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Su-57 convertible

AllAmerican75

FUBIJAR
None
Contributor
widespread Helix has no such system.

What a strange helicopter design. I've always thought it was kind of cool with the contra-rotating blades and quad-wheel undercarriage.

Kamov_KA-27_Helix_helicopter.JPEG


The various design bureaus came up with some interesting designs.
 

Pags

N/A
pilot
What a strange helicopter design. I've always thought it was kind of cool with the contra-rotating blades and quad-wheel undercarriage.

Kamov_KA-27_Helix_helicopter.JPEG


The various design bureaus came up with some interesting designs.
What I always find interesting from the Cold War is that if you look at designs from USA and USSR at the same time you can see that there are a lot of parallels in concepts that are explored and the divergence doesn't come until it's time to bend metal. For instance, the SU-25 is very similar to the A-9 that lost out to the A-10. You can see that the two disparate design teams came up with many similar paper designs and for whatever reason (culture, doctrine, etc) took different paths.
 

Griz882

Frightening children with the Griz-O-Copter!
pilot
Contributor
What I always find interesting from the Cold War is that if you look at designs from USA and USSR at the same time you can see that there are a lot of parallels in concepts that are explored and the divergence doesn't come until it's time to bend metal. For instance, the SU-25 is very similar to the A-9 that lost out to the A-10. You can see that the two disparate design teams came up with many similar paper designs and for whatever reason (culture, doctrine, etc) took different paths.
Too true. Here is our Huskie...see anything familiar?

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AllAmerican75

FUBIJAR
None
Contributor
What I always find interesting from the Cold War is that if you look at designs from USA and USSR at the same time you can see that there are a lot of parallels in concepts that are explored and the divergence doesn't come until it's time to bend metal. For instance, the SU-25 is very similar to the A-9 that lost out to the A-10. You can see that the two disparate design teams came up with many similar paper designs and for whatever reason (culture, doctrine, etc) took different paths.

Yes, exactly! The differences in design orthodoxies is really interesting to see. There are entire programs that were cut simply because they were too far outside of those traditional design decisions. It always seemed like the Soviets and Germans were more willing to embrace radical concepts while Americans were more concerned with evolutionary design changes. For instance, this weird helo design which lost to the Apache:
 

Pags

N/A
pilot
Yes, exactly! The differences in design orthodoxies is really interesting to see. There are entire programs that were cut simply because they were too far outside of those traditional design decisions. It always seemed like the Soviets and Germans were more willing to embrace radical concepts while Americans were more concerned with evolutionary design changes. For instance, this weird helo design which lost to the Apache:
Some of that may be because of the PM/engineering culture that Max mentioned earlier. There's no contractor in the US who could tell the users "you'll take what I made and like it!" So maybe Russian designs are more pure engineering decisions. Or maybe they just chose differently because of valid DOTMLPF type reasons that make sense for Russians but not not for us.

At a very basic level the differences can be summed up by the differences in attitude indicators in aircraft. In the western world the little W airplanes stays still and the attitude moves. In Soviet russian the little airplane moves and and the world stays put. Both get the job done and there are arguments for and against both instantiations. Neither is wrong, just different.
 

Pags

N/A
pilot
Yes, exactly! The differences in design orthodoxies is really interesting to see. There are entire programs that were cut simply because they were too far outside of those traditional design decisions. It always seemed like the Soviets and Germans were more willing to embrace radical concepts while Americans were more concerned with evolutionary design changes. For instance, this weird helo design which lost to the Apache:
Also, the AH-56 did not lose to the Apache. The AH-56 was at least a generation before the AH-64 and arguably paved the way for the AH-64. The AH-56 was ahead of it's time and the technology couldn't meet the schedule requirements.
 

Max the Mad Russian

Hands off Ukraine! Feet too
For instance, the SU-25 is very similar to the A-9 that lost out to the A-10.

Indeed. For short, Air Force was suffering from the ineffectiveness of supersonic "fighter-bomber" doctrine in CAS and BAI fields, heated by constant Army complains "you fuckers again missed with all your bombs" and asked for nothing else than "IL-2 with modern radio". SU-25 is good enough but is not much better than say A-4 when it comes to MANPAD heat seekers: two engines is just a warranty for return when one of them is knocked out. All in all, the best "Il-2 with modern radio" is indeed A-10.
 
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Max the Mad Russian

Hands off Ukraine! Feet too
Or maybe they just chose differently because of valid DOTMLPF type reasons that make sense for Russians but not not for us.

Oh yes, Ds and Os from this acronym are in constant contradiction here, since tribalism within Soviet military was utterly relevant thing, almost ruling all possible "joint" warfare out.
 

AllAmerican75

FUBIJAR
None
Contributor
Also, the AH-56 did not lose to the Apache. The AH-56 was at least a generation before the AH-64 and arguably paved the way for the AH-64. The AH-56 was ahead of it's time and the technology couldn't meet the schedule requirements.

Thanks for the clarification. The video made it seem like the Army was evaluating the two.
 

Max the Mad Russian

Hands off Ukraine! Feet too
It always seemed like the Soviets and Germans were more willing to embrace radical concepts
But for different reasons: Germans are sure their engineering skills could provide proper usage of no-matter-how-complicated designs, that is why the training process in German armed forces is so amazingly long and intense and they always put a well-oiled crew where it is possible instead of sigle-person operated combat machine, and at least one member of this crew will be called Engineer; we in turn believe that motivated operator could get all he needs from what he has in hand, that is why our designers prefer to stuff the machine down with all possible abilities, often contradictory, with hope that operator will chose what he wants now at the expence of all the other from the range.
But when it comes to something completely new, often it is in close parallelles: look at the first SSBNs of USN and Soviet Navy:
27667 and 27668 as the manifestation of the importance of old good snatching: who stole from whom?;) Indeed our nickname of Yankee-class is the answer: we called them "Ivan Washington"
 

Griz882

Frightening children with the Griz-O-Copter!
pilot
Contributor
But for different reasons: Germans are sure their engineering skills could provide proper usage of no-matter-how-complicated designs, that is why the training process in German armed forces is so amazingly long and intense and they always put a well-oiled crew where it is possible instead of sigle-person operated combat machine, and at least one member of this crew will be called Engineer; we in turn believe that motivated operator could get all he needs from what he has in hand, that is why our designers prefer to stuff the machine down with all possible abilities, often contradictory, with hope that operator will chose what he wants now at the expence of all the other from the range.
But when it comes to something completely new, often it is in close parallelles: look at the first SSBNs of USN and Soviet Navy:
View attachment 27667 and View attachment 27668 as the manifestation of the importance of old good snatching: who stole from whom?;) Indeed our nickname of Yankee-class is the answer: we called them "Ivan Washington"
Both Soviets and US engineers were leaning on “liberated” design plans for a next generation Nazi boat. The US plan was redefined and tested in a wind tunnel. The result was the unarmed U.S.S. Albacore launched in 1953. You can visit her in Portsmouth NH. The Soviets didn’t put a teardrop hull in the water until the Bravo in the 1960’s.
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Pags

N/A
pilot
But for different reasons: Germans are sure their engineering skills could provide proper usage of no-matter-how-complicated designs, that is why the training process in German armed forces is so amazingly long and intense and they always put a well-oiled crew where it is possible instead of sigle-person operated combat machine, and at least one member of this crew will be called Engineer; we in turn believe that motivated operator could get all he needs from what he has in hand, that is why our designers prefer to stuff the machine down with all possible abilities, often contradictory, with hope that operator will chose what he wants now at the expence of all the other from the range.
But when it comes to something completely new, often it is in close parallelles: look at the first SSBNs of USN and Soviet Navy:
View attachment 27667 and View attachment 27668 as the manifestation of the importance of old good snatching: who stole from whom?;) Indeed our nickname of Yankee-class is the answer: we called them "Ivan Washington"
But the Russians were the first to put a ballistic missile on a sub with the Zulu and Golf boats. The Germans had toyed with the idea of launching a V-2 from a sub but it never made it out of paper design. The IJN's I-400 was maybe the initial SSGN?
 

Griz882

Frightening children with the Griz-O-Copter!
pilot
Contributor
But the Russians were the first to put a ballistic missile on a sub with the Zulu and Golf boats. The Germans had toyed with the idea of launching a V-2 from a sub but it never made it out of paper design. The IJN's I-400 was maybe the initial SSGN?
Operation Teardrop was launched because the allies thought the Germans had a system ready. Interesting thought about the IJN I-400.
 

Gatordev

Well-Known Member
pilot
Site Admin
Contributor
Some of that may be because of the PM/engineering culture that Max mentioned earlier.

Come on, let's not be naive. Another major reason designs looked similar is because designs were being stolen. Of course if you don't have the whole picture, you have to fill in the gaps, which I'm sure is why the details are different.

At a very basic level the differences can be summed up by the differences in attitude indicators in aircraft. In the western world the little W airplanes stays still and the attitude moves. In Soviet russian the little airplane moves and and the world stays put. Both get the job done and there are arguments for and against both instantiations. Neither is wrong, just different.

And the French/Germans. I still have no freaking clue which way I'm supposed to move the trim now until I start to move it and see if it's going the way I want it. It works, just not what I'm used to.
 
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