Early work , 1952 Prior to August 1945, the Vultee Division of Consolidated-Vultee looked at the possibility of a swept-wing aircraft powered by a ducted rocket. Years earlier, the company had performed designs which involved liquid-cooled radiator engines. With this design, fuel would be added to the heat produced by small rocket engines in the duct, creating a "pseudo-
ramjet". In August 1945, the
United States Army Air Forces (USAAF), soon to be renamed the
United States Air Force, issued a proposal for a supersonic interceptor capable of speeds and reaching an altitude of in four minutes. Several companies responded, among which was Consolidated-Vultee, which submitted its design on 13 October 1945.
Switch to delta Convair found that by straightening the trailing edge and increasing the sweep of the leading edge, the characteristics of their new wing were greatly improved. Thus, contrary to suggestions that German designer
Alexander Lippisch influenced it, Convair independently discovered the thin high-speed delta wing. Ralph Shick, chief of aerodynamic research, later met Lippisch at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. This helped to convince him that the thin delta was the way forward, however the influence of Lippisch provided no more than "moral support" and Convair rejected many of his ideas, such as the thick wing of the
Lippisch P.13a project and the
DM-1 test glider which the US had tested.
Delta research In order to gain inflight experience with the delta wing layout, Convair suggested building a smaller prototype, the
Model 7002, which the USAAF accepted in November 1946. In order to save development time and money, many components were taken from other aircraft; the main gear was taken from a
North American FJ-1 Fury, the nosewheel from a
Bell P-63 Kingcobra, the engine and hydraulics were taken from a
Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star, the ejection seat and cockpit canopy were taken from the cancelled
Convair XP-81, and the rudder pedals were taken from a BT-13 trainer. Construction was well underway at Vultee Field in
Downey, California when
North American Aviation took over the Vultee plants in summer 1947. The airframe was moved to Convair's plant in
San Diego, and completed in the autumn. In December it was shipped without an engine to
NACA's
Ames Aeronautical Laboratory for wind tunnel testing. After testing was completed, the airframe was returned to San Diego, where it was fitted with a
Allison J33-A-21 engine. By the time the aircraft was ready for testing, the concept of the
point-defense interceptor seemed outdated and the (now redesignated) F-92 project was cancelled; the test aircraft was nevertheless completed as the
XF-92A. ==Operational history==