Early history The first successful aeroplanes adhered to the basic design of rectangular wings at right angles to the body of the machine. Such a layout is inherently unstable; if the weight distribution of the aircraft changes even slightly, the wing will want to rotate so its front moves up (weight moving rearward) or down (forward) and this rotation will change the development of lift and cause it to move further in that direction. To make an aircraft stable, the normal solution is to place the weight at one end and offset this with an opposite downward force at the other - this leads to the classic layout with the engine in front and the control surfaces at the end of a long boom with the wing in the middle. This layout has long been known to be inefficient. The downward force of the control surfaces needs further lift from the wing to offset. The amount of force can be decreased by increasing the length of the boom, but this leads to more
skin friction and weight of the boom itself. This problem led to many experiments with different layouts that eliminates the need for the downward force. One such wing geometry appeared before
World War I, which led to early swept wing designs. In this layout, the wing is swept so that portions lie far in front and in back of the
center of gravity (CoG), with the control surfaces behind it. The result is a weight distribution similar to the classic layout, but the offsetting control force is no longer a separate surface but part of the wing, which would have existed anyway. This eliminates the need for separate structure, making the aircraft have less drag and require less total lift for the same level of performance. These layouts inspired several flying wing gliders and some powered aircraft during the interwar years. tailless biplane: the angle of sweep is exaggerated by the sideways view, with washout also present at the wingtips. The first to achieve stability was British designer
J. W. Dunne who was obsessed with achieving inherent stability in flight. He successfully employed swept wings in his tailless aircraft (which, crucially, used
washout) as a means of creating positive
longitudinal static stability. For a low-speed aircraft, swept wings may be used to resolve problems with the
center of gravity, to move the wing spar into a more convenient location, or to improve the sideways view from the pilot's position. and the
D.8 was sold to the
Royal Flying Corps; it was also manufactured under licence by
Starling Burgess to the
United States Navy amongst other customers. Dunne's work ceased with the onset of war in 1914, but afterwards the idea was taken up by
G. T. R. Hill in England who designed a series of gliders and aircraft to Dunne's guidelines, notably the
Westland-Hill Pterodactyl series. However, Dunne's theories met with little acceptance amongst the leading aircraft designers and aviation companies at the time.
German developments proposed the use of swept-wings to reduce drag at high speed, at the
Volta Conference in 1935. The idea of using swept wings to reduce high-speed drag was developed in Germany in the 1930s. At a
Volta Conference meeting in 1935 in Italy,
Adolf Busemann suggested the use of swept wings for
supersonic flight. He noted that the airspeed over the wing was dominated by the normal component of the airflow, not the freestream velocity, so by setting the wing at an angle the forward velocity at which the shock waves would form would be higher (the same had been noted by
Max Munk in 1924, although not in the context of high-speed flight).
Albert Betz immediately suggested the same effect would be equally useful in the transonic. After the presentation the host of the meeting,
Arturo Crocco, jokingly sketched "Busemann's airplane of the future" on the back of a menu while they all dined. Crocco's sketch showed a classic 1950s fighter design, with swept wings and tail surfaces, although he also sketched a swept propeller powering it. Hubert Ludwieg of the High-Speed Aerodynamics Branch at the AVA Göttingen in 1939 conducted the first wind tunnel tests to investigate Busemann's theory. The
Focke-Wulf Ta 183 was another swept wing fighter design, but was also not produced before the war's end. In the post-war era,
Kurt Tank developed the Ta 183 into the
IAe Pulqui II, but this proved unsuccessful. A prototype test aircraft, the
Messerschmitt Me P.1101, was built to research the tradeoffs of the design and develop general rules about what angle of sweep to use. When it was 80% complete, the P.1101 was captured by US forces and returned to the
United States, where two additional copies with US-built engines carried on the research as the
Bell X-5. Germany's wartime experience with the swept wings and its high value for supersonic flight stood in strong contrast to the prevailing views of Allied experts of the era, who commonly espoused their belief in the impossibility of manned vehicles travelling at such speeds.
