Passion for Precision

Showing posts with label Chuck Yeager. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chuck Yeager. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

CHUCK YEAGER BREAKS THE SOUND BARRIER - AND HERE’S A FREE PAPER X-1 TO MARK THE OCCASION





On this day in 1947, US test pilot Charles ‘Chuck’ Yeager flew the bullet-shaped Bell X-1 rocketplane faster than sound and into the record books. It was a spectacular achievement - until then, the ‘sound barrier’ had been regarded by many as a ‘wall in the sky’ that might forever be unbreakable.

Since then of course, supersonic flight has become an everyday event, with most air arms sporting at least one supersonic interceptor type. However, the X-1 itself has not been particularly well covered as models go. Probably the best one is still the old Tamiya 1:72 offering, which has an optional transparent fuselage half, allowing you to see the rocket motor and fuel tanks inside. Other interior detail is rather sparse though, so it’s a toss-up as to whether the model is best off built like this.

UK online outfit Hannants can supply the Tamiya X-1, though note it has new box art, which in SMN’s opinion is not half as much fun as the ‘classic’ box we show above. The click-through below takes you to an X-1 maker listing, so there are some choices there.

And for paper model makers, the website Paper Model Toy has a free pdf for you to make a simple cut-and-fold X-1. Printed onto A4 paper, it’s roughly 1:72 scale, so will allow you to compare the little X-1 with other single-seaters to that scale.

Pictures show, from top to bottom:
1 Yeager by the entry hatch of his X-1 Glamorous Glennis.
2 Free paper model for pdf download.
3 Classic Tamiya boxtop art.
4 Bits in the box, complete with metal ball oxygen tank.

Download the paper X-1 from Paper Model Toy here.

Buy an X-1 from Hannants here.

Friday, May 8, 2009

X-PLANES: FLYING INTO THE FUTURE



This is the first in a series that will track models made of the US experimental aircraft series that began back in the 1940s, with the Bell X-1. This was a small single seater rocket-plane, and the first crewed air vehicle that broke the (at the time) much feared ‘Sound Barrier’. Various crackups in mid-air had previously convinced many observers that the speed of sound was an invisible wall, that would kill anyone who tried to fly past it.

In fact of course, they were wrong, and breaking the sound barrier was a technical issue, rather than some hidden bogey waiting to pounce, and Chuck Yeager’s record-breaking flight in 1947 proved it once and for all.

As for models, there are several available in various scales, but the one we show here is the 1:72 Tamiya offering. It’s a neat and detailed kit, with an unusual choice of a supplied clear plastic fuselage half. This allows you to view various interior features such as fuel tanks, cockpit detail and oxygen tank, which is supplied as a shiny metal ball.

The Tamiya X-1 makes up into a nice little display model, though availability comes and goes. The pictures here show the ‘classic’ box design - newer offerings are in a simpler style. When in stock, the X-1 is available as the ‘Mach Buster’ from most suppliers, including Hannants at £8.50 GBP ($12.84 USD).