Northrop Flying Wing Down
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The Brummie

Original Poster:

9,424 posts

211 months

Monday 22nd April 2019
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Being reported that the N-9M yellow flying wing has been lost today in California.

Apparently crashed into a prison yard. No official news on the pilot however unconfirmed reports are that he did not survive.




MartG

22,424 posts

228 months

Monday 22nd April 2019
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Sad news frown

Equus

16,980 posts

125 months

Tuesday 23rd April 2019
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Funnily enough I was reading up on this only yesterday - I drifted onto it after reading about the Horten 229.

I was surprised to find that it was still flying - they always were tricky things to get right. It always stuck me that the basic layout must make the margins for pitch control fairly slender, at best, and longitudinal stability without a tailfin/rudder must be challenging?

Eric Mc

124,939 posts

289 months

Tuesday 23rd April 2019
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Sad to hear. It was restored to airworthy condition only a few years ago.

Although it's too early to speculate, I wouldn't be surprised if the natural instability of all wing designs played a part in the accident.

dr_gn

16,775 posts

208 months

Tuesday 23rd April 2019
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Equus said:
Funnily enough I was reading up on this only yesterday - I drifted onto it after reading about the Horten 229.

I was surprised to find that it was still flying - they always were tricky things to get right. It always stuck me that the basic layout must make the margins for pitch control fairly slender, at best, and longitudinal stability without a tailfin/rudder must be challenging?
Depends on the design - stability in pitch isn't an issue at all with a properly designed flying wing, with sweep and washout or reflex built into the profile. Trouble is, by adding these features, efficiency is reduced. Yaw stability is more tricky with a pure flying wing with no vertical surfaces, but it's not impossible to overcome.

aeropilot

39,796 posts

251 months

Tuesday 23rd April 2019
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Eric Mc said:
Sad to hear. It was restored to airworthy condition only a few years ago.
Nearly 30 years ago actually wink

I saw it flying in 1997 when in the USA.

It suffered an inflight engine fire about a decade or so ago, but was able to land OK, and thus had to undergo a long term repair, and it was after this repair that it took to the air again a few years ago.


Eric Mc

124,939 posts

289 months

Tuesday 23rd April 2019
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It was the latter restoration I was referring to.

ChemicalChaos

10,707 posts

184 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
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Confirmed this morning that the pilot has died and the aircraft was totally destroyed. In the overhead picture going around, there's no pieces of wreckage left bigger than a suitcase, so it was obviously a monumental crash frown

MartG

22,424 posts

228 months

Wednesday 24th April 2019
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A lot of it was constructed from wood, so not surprising there isn't much left after a fire