

ee also

aircontent
related=

similar aircraft=
* XF-108 Rapier
sequence=
F-100 -
F-101 -
F-102 -XF-103 -
F-104 -
F-105 -
F-106
lists=

see also=
* Century series

References

Notes

Bibliography

* Jenkins, Dennis R. "Titanium Titan: The Story of the XF-103." "Airpower, January 2004".
* Pace, Steve. "X-Fighters: USAF Experimental and Prototype Fighters, XP-59 to YF-23". Oscela, Wisconsin: Motorbooks International, 1991. ISBN 0-87938-540-5.

External links

* [http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=2377 USAF Museum: XF-103]


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