Some air inlets feature a
biconic centrebody (
MiG-21) to form two conic shock waves, both focused on the lip of the intake. This improves pressure recovery. Some aircraft (
BAC TSR-2,
F-104,
Mirage III) use a semi-conic centrebody. The
F-111 has a quarter cone, which moves axially, followed by an expanding cone section. Because these inlets tend to be positioned behind the forward fuselage, they are spaced away (i.e. mounted on a
splitter plate) in order to bypass the forebody's turbulent
boundary layer to mitigate flow distortion. Other supersonic aircraft such as the
Concorde,
Tu-144,
F-15 Eagle,
MiG-25 Foxbat, and the
A-5 Vigilante use so-called 2D inlets, where the nacelle is rectangular and a flat
intake ramp replaces the dual cones. The ramp is similarly adjusted in flight to ensure that the oblique shocks are properly positioned for efficient pressure recovery; such designs can also have supersonic compression be either all external, or mixed external/internal with the
XB-70 Valkyrie being an example of the latter. Some other supersonic aircraft (
Eurofighter Typhoon) use a variable lower cowl lip for high angle of attack operation and a bleed system (porous wall) incorporated on the intake ramp to facilitate stabilization of the shock system at supersonic Mach numbers. For the improvement of the intake flow (reduced distortion), air is dumped via an intake bleed slot on the ramp side downstream of the intake. The ramp, which is separated from the fuselage by a diverter, produces an oblique shock in order to decelerate the flow. The leading edge of the splitter plate separating the two intakes is located downstream of this oblique shock. Many supersonic aircraft (
F-16 Fighting Falcon,
F/A-18 Hornet) dispense with the conical centrebody or complex variable ramps and employ a simple fixed-geometry
pitot intake, which is structurally lighter and more durable; a detached, strong normal shock appears directly in front of the inlet at supersonic flight speeds, which leads to poorer pressure recovery especially at higher Mach numbers. This was considered an acceptable tradeoff for aircraft that mainly operate in subsonic and transonic airspeeds with only transient supersonic dashes. In newer aircraft, advances in aerodynamics have enabled fixed-geometry inlet designs to match the performance of variable inlet cones or ramps through careful shaping of the inlet geometry and using downstream pressure to control shock position. Examples include swept caret inlet ramps and cowls (
F-22 Raptor,
F/A-18 Super Hornet), which has a pair of fixed oblique ramps and a downstream bleed system to control and avoid shocks. Another is the
diverterless supersonic inlet (
F-35 Lightning II), which has a 3-D (non-axisymmetric) compression bump that acts similarly as a fixed half-cone to avoid shocks while also diverting the forebody boundary layer. NASA has tested an alternative to the external/internal, or mixed compression inlet, needed for speeds above about Mach 2.2 (below that speed inlets with all-external compression are used). The mixed-compression inlet is susceptible to unstarts or expulsion of the internal shock to in front of the inlet. The NASA inlet, which they call a Parametric Inlet, does all the supersonic compression externally so there is no shock inside the ducting in a potentially unstable location. == Different types of inlet cone ==