World's First VTOL Airplane Convair/Navy XFY-1 Pogo

962288

11/18/1996

Event
SAE International Powered Lift Conference and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
The Convair/Navy XFY-1 VTOL fighter was ahead of its time. In the early 1950s it became the first airplane to take off vertically, hover, transition to high speed level flight, transition back to hover, and land vertically. Pilot “Skeets” Coleman made a number of successful flights at Moffett Field South of San Francisco, at Brown Field near the California/Mexican border, and at San Diego's Lindbergh Field. This “first of a kind” aircraft soon adopted the name “POGO”.
The POGO with its stall proof delta wing had near perfect aerodynamic characteristics in hover, transition and level flight. There were no “black boxes” needed for stability augmentation. The POGO was one of the very first aircraft to use hydraulic power flight controls - a system used today on all modern fighter and transport aircraft.
To accommodate both vertical and horizontal flight, the pilot's seat rotated to align the pilot with his engine controls, his control stick and rudder pedals, and to provide the best possible pilot vision. As it turned out, the pilot's over the shoulder vision for judging altitude, sink rate and roll rate during hover descent to touchdown was not the best.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/962288
Pages
6
Citation
Chana, W., and Coleman, J., "World's First VTOL Airplane Convair/Navy XFY-1 Pogo," SAE Technical Paper 962288, 1996, https://doi.org/10.4271/962288.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Nov 18, 1996
Product Code
962288
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English