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Thread: Vultee XP-54 - Texture Artist Needed

  1. #151
    Mike Kelley's Paint Kit is now available for anyone wishing to sling some paint on this unique aircraft.

    You can find it here:

    http://www.sim-outhouse.com/sohforum...=22853&catid=3
    Milton Shupe
    FS9/FSX Modeler Hack

    My Uploads at SOH - Here
    Video Tutorials - Gmax for Beginners

  2. #152
    SOH-CM-2023 Hurricane91's Avatar
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    Hello Milton,
    You might check that pesky vc01_L.bmp in the FS9 package, it's alignment is slightly different than the
    panel's instrument placement.

    For a temporary workaround, I used the same texture from the XP-47J/XP-72. The texture you offered
    at post #121 should work also. Thanks.

    Best Regards,
    John

  3. #153
    Quote Originally Posted by Hurricane91 View Post
    Hello Milton,
    You might check that pesky vc01_L.bmp in the FS9 package, it's alignment is slightly different than the
    panel's instrument placement.

    For a temporary workaround, I used the same texture from the XP-47J/XP-72. The texture you offered
    at post #121 should work also. Thanks.

    Best Regards,
    John
    Hi John,

    Thanks for that heads-up. Not sure how that happened but it will be corrected along a few other minor issues in v1.1
    Milton Shupe
    FS9/FSX Modeler Hack

    My Uploads at SOH - Here
    Video Tutorials - Gmax for Beginners

  4. #154
    The archive has been updated to incorporate v1.1 changes that correct various issues as of August 5th, 2017.


    If you downloaded before August 4th, you may want to re-download to replace your current XP-54 folders.
    This is a full replacement update.


    Fixes include:


    Fuel gauge not working
    Minor texture issue on the 97 Bluebird
    Incorrect night time gauge backlighting texture VC01_L.bmp
    Two seats in the VC
    FSX Only - Remapped pitots
    Coolant (radiator) temp gauges in some liveries
    FS9 only - fix some textures that had MIPMaps included

    http://www.sim-outhouse.com/sohforum...6&linkid=22845
    Milton Shupe
    FS9/FSX Modeler Hack

    My Uploads at SOH - Here
    Video Tutorials - Gmax for Beginners

  5. #155
    Quote Originally Posted by Milton Shupe View Post
    The archive has been updated to incorporate v1.1 changes that correct various issues as of August 5th, 2017.


    If you downloaded before August 4th, you may want to re-download to replace your current XP-54 folders.
    This is a full replacement update.


    Fixes include:


    Fuel gauge not working
    Minor texture issue on the 97 Bluebird
    Incorrect night time gauge backlighting texture VC01_L.bmp
    Two seats in the VC
    FSX Only - Remapped pitots
    Coolant (radiator) temp gauges in some liveries
    FS9 only - fix some textures that had MIPMaps included

    http://www.sim-outhouse.com/sohforum...6&linkid=22845
    The v1.1 upload was actually the 5th of August. I mis-stated that in some places, as above.
    Milton Shupe
    FS9/FSX Modeler Hack

    My Uploads at SOH - Here
    Video Tutorials - Gmax for Beginners

  6. #156

    Vultee XP-54 - Texture Artist Needed

    Still having a lot of fun with this. Thanks Milton and team for another fantastic model! I was wondering what the Goose would have looked like with under wing fuel tanks and / or bombs. That would probably be problematic, dropping the tanks or bombs might have gotten tangled up in the propeller (unless set outside of the booms which might be structurally bad)!


    Oh, btw, I was only wondering, not asking for a new model......

  7. #157
    Quote Originally Posted by wbuchart View Post
    Still having a lot of fun with this. Thanks Milton and team for another fantastic model! I was wondering what the Goose would have looked like with under wing fuel tanks and / or bombs. That would probably be problematic, dropping the tanks or bombs might have gotten tangled up in the propeller (unless set outside of the booms which might be structurally bad)!


    Oh, btw, I was only wondering, not asking for a new model......
    Hi Bill,

    Happy that you are enjoying the Swoose Goose.

    The XP-54 was never intended or designed to carry bombs or external tanks. it was only to be a high speed fighter.

    Here's the original armament specs:

    Armament: Proposed
    Two 37mm T-12/T-13 cannon
    Ammunition: 60 rounds per gun.
    Two .50 M2 machine guns
    Ammunition: 500 rounds per gun.