Postwar advancements During the immediate post-war era, several nations were conducting research into high speed aircraft. In the United Kingdom, work commenced during 1943 on the
Miles M.52, a high-speed experimental aircraft equipped with a straight wing that was developed in conjunction with
Frank Whittle's
Power Jets company, the
Royal Aircraft Establishment (RAE) in
Farnborough, and the
National Physical Laboratory. The M.52 was envisioned to be capable of achieving in level flight, thus enabling the aircraft to potentially be the first to exceed the speed of sound in the world. It has since been widely recognised that the cancellation of the M.52 was a major setback in British progress in the field of supersonic design. On 14 October 1947, the Bell X-1 performed the first manned
supersonic flight, piloted by
Captain Charles "Chuck" Yeager, having been
drop launched from the bomb bay of a
Boeing B-29 Superfortress and attained a record-breaking speed of Mach 1.06 (). Thus, an experimental aircraft to explore the technology, the
de Havilland DH 108, was developed by the firm in 1944, headed by project engineer
John Carver Meadows Frost with a team of 8–10 draughtsmen and engineers. The DH 108 primarily consisted of the pairing of the front fuselage of the
de Havilland Vampire to a swept wing and small vertical tail; it was the first British swept wing jet, unofficially known as the "Swallow". It first flew on 15 May 1946, a mere eight months after the project's go-ahead. Company test pilot and son of the builder,
Geoffrey de Havilland Jr., flew the first of three aircraft and found it extremely fast – fast enough to try for a world speed record. On 12 April 1948, a D.H.108 did set a world's speed record at 973.65 km/h (605 mph), it subsequently became the first jet aircraft to exceed the speed of sound. Around this same timeframe, the
Air Ministry introduced a program of experimental aircraft to examine the effects of swept wings, as well as the
delta wing configuration. Furthermore, the
Royal Air Force (RAF) identified a pair of proposed fighter aircraft equipped with swept wings from
Hawker Aircraft and
Supermarine, the
Hawker Hunter and
Supermarine Swift respectively, and successfully pressed for orders to be placed 'off the drawing board' in 1950. On 7 September 1953, the sole Hunter Mk 3 (the modified first prototype,
WB 188) flown by
Neville Duke broke the world
air speed record for jet-powered aircraft, attaining a speed of 727.63 mph (1,171.01 km/h) over
Littlehampton,
West Sussex. This world record stood for less than three weeks before being broken on 25 September 1953 by the Hunter's early rival, the Supermarine Swift, being flown by Michael Lithgow. In February 1945,
NACA engineer
Robert T. Jones started looking at highly swept
delta wings and V shapes, and discovered the same effects as Busemann. He finished a detailed report on the concept in April, but found his work was heavily criticised by other members of
NACA Langley, notably Theodore Theodorsen, who referred to it as "hocus-pocus" and demanded some "real mathematics". Ironically, by this point Busemann's work had already been passed around. In May 1945, the American
Operation Paperclip reached
Braunschweig, where US personnel discovered a number of swept wing models and a mass of technical data from the wind tunnels. One member of the US team was
George S. Schairer, who was at that time working at the Boeing company. He immediately forwarded a letter to Ben Cohn at Boeing, communicating the value of the swept wing concept. He also told Cohn to distribute the letter to other companies as well, although only Boeing and North American made immediate use of it. Boeing was in the midst of designing the
B-47 Stratojet, and the initial Model 424 was a straight-wing design similar to the
B-45,
B-46 and
B-48 it competed with. Analysis by Boeing engineer Vic Ganzer suggested an optimum sweepback angle of about 35 degrees. By September 1945, the Braunschweig data had been worked into the design, which re-emerged as the Model 448, a larger six-engine design with more robust wings swept at 35 degrees. The resulting B-47 was hailed as the fastest of its class in the world during the late 1940s, and trounced the straight-winged competition. Boeing's jet-transport formula of swept wings and pylon-mounted engines has since been universally adopted. In fighters,
North American Aviation was in the midst of working on a straight-wing jet-powered naval fighter, then known as the
FJ-1; it was later submitted to the United States Air Force as the
XP-86. Larry Green, who could read German, studied the Busemann reports and convinced management to allow a redesign starting in August 1945. The performance of the F-86A allowed it to set the first of several official
