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Cockpit
The '
Grumman X-29' is a
1984 concept aircraft by
Northrop Grumman. It explored a number of new technologies, the most immediately obvious being the
forward-swept wings and
canard control surface. The inherent
aerodynamic instability of this arrangement required the use of computerized
fly-by-wire control, and advanced
composite materials were needed to make the
wing sufficiently rigid without being unacceptably heavy.
Development
Two X-29As were built by Grumman Aerospace Corporation, the first flight taking place in 1984. The aircraft were adapted from existing
Northrop F-5A Freedom Fighter airframes (after the proposal had been chosen over a competing one involving a
General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon); the modified design was known internally as the 'G-712'. The test program of the two planes continued for over a decade, and on
December 13,
1985 one of them became the first forward swept wing
aircraft to fly in
supersonic, level flight. The earlier
Junkers Ju 287 had been the first jet aircraft with forward-swept wings.

A fiberglass scale model at the National Air and Space Museum
The X-29A demonstrated excellent control and maneuvering qualities at an
angle of attack up to 45 degrees. There was also a decrease in turbulence. However, the wing configuration made the craft inherently unstable and it could fly only with the constant corrections (up to 40 per second) provided by the computerized flight control system. The system was made up of three redundant digital computers backed up by three redundant
analog computers. It was estimated that a total failure of the system was as unlikely as a mechanical failure in a normal airplane.
The first craft built is now on display in the
National Museum of the United States Air Force at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near
Dayton, Ohio. The other craft is on display at the
Dryden Flight Research Center on
Edwards Air Force Base.
Specifications (X-29)
References
American X-Vehicles (.pdf)
External links
★
NASA's X-29 website
★
NASA's X-29 factsheet
★
Grumman X-29 at fighter-planes.com
Media
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