JF Ptak Science Books Post 2781
I'm sharing some of the collection here of the published work of George.H. Davis (1881-1963), the prolific and vastly accomplished artist for The Illustrated London News. His work with that magazine for the forty or so years that I am familiar with is superb, and his great strengths can be found in rendering technical cross sections and infographics. He had a great sense of design and a very fine hand, and so far as I can tell he displayed an excellent control of his subject, thousands and thousands of times (2,500 times, according to Mr. Davis).
Here are some fabulous examples of technological cross sections of WWII aircraft by Davis--the drawings are just superb, and you can easily get lost in them, following the geography of engineering detail from one logical place to the next.
Blohm u. Voss BV141
Surprise! My first cross section isn't one--I just couldn't resist posting it, though. This aircraft is the Blohm u. Voss "BV 141"a very unusual-looking aircraft as it appeared in The Illustrated London News for 23 May 1942--it gives an excellent view of what the editors called "a lop-sided freak". Perhaps the editors of the ILN wanted to educate its readers on the plane since it was supposed to be widely employed on the Russian Front, though it looks like only 38 were ever built (and none survive today). Actually, the plane, designed by Dr. Richard Vogt (1894-1979), was a high-flying three-seater surveillance aircraft capable of 220 mph at 17,000 feet, powered by a single 1000 hp Bramo Fafnir 9-cylinder radial engine. The idea for the design was to give the pilot and co-pilot a very wide field of view--and by this, I'm guessing that the field of view most affected and aided by this would be straight down. The rear gunner also had an enormous field of view.
As it turns out Vogt survived the war and spent his Golden Years in the U.S., seven of them (1960-1966) with Boeing to evaluate hydrofoils and vertical liftoff systems: he had built other odd planes during his career, and carried them with them into near-retirement, making this sort of design his metier.
"The Mustang--Fastest Army Co-operation in the World", appearing in The Illustrated London News for 12 December 1942.
The Spitfire (perhaps the most beautiful-sounding aircraft of WWII):
The Heinkel 111K Mark V bomber. (The Illustrated London News 13 July 1940.)
The Hawker "Hurricane":
The Davis Non-Recoil Gun (The Illsutrated London News for 14 February 1942). $35
And the great Lancaster bomber:
And the Stirling:
The Beaufighter (1941):
The Focke-Wulf 190 in action, going down; the illustration depicting the manner in which the pilot abandons his aircraft. (The Illustrated London News 5 September 1942.)
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