SKEW WHAT?

Incredible plan for ‘wonky wing’ supersonic plane of the future that ‘defies nature’ with mind-bending design

The oblique flying wing was designed to drastically improve commercial air transportation and reduce fuel costs

THE INCREDIBLE plan for a "wonky wing" supersonic plane of the future "defied nature" with its mind-bending design.

The aircraft's design saw it adopt just a single wing that would rotate on a centre pivot - similar to a helicopter.

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The oblique wing supersonic plane of the future 'defied nature' with its mind-bending designCredit: YouTube/@Mustard
The oblique wing was designed to rotate on a centre pivot - similar to a helicopterCredit: YouTube/@Mustard
The oblique wing design in comparison to the standard design used on planes todayCredit: YouTube/@Mustard
NASA began testing and conducting extensive research in the 1970'sCredit: YouTube/@Mustard

The "oblique wing", as it was known, would have had one of its tips swept forward while the opposite tip is swept aft.

As the aircraft displaces the air, a sonic wave is generated.

The design certainly raised eyebrows but it was guaranteed to offer several advantages over more conventional swept wings.

At transonic and supersonic speeds, the angled orientation minimised both wave and induced drag.

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This would lead to improved overall aerodynamic efficiency without sacrificing low speed performance.

Compared to other variable geometry wings, oblique wings would also be lighter, less complex and have fewer drawbacks like a shifting centre of lift.

An oblique flying wing could drastically improve commercial air transportation, reducing fuel costs and noise in the vicinity of airport.

But since the early 1990s, budget constraints and shifting priorities have largely stalled intensive oblique wing research programs.

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Plans for a radical wing were initially drawn up in the 1950's by NASA engineer Robert Thomas Jones, but it wasn't until the 1970's when testing and extensive research began.

In 1979, the NASA Ames-Dryden-1 (AD-1) - a subsonic, human piloted oblique wing aircraft - began rigorous flight testing.

So far, though, it is the only manned aircraft built to explore the oblique wing concept.

Military operations have included the possibility of a long–endurance fighter vehicle.

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