Bell X-5 (German Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Bell X-5" in German language version.

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google.de

books.google.de

  • Fritz Dubs: Hochgeschwindigkeits-Aerodynamik – Vorgänge und Probleme in kompressibler Strömung (= Flugtechnische Reihe, Band 2). 2. Auflage. Springer, Basel 1975, ISBN 3-0348-5924-4, S. 64 (eingeschränkte Vorschau in der Google-Buchsuche): „Im weiteren besteht als Radikalmittel zur Eliminierung der erwähnten unangenehmen Eigenschaften [der Abreißbeginn der Strömung im Flügelaußenteil] die Möglichkeit, im Langsamflug durch Verstellen der Flügel die Flügelpfeilung zu beseitigen. Entsprechende, erfolgreich durchgeführte Versuche wurden erstmals mit dem Versuchsflugzeug Bell X-5 vorgenommen.“
  • United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Hrsg.): NASA's Contributions to Aeronautics – Flight Environment, Operations, Flight Testing, and Research (= NASA SP, Band 570). National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 2010, ISBN 978-0-16-084636-6, S. 264 (eingeschränkte Vorschau in der Google-Buchsuche): „Spurred on by postwar interests in the variable-wing-sweep concept as a means to optimize mission performance at both low and high speeds, the NACA at Langley initiated a broad research program to identify the potential benefits and problems associated with the concept. The disappointing experiences of the Bell X-5 research aircraft, which used a single wing pivot to achieve variable sweep in the early 1950s, had clearly identified the unacceptable weight penalties associated with the concept of translating the wing along the fuselage centerline to maintain satisfactory levels of longitudinal stability while the wing sweep angle was varied from forward to aft sweep. After the X-5 experience, military interest in variable sweep quickly diminished while aerodynamicists at Langley continued to explore alternate concepts that might permit variations in wing sweep without moving the wing pivot location and without serious degradation in longitudinal stability and control.“
  • Stephen Corda: Introduction to Aerospace Engineering with a Flight Test Perspective (= Aerospace Series). John Wiley & Sons, 2017, ISBN 978-1-118-95336-5, S. 414–415 (eingeschränkte Vorschau in der Google-Buchsuche): „The first variable sweep aircraft, where the wing sweep could be changed in flight, was the Bell X-5 research aircraft […]. The design was similar to the German Messerschmitt P.1011 prototype fighter aircraft, which had variable sweep wings, but the sweep could only be changed manually on the ground. The Messerschmitt P.1011 never flew and was captured by the USA after World War II. The German variable-sweep aircraft was shipped to the Bell factory in the United States, where it was studied by the Bell engineers prior to the design of the X-5. However, unlike the P.1011, the Bell X-5 could change its wing sweep in flight to three sweep positions of 20, 40, or 60°. The first flight of the Bell X-5 was on 20 June 1951. Two X-5 aircraft were built, completing test flights up to Mach 0.9. Valuable aerodynamic, stability, and control data were obtained for variable sweep aircraft at transonic speeds. Unfortunately, the X-5 had poor spin characteristics and one aircraft was lost due to an unrecoverable spin, with the wings in the 60° sweep position. […] The X-5 successfully demonstrated the technological feasibility and aerodynamic benefits of a variable sweep aircraft. Variable sweep wings have been used on a variety of production aircraft, including the General Dynamics F-111 Aardvark, Grumman F-14 Tomcat, Rockwell B-1 Lancer, Panavia Tornado, and Mikoyan MiG-23 Flogger.“
  • Dart-Shaped Plane Sweeps Its Wings Back in Flight. In: Popular Science. Band 159, Nr. 2. Bonnier Corporation, August 1051, ISSN 0161-7370, S. 84 (eingeschränkte Vorschau in der Google-Buchsuche): „Obviously designed for high speeds, the X-5 has a gas-turbine engine instead of the rocket engine that powered the X-1. And, unlike the X-1, it doesn't have to be launched by a mother plane. It can take off from the ground under its own power. The heart of the X-5 is an electric mechanism, highly secret, that moves the wings forward and backward. Bell had to solve a problem there-as the wings were moved, the plane's center of gravity shifted, and that had to be compensated for. Preliminary flight tests of the new plane are being conducted at Edwards Air Force Base in California by Jean L. "Skip" Ziegler, Bell's chief of flight research.“
  • Experimental Airplane Changes Angle Of Wing Sweepback While In Flight. In: United States. Air Force, Air Matériel Command, Documents Division (Hrsg.): Technical Data Digest. Band 16, Nr. 7–12. Air Documents Division, Intelligence T-2, Air Matériel Command, 1951, S. 5 (eingeschränkte Vorschau in der Google-Buchsuche): „Viewed in profile, the X-S has a "Fying guppy" configuration which results from mounting its Allison J-35-A-17 turbojet engine under the cockpit rather than behind the pilot. […] The X-5 is 33 ft 4 in. long and 12 ft from ground to fin tip. Wing span is 32 ft 9 in. and weight is approximately 10,000 Ib. […] Two dive brakes are located in the sides of the fuselage forward of the cockpit. They are metal "doors" which can be opened hydraulically until they are at nearly right angles to the fuselage. Protruding, they provide rapid deceleration. The axial-flow turbojet engine develops a 4900-1b thrust. […]“

nasa.gov

  • Dennis R. Jenkins, Tony Landis, Jay Miller: American X-Vehicles. An Inventory – X-1 to X-50 – Centennial of Flight Edition. In: Monographs in Aerospace History. Band 31. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Office of External Relations, Washington DC 2003, S. 11 (nasa.gov [PDF]).

zdb-katalog.de

  • Dart-Shaped Plane Sweeps Its Wings Back in Flight. In: Popular Science. Band 159, Nr. 2. Bonnier Corporation, August 1051, ISSN 0161-7370, S. 84 (eingeschränkte Vorschau in der Google-Buchsuche): „Obviously designed for high speeds, the X-5 has a gas-turbine engine instead of the rocket engine that powered the X-1. And, unlike the X-1, it doesn't have to be launched by a mother plane. It can take off from the ground under its own power. The heart of the X-5 is an electric mechanism, highly secret, that moves the wings forward and backward. Bell had to solve a problem there-as the wings were moved, the plane's center of gravity shifted, and that had to be compensated for. Preliminary flight tests of the new plane are being conducted at Edwards Air Force Base in California by Jean L. "Skip" Ziegler, Bell's chief of flight research.“
  • M. Meyer: Bell X-5. In: Fliegerrevue Nr. 3/2022, PPV Medien, Bergkirchen, ISSN 0941-889X, S. 61.