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D-558-1 Skystreak Ship Number 1in Assembly
D-558-1 Skystreak on Static Display
First D-558-1 Skystreak in Assembly
D-558-1 Skystreaks on Static Display
D-558-1 Skystreaks on Static Display
D-558-1 Skystreak #1 is Towed out of its Construction Hangar
D-558-1 Skystreak Battery Compartment
D-558-1 Skystreak 2 in Assembly
D-558-1 Skystreak on the Ground
D-558-1 Skystreak on the Ground
D-558-1 Skystreak on the Ground
D-558-1 Skystreak Ship #2 Jettisonable Nose Section
D-558-1 Skystreak 2 Fuselage Sections Awaiting Final Body Join
D-558-1 Skystreak on the Ground
D-558-1 Skystreak Static Thrust Engine Test
Nose Landing Gear on D-558-1 Skystreak Ship Number One
Second D-558-2 Skyrocket in Assembly
D-558-1 Skystreak on the Ground
First D-558-2 Skyrocket Rollout with Flush Canopy
D-558-2 Skyrocket on Tarmac
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D-558-1 Skystreaks, Ship #1 in Rear and Static Fuselage in Front
The D-558-1 was developed by the Douglas Aircraft Company at its El Segundo (California) Division in the 1940s. The basic design philosophy was to build the smallest plane around the most powerful turbine engine available. To mitigate as much risk as possible, the team kept the design simple, using a conventional straight wing rather than the then new, and mostly unproven swept wing. The 5,000-lb.-thrust (22-kilonewton) Allison J35-A-11 engine filled the fuselage, leaving just enough room to house instrumentation and a pilot in a cramped cockpit. Because of the lack of knowledge about the survivability of a high-altitude, highspeed bailout, Douglas engineers designed a jettisonable nose section that could protect the pilot until a safe bailout speed was reached.
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Unique identifier
BI229507
Boeing ID
es59933
Type
Image
Size
2686px × 2061px 5MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1940s
airplanes
buildings
day
factories
full body views
fuselages
ground shots
historic production status
interiors
jets
manufacturing
military
military livery
monoplanes
nobody
photos
repetition
research/experimental
right rear views
right side views
scanned from film negative
structural systems
text
viewed from above
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