The Goodyear Inflatoplane was an inflatable experimental aircraft made by the Goodyear Aircraft Company, a subsidiary of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, well known for the Goodyear blimp. Although it seemed an improbable project, the finished aircraft proved to be capable of meeting its design objectives, although orders were never forthcoming from the military. A total of 12 prototypes were built between 1956 and 1959, and testing continued until 1972, when the project was finally cancelled.
Goodyear Inflatoplane
Goodyear GA-447 Inflatoplane at the Akron, Ohio test area
Role
Experimental aircraft
Type of aircraft
Manufacturer
Goodyear Aircraft Company
First flight
13 February 1956
Primaryuser
United States Army
Produced
1955–1962
Number built
12
Design and development
The original concept of an all-fabric inflatable aircraft was based on Taylor McDaniel's inflatable rubber glider experiments in 1931. Designed and built in only 12weeks, the Goodyear Inflatoplane was built in 1956, with the idea that it could be used by the military as a rescue plane to be dropped in a hardened container behind enemy lines. The 44 cubic ft (1.25 cubic meter) container could also be transported by truck, jeep trailer or aircraft.[1] The inflatable surface of this aircraft was actually a sandwich of two rubber-type materials connected by a mesh of nylon threads, forming an I-beam. When the nylon was exposed to air, it absorbed and repelled water as it stiffened,[clarification needed] giving the aircraft its shape and rigidity. Structural integrity was retained in flight with forced air being continually circulated by the aircraft's motor. This continuous pressure supply enabled the aircraft to have a degree of puncture resilience, the testing of airmat showing that it could be punctured by up to six .30 calibre bullets and retain pressure.[2][3]
There were at least two versions:
The GA-468 was a single-seater. It took about five minutes to inflate to about 25psi (170kPa); at full size, it was 19ft 7in (5.97m) long, with a 22ft (6.7m) wingspan. A pilot would then hand-start the two-stroke cycle,[1]40 horsepower (30kW) Nelson engine, and takeoff with a maximum load of 240 pounds (110kg). On 20 US gallons (76 L) of fuel, the aircraft could fly 390 miles (630km), with an endurance of 6.5hours. Maximum speed was 72 miles per hour (116km/h), with a cruise speed of 60mph. Later, a 42 horsepower (31kW) engine was used in the aircraft.
Takeoff from turf was in 250feet with 575feet needed to clear a 50-foot obstacle. It landed in 350feet. Rate of climb was 550feet per minute. Its service ceiling was estimated at 10,000ft.
The GA-466 was the two-seater version, 2in (51mm) shorter, but with a 6ft (1.8m) longer wingspan than the GA-468. A more powerful 60 horsepower (45kW) McCulloch 4318 engine could power the 740 pounds (340kg) of plane and passenger to 70 miles per hour (110km/h), although the range of the plane was limited to 275 miles (443km).
Operational history
Goodyear GA-447 Inflatoplane coming in to land during ONR flight testing with tri-cycle landing gear
The test program at Goodyear's facilities near Wingfoot Lake, Akron, Ohio showed that the inflation could be accomplished with as little as 8 psi (544mbar), less than a car tire.[1] The flight test program had a fatal crash when Army aviator Lt. "Pug" Wallace was killed. The aircraft was in a descending turn when one of the control cables under the wing came off the pulley and was wedged in the pulley bracket, locking the stick. The turn tightened until one of the wings folded up over the propeller and was chopped up. With the wings flapping because of loss of air, one of the aluminum wing tip skids hit the pilot in the head, as was clear from marks on his helmet. Wallace was pitched out, over the nose of the aircraft and fell into the shallow lake. His parachute never opened.[4] Only 12 Goodyear Inflatoplanes were built, but development continued until the project was cancelled in 1973.
Variants
GA-33 Inflatoplane
The initial single-seat version, with open cockpit, based on the Taylor McDaniel inflatable rubber glider experiments from the early 1930s. One built.
GA-447 Inflatoplane
An enclosed cockpit and new wing, used for undercarriage experiments (tricycle, uniwheel, and hydroskid). One built.
Powerplant: 1 × Nelson H-63A (YO-65) 2-cylinder air-cooled 2-stroke horizontally-opposed piston engine, 42hp (31kW) at 4000 rpm
Propellers: 2-bladed fixed-pitch propeller
Performance
Maximum speed: 72mph (116km/h, 63kn)
Cruise speed: 60mph (97km/h, 52kn)
Stall speed: 37mph (60km/h, 32kn)
Range: 390mi (630km, 340nmi)
Endurance: 6 hours 30 minutes
Service ceiling: 10,000ft (3,000m)
Rate of climb: 550ft/min (2.8m/s)
Take-off run: 250ft (76m) on sod
Take-off distance to 50ft (15m): 575ft (175m) on sod
Landing run: 350ft (107m) on sod
References
Notes
Citations
Winchester, Jim (2005). The world's worst aircraft: form pioneering failures to multimillion dollar disasters. London: Amber Books. pp.126–127. ISBN1-904687-34-2.
CBS quiz show "I've Got a Secret" 1956 Goodyear engineer J Thomas Blair demonstrates the Inflatoplane
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