    On November 27, 1939 the USAAC issued Circular Proposal R-40C, which called for a fighter that would be much more effective than any extant--with a top speed, rate of climb, maneuverability, armament, and pilot visibility, all of which would be far superior to those of any existing fighter. In addition, the fighter was required to have a low initial cost and had to be easy and inexpensive to maintain. The Army specifically mentioned in R-40C that they would consider aircraft with unconventional configurations.
    No less than 50 responses came in. Many of them were quickly ruled out, but by the end of 1940, four designs were considered sufficiently worthy of further study. These were designs submitted by Bell, by Curtiss, by Northrop, and by Vultee.
    The Vultee Aircraft Corporation's only previous venture into fighter design had been the Model 48 Vanguard, which had been unsuccessful in attracting any Army production contracts. Nevertheless, Richard Palmer's team at Vultee came up with the proposal which was judged the best of the entrants. An initial Army contract covering engineering data and wind tunnel models was issued on June 22, 1940. A contract for one prototype was issued on January 8, 1941 under the designation XP-54. The serial was 41-1210. A second XP-54 was ordered on March 17, 1942, with the serial 42-108994 being assigned.
    However, photographs of the second XP-54 exist with the tail number 11211 painted on the fins, which implies that its serial was 41-1211, which would make both planes having consecutive serial numbers, even when ordered more than a year apart. Moreover, 41-1211 conflicts with a serial number allocated to a BT-13A Valiant basic trainer. It appears that the explanation of the discrepancy is a simple printing error in painting the second XP-54 and that its serial really was 42-108994. According to Ray Wagner, the second XP-54 took off on its first flight with the faulty tail number 11211 painted on its fin. However by the time of the second flight, the serial had been replaced with the correct 2108994.
    The XP-54, designated Model 84 by Vultee, was a twin-boom, low-mounted, inverted gull-wing monoplane powered by an engine mounted in pusher configuration. The engine was to be the Pratt & Whitney X-1800-A4G (military designation H-2600) twenty-four cylinder liquid-cooled engine offering a power output of 1850 hp and driving a set of contra-rotating pusher propellers. The Model 84 was actually an outgrowth of an earlier Vultee proposal known as Model 78, which had a similar configuration but was to be powered by a unsupercharged Allison V-1710 liquid-cooled engine. The single-seat cockpit was cited in the center section of the bullet-shaped fuselage. Magnesium alloy construction was to be used throughout the fuselage. A tricycle landing gear was fitted, with the nosewheel retracting into the fuselage and the mainwheels retracting into the booms.
    The center wing section was designed around the newly-developed NACA "ducted wing", in which the airflow was taken in via narrow slots in the wing leading edge and directed over the oil and coolant radiators and then to the intercoolers and eventually fed into the engine via ducts in the wing trailing edge. The landing flaps were so designed that their secondary function was to regulate the airflow through the coolers. This innovation made it possible to house the coolant radiators and the intercooler entirely within the wings.
    The original mission of the XP-54 was envisaged to be low- and medium-altitude combat. Six 0.50-inch machine guns were to be mounted in the nose. The estimated maximum weight was 11,500 pounds, and maximum speed was expected to be no less than 510 mph at 20,000 feet, taking six minutes to reach that altitude.
    On September 7, 1940, the USAAC announced to Vultee that they were changing the mission of the XP-54 from that of low-level combat to that of high-altitude bomber interceptor. This change necessitated the development of a pressurized cockpit and the installation of turbosupercharging equipment. Armament was changed to a pair of 37-mm T-12/T-13 cannon with 60 rpg and twin 0.50-in M2 machine guns with 500 rpg, all mounted in the nose. The Army also required the fitting of heavy armor protection for the engine and pilot. All of these changes caused the estimate gross weight to creep up to 18,000 pounds.
    The pressurized cockpit requirement, combined with the considerable height of the aircraft from the ground, made cockpit entry and exit a problem. In order to attack these problems, a unique solution was evolved--a pilot seat which functioned as an elevator. In order to enter the aircraft, the seat was electrically lowered from the bottom of the aircraft by a switch mounted on the outside of the plane. The pilot would sit down on the seat, throw a switch, and the seat would electrically raise itself up into the aircraft until it reached the flight position. Flight control cables were routed around the opening in the floor, and an inverted U-column was used to support the pilot's control wheel. This ventral access was also valuable in that it made possible the design of a fixed cockpit canopy, which simplified the problem of making a pressure-tight seal. In an emergency (assuming sufficient altitude were available), the elevator seat assembly would be catapulted downward clear of the propeller, making the XP-54 the first American fighter to be fitted with an ejector seat.
