This is the place where the majority of the warbird (aircraft that have survived military service) discussions will take place. Specialized forums may be added in the new future
Post a reply

P-75A Eagle

Mon Jan 29, 2007 1:52 pm

Here are a few pics of the XP-75 Eagle. Enjoy! :D

Image

Image

Image
Last edited by PhantomAce08 on Mon Jan 29, 2007 4:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Mon Jan 29, 2007 1:55 pm

That plane has to bring a smile to your face :lol: It is kinda like seeing a clown.

Any progress on the NMUSAF's example? It looks complete (I saw it a few years ago). Every update I have heard was that it was *almost* ready.

Mon Jan 29, 2007 2:44 pm

Image

Taken last spring

Shay
____________
Semper Fortis

Mon Jan 29, 2007 3:19 pm

They are currently dressing it up right now. It is going to be great looking when it is finished. I heard Spring for the roll out.

P-75

Mon Jan 29, 2007 3:38 pm

I always wondered how this thing got beyond the design stage - or, for that matter, how it got beyond the "drawing on a cocktail napkin" stage :? .

Mon Jan 29, 2007 3:41 pm

If you look at it, it is actually a bunch of other aircraft parts thrown together. There are parts form the p-40, F4u, P-51, and SBD.

Mon Jan 29, 2007 3:43 pm

mustangdriver wrote:If you look at it, it is actually a bunch of other aircraft parts thrown together. There are parts form the p-40, F4u, P-51, and SBD.


Looks like a new build Reno Racer! Has enough parts for one.

Regards,
Mike

Fisher P-75A Eagle

Mon Jan 29, 2007 3:48 pm

Hi--

To nitpick...this isn't the XP-75, it's the production model P-75A Eagle. The XP was a genuine freak, being an amalgam of parts from aircraft already in production--wings and canopy were P-40, aft end was SBD Dauntless, main gear was F4U. Constructed by the Fisher auto-body division of General Motors. Interesting idea, and it flew more or less okay, but (perhaps unsurprisingly) its performance wasn't a match for airplanes of less "mongrel" origins! Fisher revised the design into an all-new type, the P-75A, and a handful were built for evaluation, one of which, improbably enough, survives. I think it's a striking-looking beast, and wonder how it might have done with a turboprop engine...

Incidentally, a peculiar footnote: there's a gap in the P-series designations just before the Fisher Eagle project. There's no P-73 or P-74, even among unbuilt projects. Retrospectively, however, those two numbers seem occasionally to get assigned to the USAAF's "reverse Lend Lease" Beaufighters (P-73) and Spitfires (P-74). Anyone have a handle on when those references began to be made??

S.

Re: Fisher P-75A Eagle

Mon Jan 29, 2007 4:05 pm

Steve T wrote:Hi--

To nitpick...this isn't the XP-75, it's the production model P-75A Eagle. The XP was a genuine freak, being an amalgam of parts from aircraft already in production--wings and canopy were P-40, aft end was SBD Dauntless, main gear was F4U. Constructed by the Fisher auto-body division of General Motors. Interesting idea, and it flew more or less okay, but (perhaps unsurprisingly) its performance wasn't a match for airplanes of less "mongrel" origins! Fisher revised the design into an all-new type, the P-75A, and a handful were built for evaluation, one of which, improbably enough, survives. I think it's a striking-looking beast, and wonder how it might have done with a turboprop engine...

Incidentally, a peculiar footnote: there's a gap in the P-series designations just before the Fisher Eagle project. There's no P-73 or P-74, even among unbuilt projects. Retrospectively, however, those two numbers seem occasionally to get assigned to the USAAF's "reverse Lend Lease" Beaufighters (P-73) and Spitfires (P-74). Anyone have a handle on when those references began to be made??

S.


Are you saying that my photos are of the P-75A and not of the XP-75 or are you talking about the one at the Air Force Museum? I'm pretty sure when I scanned them that they said XP-75 but they could have been wrong. Thanks!

Mon Jan 29, 2007 4:21 pm

Sasnak wrote:Look here for a picture of an XP-75: http://aeroweb.brooklyn.cuny.edu/specs/fisher/xp-75.htm

Click on the photo to enlarge. You can clearly see the tail of the SBD and the difference in the canopy.


Ah... thank you for the correction. I have changed the subject to be correct. :D

Mon Jan 29, 2007 7:59 pm

I just had to do it...it was getting too hard to look at.

I call her the V-75 Viagranator!!:wink:

Image

Mon Jan 29, 2007 8:22 pm

the frankenstein of warbirds.... pieces from other dead carcasses
Post a reply