The Coanda 1910, the first step towards jet propulsion
Posted by Tythatguy1312@reddit | WeirdWings | View on Reddit | 48 comments
This Gorious French-Romanian design somehow dates to 1910, and used what is essentially a motorjet for propulsion, coupled to a 50hp engine with both mounted in front of the pilot. It was a dangerous arrangement, honestly I’m not convinced it could actually fly, but it did move under its own power… straight into a wall. Whilst on fire. This is a replica, to clarify.
PrimaryMeeting4297@reddit
It looks like something I'd make in Simple Planes
lirecela@reddit
Those wing's airfoil look way too modern for 1910, anachronistic.
Shaun_Jones@reddit
This was the first ever aircraft to have fuel tanks in the wings.
clevertulips@reddit
1910, 0people. Jet engine. Romanian scientist.
PatchesMaps@reddit
I don't think a tractor configured ducted fan/blower thing qualifies as the first step toward jet propulsion. A step maybe but not a very big one.
decafade9@reddit
Yeah I'd have to agree. Also the OP describes it as a motorjet which it may have been referred to at some point but in modern terms a motorjet is quite different.
A motorjet uses a ICE engine to run a compressor which compresses the airflow which then has fuel added to it and burnt to generate thrust.
Uranium-Sandwich657@reddit
It has a foreskin!
winchester_mcsweet@reddit
I just watched a YouTube video on this aircraft today, very interesting design!
MisterGlo764@reddit
Found and explained?
LeTop007@reddit
I think the reason why this posts exists is because of that video lol.
cloudubious@reddit
Yeah, I watch Rex's Hangar, too.
LeTop007@reddit
That's actually Found and Explained, not Rex's Hangar.
cloudubious@reddit
I get those mixed up a lot.
Remarkable_Salt6681@reddit
Both channels disd cover that subject. The screenshot is clearly from F&E
Fabio_451@reddit
Me to my Romanian girlfriend, when we lamded at Coamda airport: "oh my god, this country is home to Coanda, Romanians are so cool!"
mz_groups@reddit
When it comes to Eastern European countries and aerodynamicists, I'm biased toward Hungary (for Theodore von Karman)
Fabio_451@reddit
Von Karman is the goat...but one day a professor of mine did a lesson on Kolmogorov....mind blowing
mz_groups@reddit
Sounds a bit like the Russian version of von Neumann.
vukasin123king@reddit
I'm biased towards Kingdom of Yugoslavia. There was a significant amount of Russian engineers immigrating after WW1 which resulted in a ton of insane designs, like the Aerostratoplan and an entire airforce squadron being equipped with autogyros.
mz_groups@reddit
Ooh, that might be a night's google activity.
xerberos@reddit
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coand%C4%83-1910
I'm gonna pass on this one, thanks.
YoungMasterWilliam@reddit
This is the next iteration of that design.
Which honestly looks equal parts terrifying and awesome.
ceelose@reddit
Looks like fun.
lavardera@reddit
So the pilot sat all the way back there spinning those wheels?
Was there another guy up front shoveling coal into the burner?
CapitanianExtinction@reddit
I feel like the pilot might get blown right out of the cockpit
Or barbequed.
Or both
Harpies_Bro@reddit
Beeeg ducted fan. You are gonna get a face full of 1910 gasoline fumes, though.
OldWrangler9033@reddit
Looks like their riding on the barrel section vs getting into it. It does look deadly flying candle stick. Did this recreation fly?
NassauTropicBird@reddit
OldWrangler9033@reddit
Guy going get blasted from that Thrust
NassauTropicBird@reddit
How is that much different from having a prop up front?
OldWrangler9033@reddit
Well, this thing is a Jet.
Freddan_81@reddit
It is a ducted fan powered by a piston engine. It is not much different than sitting behind the prop of any other open cockpit propeller plane.
NassauTropicBird@reddit
Well, how is that much different from having a prop up front?
Never mind, I won't be able to explain it.
GlockAF@reddit
Only by Professor Mustard, in the study…
chandris@reddit
psunavy03@reddit
"And monkey's brains, though popular in Cantonese cuisine, are not often to be found in Washington, DC."
Desembler@reddit
As I recall the turbine doesn't compress anything, it's just sort of a regular propeller with a weird cowling.
psunavy03@reddit
AKA a ducted fan.
AnActualTroll@reddit
Yeah he basically just made a weird experimental ducted/shrouded propeller that didn’t proved to be a good idea and then decades later he lied and claimed to have invented the jet engine
WhoRoger@reddit
Just watching the video earlier today https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHIOJYrgjH8
FourteenTwenty-Seven@reddit
According to Wikipedia:
Seems like it was just a ducted fan that he tried to retcon.
earthforce_1@reddit
This aircraft was uncircumcised.
Diogenes256@reddit
Yet another “Okay cool, but you first.” design.
NassauTropicBird@reddit
I'm almost surprised it doesn't say ACME on the side.
curious-chineur@reddit
There is more to be attributed to Henri Coanda. The name sounded familiar, so I went other Web.
The Coanda effect is about a law that increase The lift when the airflow follow curve surface please see wikipedia.
Maybe also why ut ringed à Bell, it the basisbof à dyson hair product that I purchased to my wife for xmas 2024 or 2023 I don't remember
All in all, Henri Coanda was a true pionner of flight I guess.
I low need to look up that plane in more détails !
curious-chineur@reddit
I idid some reading. Quite a topic...
shmoogleshmaggle@reddit
Shouts to Found and Explained, who just did another great video on this plane. The tail fins and controls are almost as wild as the motor jet itself
Rip_Topper@reddit
An absolute unit