XF-90: Lockheed’s Rugged Fighter Tested in the Nuclear Age

Share This Post

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Throughout the first period of the Cold War, the US had to face a big question about the way its bombers would manage to go deep into areas controlled by the enemy and protect themselves against faster enemy fighters, long-range missiles, and the general anxiety caused by the threat of nuclear war. One of the solutions to the riddle was the “penetration fighter”—a bomber’s companion, an aerial guard that would rescue the airspace from threats and then return to the base.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Lockheed’s response to this issue was the XF-90, designed at the Skunk Works legend by Kelly Johnson and Willis Hawkins.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Taking a lesson from the P-80 Shooting Star, the XF-90 was state-of-the-art in drawings: 35-degree swept wings, Fowler flaps, leading-edge slats, and a swept wings-afterburners-tip tanks combination novel to home production.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Its tail surfaces were adjustable in both directions, another innovative step forward.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

But engineering superiority had its price. The XF-90’s airframe was constructed from 75ST aluminum—stronger by far than the more conventional 24ST—but also considerably heavier.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

The consequence was an aircraft that would endure incredible forces, such as nuclear shock waves, but whose two Westinghouse J34 turbojets simply could not generate enough power.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Though the plane theoretically achieved 665 mph, with a range of 2,300 miles and a ceiling of 39,000 feet, it fell behind Air Force requirements and its competition.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Flight testing exposed its deficiencies. The XF-90 was able to break the sound barrier only in a dive, and even takeoff needed rocket-assisted boosters.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

It was compared unfavorably with competitors such as the McDonnell XF-88 and North American YF-93, as it was slow, clumsy, and underpowered.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

When the Air Force chose the XF-88 as its favored aircraft, the penetration fighter idea lost momentum as strategic needs changed and appropriations ended.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

But the XF-90 became oddly famous due to its unparalleled durability. One of the prototypes was subjected to stress tests at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, and the second one was shipped to the Nevada Test Site for nuclear weapons tests.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

The tests yielded surprising results: a one-kiloton explosion produced minor fractures only, a 33-kiloton explosion crumpled the nose but did not suffer catastrophic structural damage, and even a 19-kiloton explosion that ripped off the tail left the plane mostly intact.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Amazingly, engineers assessed that it would only take 106 hours to return the plane to airworthiness after the initial explosion.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Years later, the radiation-stained pieces of the XF-90 were unearthed, restored, and put on exhibit at the United States Air Force National Museum in Dayton, Ohio—a rare reminder of a jet that withstood three nuclear explosions.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Though it never saw active duty and failed to fulfill its intended mission, the XF-90 influenced future designs like the F-104 Starfighter. Its story demonstrates that even “failed” aircraft can push technological boundaries and that some machines are built tough enough to endure both battlefield stress and atomic fire.

Related Posts

12 Intense End-of-the-World Movies You Won’t Forget

Watching the collapse of society has a weirdly soothing...

10 Legendary Soap Operas That Made TV History

Soap operas are the ultimate TV guilty pleasure, messy,...

10 Landmark Black Films That Shaped Hollywood

Everyone is aware that black movies have never been...

15 Conspiracy Thrillers That Will Keep You Guessing

What is it about conspiracy thrillers that keeps us...

10 Spin-Offs That Grew Into Cultural Phenomena

Frankly, most TV spin-offs return disappointing results, and one...

9 Brilliant Miniseries on Max Worth Your Weekend

To be quite frank, I think the act of...