VNugget
suck squeeze bang blow
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2002
- Posts
- 809
You can read about it in detail here, but here is the summary.
Apparently, the first jet airplane (kind of) was developed and flown NOT during WWII, and Heinkel et al. had nothing to do with it. It was built and flown in 1910 by Henri Coanda, a Romanian aerodynamicist who studied in Germany and France. Apparently the reason it doesn’t “count” is that it did not use a turbine – the compressor was turned by a plain old 4-stroke reciprocating engine, running at 1000 RPM and geared at a 1:4 ratio. (The “throttle” was an iris/camera aperture-like opening in front of the compressor.)
It crashed on its first flight, interestingly enough because Coanda was not a pilot. He merely wished to test the engine, but it was so powerful that the plane took off. Further development ceased due to a lack of funding.
WHY IS THIS NOT IN THE HISTORY BOOKS?
But wait – it gets better!
As a byproduct of his development, discovered the real reason wings develop lift at high lift coefficients (called, you guessed it, the Coanda effect) by observing that the flames from the jet hugged the fuselage instead of deflecting to the side, like he intended with a system of curved baffles. This is, curiously enough, missing from every aerodynamics textbook and syllabus I have come across.
Very interesting indeed.
edit: More here and here.
Apparently, the first jet airplane (kind of) was developed and flown NOT during WWII, and Heinkel et al. had nothing to do with it. It was built and flown in 1910 by Henri Coanda, a Romanian aerodynamicist who studied in Germany and France. Apparently the reason it doesn’t “count” is that it did not use a turbine – the compressor was turned by a plain old 4-stroke reciprocating engine, running at 1000 RPM and geared at a 1:4 ratio. (The “throttle” was an iris/camera aperture-like opening in front of the compressor.)

It crashed on its first flight, interestingly enough because Coanda was not a pilot. He merely wished to test the engine, but it was so powerful that the plane took off. Further development ceased due to a lack of funding.
WHY IS THIS NOT IN THE HISTORY BOOKS?
But wait – it gets better!
As a byproduct of his development, discovered the real reason wings develop lift at high lift coefficients (called, you guessed it, the Coanda effect) by observing that the flames from the jet hugged the fuselage instead of deflecting to the side, like he intended with a system of curved baffles. This is, curiously enough, missing from every aerodynamics textbook and syllabus I have come across.
Very interesting indeed.
edit: More here and here.
Last edited: