
Three views of the VJ101 at the
German Museum of Munich
The
EWR VJ 101 was an experimental German
jet fighter VTOL
tiltjet aircraft. VJ stood for
"'V
ersuchsj
äger", (German for "Experimental
Fighter"). It was to be the basis for a
successor to the F-104G Starfighter, but was
cancelled in 1968 after a five-year test program.
The VJ 101 was one of the first V/STOL designs to have the potential for eventual
Mach 2 flight.
Design and development
Heinkel and
Messerschmitt had developed designs to meet
the requirements of VTOL flight and by 1959, the two companies,
along with
Bölkow, had created a joint
venture company called EWR, to build the VJ 101 C. The new proposal
merged the characteristics of earlier Bölkow, Heinkel and
Messerschmitt designs into a sleek, streamlined platform. The VJ
101 was similar in appearance to the
Bell
XF-109, both with rotating engines in
nacelles at the wingtips. In addition to the wingtip
engines, two further
lift jets were
installed in the fuselage to supplement the main engines in
hovering flight.
In order to test the concept, EWR built a test rig called the
Wippe (seesaw) in early 1960. The simple device
incorporated a rudimentary cockpit on a horizontal beam with a
"lift" engine mounted vertically at the centre for preliminary
single-axis tests of the control system. A later "hover rig" was
built that had the skeletal fuselage of the VJ 101C with three
Rolls-Royce RB106 engines installed in the
approximate positions they would occupy in the final flying
version. The small engines each had 2,100 lbf (9.3 kN) thrust,
enough to lift the test rig. After initial testing in May 1961 from
a telescopic column, the new rig was able to "fly" in free flight
in March 1962. Additional tests with a cloth "skin" simulating
fuselage and wings proved to be successful (showing satisfactory
control in all seasons and weather conditions).
Testing and evaluation
Two prototypes were built: X-1 and X-2. On 10 April 1963, the X-1
made its first hovering flight. The first transition from hovering
flight to horizontal flight took place on 20 September 1963. The VJ
101C X-1 flew 40 aerodynamic flights, 24 hover flights and 14 full
transitions. During these tests the sound barrier was broken, for
the first time by a vertical take-off aircraft, but on 14 September
1964 a defect in the
autopilot caused a
crash. On July 29, 1964 the VJ 101 C flew at Mach 1.04 without use
of an
afterburner.
The second prototype X2 with a new autopilot made a successful
transition on 22 October 1965. The tests were subsequently
continued with X-2, which in contrast to X-1 had afterburners.
However the project was cancelled in 1968. The proposed VJ 101 D
Mach 2 interceptor was never built.
VJ 101 C X 2 hangs today in the Deutsches
Museum
in Munich
.
Although the VJ 101C did not proceed to production status, other
projects including the
Mirage
IIIV,
Hawker P.1154 (a supersonic
parallel to what would become the
Hawker Siddeley Harrier) and the
much later
F-35 Lightning II
showed the promise of VTOL fighters.
Specifications (VJ 101C X-2)
See also
References
Notes
- Winchester 2005, p. 174.
- Rogers 1989, p. 186, 189.
- Rogers 1989, p. 190.
- Geschichte.aero, VJ 101 Retrieved: 16 March
2008
Bibliography
- Rogers, Mike. VTOL: Military Research Aircraft. New
York: Orion Books, 1989. ISBN 0-517-57684-8.
- Winchester, Jim. "EWR-Sud VJ 101C (1962)". X-Planes and
Prototypes. London: Amber Books Ltd., 2005. ISBN
1-904687-40-7.
- Green, William. Macdonald Aircraft Handbook. London.
Macdonald & Co. (Publishers) Ltd., 1964.
External links