    The nacelle-type fuselage incorporated yet another unusual feature. Because of the different muzzle velocities of the cannon and machine guns, the entire nose section was moveable so that direction of fire of the machine guns could be elevated by as much as three degrees or depressed by as much as six degrees without changing the flight attitude. The cannon were fixed and did not move. The movement of the nose section and the machine guns was controlled by a special compensating gunsight. The management of these differentially- pointing guns probably would have been a real nightmare.
    In October 1940, Pratt & Whitney discontinued all work on its X-1800 engine, and Vultee decided to substitute the 2200 hp twenty-four cylinder liquid-cooled Lycoming XH-2470 in its place. The Lycoming engine was still under development for the Navy at the time. The Lycoming engine was to be fitted with a turbosupercharger, in view of the XP-54's newly-assigned high-altitude role.
    With all of these changes, it came as no surprise that the delivery date slipped substantially from the promised date of July 1942. The first XP-54 (41-1210) did not, in fact, fly until January 15, 1943, when test pilot Frank Davis took it for a 31-minute flight from Muroc Dry Lake (now Edwards AFB). This flight went fairly uneventful except for the malfunction of the Curtiss propeller. The faulty propeller was subsequently replaced by a Hamilton-Standard unit. By March 11, ten flights had been made, but it was clear that performance was substantially below that which was guaranteed. In addition, the engine showed metal traces in the oil, and the aircraft was returned to Downey for an engine change. 86 more flights were carried out at Ontario AFB, California, and on October 28, the XP-54 was flown to Wright Field for service testing. However, the Lycoming engine again developed serious problems, and the entire engine had to be returned to the manufacturer for repairs. Repair costs turned out to be prohibitive, and the engine had to be scrapped.
    Some sources claim that the XP-54 was known under the popular name "Swoose Goose" while it was at Wright Field. The name came from the fact that the XP-54 looked like a goose when it was flying, and the "Swoose" part of the name is a misspelling of the word "Swiss".
    By late 1943, the continual troubles with the Lycoming H-2470 engine had led the Navy to abandon the entire program. The XP-54 was therefore left without an engine. A proposal to adapt the Wright R-2160 Tornado radial engine to fit the XP-54 airframe was briefly considered, the project being redesignated P-68. However the Tornado engine also failed to achieve production, and the P-68 project was abandoned. Although it appeared possible to install the Allison W-3420 in the XP-54 without major structural changes, the delay and expense involved in making such a change resulted in the decision being made not to try to introduce the XP-54 into quantity production. There was even thought given to the installation of a jet engine in the XP-54 airframe, but such a proposal was rejected on the grounds of cost.
    The second XP-54 (42-108994) was delayed by the need to change from two Wright turbosuperchargers to a single experimental General Electric XCM model. Consequently, by the time it was ready for flight, all hope of quantity production of the XP-54 had been abandoned. The second XP-54 finally took to the air on May 24, 1944, when it was taken on a 20-minute flight from Downey to Ontario, California. It flew nine more times, its last flight being on Apr 2, 1945. The engine/turbosupercharger combination was found to be unsatisfactory and they were returned to the manufacturer. Although another engine was fitted to the second XP-54, it was never flown again. The nose section was sent to Elgin AFB for armament tests (the guns were never fired from the air). The rest of the airframe was scrapped.
    The first XP-54 was static tested to destruction at Wright Field.
    The XP-54 was the last project that the Vultee corporation carried out for the USAAF under its own name. In June 1943, Vultee Aircraft, Inc. merged with Consolidated to form Consolidated Vultee Aircraft Corporation. Although the name of the new conglomerate was contracted to "Convair" internally, this name was not officially registered until 1954 when Convair became a division of General Dynamics.
    Specs of the XP-54:
    Maximum speed: 381 mph at 28,500 feet, 290 mph at sea level. Initial climb rate: 2300 feet per minute. Climb to 32,100 feet in 27.7 minutes. Service ceiling: 37,000 feet. Weights were 15,262 pounds empty, 18,233 pounds normal loaded, and 19,337 pounds maximum. Dimensions were wingspan 53 feet 10 inches, length 54 feet 8 3/4 inches, height 14 feet 6 inches, and wing area 455.5 square feet.
    Type: High-altitude Interceptor
    Origin: Vultee
    Crew: One
    Model: XP-54, Model 84
    First Flight:
    First Prototype: January 15, 1943
    Second Prototype: May 24, 1944
    Production: 2 Prototypes
    ________________________________________
    Powerplant:
    Model: Lycoming XH-2470-1
    Type: Liquid-cooled engine
    Number: One Horsepower: 2,300 hp
    ________________________________________
    Dimensions:
    Wing span: 53 ft. 10 in.
    Length: 54 ft. 8.75 in.
    Height: 14 ft. 6 in.
    Lifting Surface Area: 455.5 sq. ft. Weights:
    Empty: 15,262 lb.
    Loaded: 18,233 lb.
    Maximum: 19,337 lb.
    Performance:
    Maximum Speed:
    381 mph at 28,300 ft.
    290 mph at sea level
    Initial Climb Rate: 2,300 ft./min.
    Service Ceiling: 37,000 ft.
    Time to 32,100 ft.: 27.7 minutes
    ________________________________________
    Armament: Proposed
    Two 37mm T-12/T-13 cannon
    Ammunition: 60 rounds per gun.
    Two .50 M2 machine guns
    Ammunition: 500 rounds per gun.
    Milton Shupe
    FS9/FSX Modeler Hack

    My Uploads at SOH - Here
    Video Tutorials - Gmax for Beginners

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