Half a croissant, on a plate, with a sign in front of it saying '50c'
h a l f b a k e r y
Left for Bread

idea: add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random

meta: news, help, about, links, report a problem

account: browse anonymously, or get an account and write.

user:
pass:
register,


                                                         

Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register. Please log in or create an account.

Proper space Spitfire

BYO silk scarf and biggles helmet
  (+3, -1)
(+3, -1)
  [vote for,
against]

As we have all found out, at one time or another, the biggest problem with flying a plane in space is the lack of air.

So, what I'm proposing is a Spitfire with a huge air tank. Then there's lots of air is available to be sprayed (?) over the lifting and steering surfaces.

The forward momentum comes from the exhaust gasses from the Merlin engine being diverted into small holes on the reverse of the prop, which would make it spin as the Spitfire moves forward.

not_morrison_rm, Jun 24 2012

Perhaps this for propulsion, lift. Bernoulli_27s_20Spaceplane#1248783223
[FlyingToaster, Jun 24 2012]

Thought for a moment that you were proposing a space spitfire version of this classic Roaming_20Goldfish_20Bowl
[calum, Jun 27 2012]

Improper Spitfire... Improper_20Space_20Spitfire
...I shall say no more.... [not_morrison_rm, Jun 28 2012]

[link]






       It would seem a bit more efficient to simply use your compressed air--or better yet, rocket fuel--to directly propell the craft. The amount of air required for sustained maneuvers via flight surfaces in vacuum would require an air tank the size of Wales.   

       [+] anyway.
Alterother, Jun 24 2012
  

       First, this should be in the "vehicle" not "science" area.   

       Second, why not "an air tank the size of Wales"? Just fly the spitfire around inside the tank, while the tank orbits in space....
Vernon, Jun 24 2012
  

       Even better, do everyone a favour and tow wales into space ...
8th of 7, Jun 24 2012
  

       Didn't they already do that in one of the crappier Star Trek movies?
Alterother, Jun 24 2012
  

       // an air tank the size of Wales.//   

       Excellent. So we have somewhere to house the prototype, what next?
MaxwellBuchanan, Jun 24 2012
  

       //Didn't they already do that in one of the crappier Star Trek movies   

       Erm, which film was it they dragged Wales into space? I must have missed that one. What would the Borg do with Wales anyway?
not_morrison_rm, Jun 24 2012
  

       //do everyone a favour and tow wales into space //   

       "Remember, lad, every time you have a roast lamb dinner, you leave a Welshman lonely."
MaxwellBuchanan, Jun 24 2012
  

       That's right up there with "Every time a mattress hits the freeway, a stripper gets her wings".   

       Okay, maybe it would help if you knew the back story.   

       Oh, and I love this idea for the level of practicality. Perhaps we could make it so the propeller did not rotate - the rest of the aircraft could spin instead thereby simulating gravity out on the wingtips where you could do those gravity things.
normzone, Jun 24 2012
  

       //the rest of the aircraft could spin instead// sp. spacecraft
pocmloc, Jun 24 2012
  

       I've always wondered how much the fine performance of the Spitfire was a product of the heavy, humid, cloudy British air.   

       Would a Spitfire even be able to manage a coordinated turn in sunshine?
lurch, Jun 24 2012
  

       Given the RAF's daylight sortie record over France and Germany after the Battle of Britain was won, I would say yes. The Spit was a terrific aircraft, better able to maneuver in just about any weather than any other fighter in the ETO. Like the best kind of woman, it was elegant, nimble, unpredictable, deadly, and very hard to fly in a straight line.
Alterother, Jun 24 2012
  

       // Like the best kind of woman, it was elegant, nimble, unpredictable, deadly, and very hard to fly in a straight line//...and had a retractable undercarriage.
MaxwellBuchanan, Jun 24 2012
  

       Vernon has it right, put the spitfire in the tank. Except once you're in the tank, you don't need the spitfire.
ldischler, Jun 24 2012
  

       //Except once you're in the tank, you don't need the spitfire.   

       How is one to get about the tank, without the Spitfire?
not_morrison_rm, Jun 25 2012
  

       //// Like the best kind of woman, it was elegant, nimble, unpredictable, deadly, and very hard to fly in a straight line//...and had a retractable undercarriage// ...and four .303 Browning machine-guns
hippo, Jun 25 2012
  

       <placeholder for cockpit joke>   

       <placeholder for joystick joke>
MaxwellBuchanan, Jun 25 2012
  

       Just a boring point here, but wasn't there something of a lengthy chronological gap between cock-fighting and first aeroplanes...just wondering why it wasn't called the bridge or something...
not_morrison_rm, Jun 25 2012
  

       The "cockpit" was, of course, an invention of the French.   

       As is demonstrated by the 1783 balloon development of the Brothers Montgolfier, the natural and primary inclination of a Frenchman is to use a flying device for the transport of livestock and poultry. However, a device such as the Wright Flyer was eminently unsuitable for that task; putting your chickens right out there, untethered, in the slipstream, right in front of the pusher props.   

       So, a bucket to put the birds in; next thing, the pilot has to get in the bucket to control the birds.   

       (This also relates to the joke about a French car: Q: Why are there doors on a 2CV? A: So you'll know where to look for the eggs in the morning.)
lurch, Jun 26 2012
  

       R.J. Michélé was a genius engineer, no mistake, and the factory at Superbe-sur-la-mer near Le Harve is a mecca for all who wish to see where the Spitfire was originally designed and constructed.
pocmloc, Jun 26 2012
  

       Ah yes, that's close to where Franc Ouitelle invented the jet engine, n'est ce pas?
MaxwellBuchanan, Jun 26 2012
  

       May, wheeee!
pocmloc, Jun 27 2012
  

       //2CV   

       Dirk Gently..during the accident (?)trial, the 2CV is only referred to "the alleged car"..
not_morrison_rm, Jun 27 2012
  

       In Ouatani, "Two cee vee" translates (phonetically) as "your penis is showing".
MaxwellBuchanan, Jun 27 2012
  

       You missed your "joystick" placeholder.
lurch, Jun 28 2012
  

       I blame the Borg for perverting the whole idea. Crass commercial of the lowest kind! Forcing helpless Spitfires to work in clubs with punters going "Phwoah!! Look at the undercarriage on that baby, eh?"   

       See link.   

       <starts writing a letter to the Daily Telegraph, but can't find the mauve crayon>
not_morrison_rm, Jun 28 2012
  
      
[annotate]
  


 

back: main index

business  computer  culture  fashion  food  halfbakery  home  other  product  public  science  sport  vehicle