world speed records, attaining on 15 September 1948, flown by Major
Richard L. Johnson. With the appearance of the MiG-15, the F-86 was rushed into combat, while straight-wing jets like the
Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star and
Republic F-84 Thunderjet were quickly relegated to ground attack missions. Some, such as the F-84 and
Grumman F-9 Cougar, were later redesigned with swept wings from straight-winged aircraft. Later planes, such as the
North American F-100 Super Sabre, would be designed with swept wings from the start, though additional innovations such as the afterburner, area-rule and new control surfaces would be necessary to master supersonic flight. The swept wing was applied to the
MiG-15, an early jet-powered fighter, its maximum speed of outclassed the straight-winged American jets and piston-engined fighters initially deployed during the
Korean War. The MiG-15 is believed to have been one of
the most produced jet aircraft; in excess of 13,000 would ultimately be manufactured. The MiG-15, which could not safely exceed Mach 0.92, served as the basis for the
MiG-17, which was designed to be controllable at higher Mach numbers. Its wing sweep, 45° near the fuselage ( the same as the
F-100 Super Sabre), changed to 42° for the outboard part of the wing. A further derivative of the design, designated
MiG-19, featured a relatively thin wing suited to supersonic flight that was designed at TsAGI, the Soviet
Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute; swept back at an angle of 55 degrees, this wing featured a single
wing fence on each side. A specialist high-altitude variant, the Mig-19SV, featured, amongst other changes, an adjustable flap to generate greater lift at higher altitudes, helping to increase the aircraft's ceiling from to . Germany's swept wing research was also obtained by the Swedish aircraft manufacturer
SAAB, with the help of ex-Messerschmitt engineers that had fled to
Switzerland during late 1945. At the time, SAAB saw the need to make aeronautical advances, particularly in the new field of jet propulsion. The company incorporated both the jet engine and the swept wing to produce the
Saab 29 Tunnan fighter; on 1 September 1948, the first prototype conducted its maiden flight, flown by the English test pilot
S/L Robert A. 'Bob' Moore,
DFC and bar, Although not well known outside Sweden, the Tunnan (lit. "The Barrel") was the first Western European fighter to be introduced with such a wing configuration. In parallel, SAAB also developed another swept wing aircraft, the
Saab 32 Lansen, primarily to serve as Sweden's standard attack aircraft. Its wing, which had a 10 per cent laminar profile and a 35° sweep, featured triangular fences near the
wing roots in order to improve airflow when the aircraft was being flown at a high
angle of attack. The successes of aircraft such as the Hawker Hunter, the B-47, and F-86 showed the value of the swept wing research acquired from Germany. Eventually, almost all advanced design efforts for high speed aircraft would incorporate a wing with a swept leading edge, with either a swept wing or
delta wing planform. The Boeing B-52, designed in the 1950s, continues in service as a subsonic long-range heavy bomber. While the Soviets never matched the performance of the
Boeing B-52 Stratofortress with a jet aircraft, the intercontinental range
Tupolev Tu-95 turboprop bomber with its near-jet class top speed of 920 km/h, combining swept wings with propeller propulsion, also remains in service today, being the fastest propeller-powered production aircraft. In Britain, two swept-wing bombers entered service, the
Vickers Valiant (1955) and the
Handley Page Victor (1958). By the early 1950s, nearly every new fighter had a swept wing. By the 1960s, most civilian jets also adopted swept wings. Most early transonic and supersonic designs such as the MiG-19 and F-100 used long, highly swept wings. Swept wings would reach Mach 2 on the BAC Lightning, and
Republic F-105 Thunderchief, built to operate at low level and very high speed primarily for nuclear strike, but with a secondary air-to-air capability. By the late 1960s, the
McDonnell F-4 Phantom II, was used in large numbers by air forces influenced by the United States. Variable geometry wings were employed on the American
F-111,
Grumman F-14 Tomcat and Soviet
Mikoyan MiG-27, although the idea would be abandoned for the American SST design. After the 1970s, most newer generation fighters optimized for maneuvering air combat since the USAF F-15 and Soviet
Mikoyan MiG-29 have employed relatively short-span fixed wings with relatively large wing area. ==See also==