Northrop N-204

Northrop N-204
Role High altitude reconnaissance
Manufacturer Northrop Corporation
Status paper project only
Primary user United States Air Force (intended)
Number built none completed

The Northrop N-204 was a high altitude reconnaissance jet aircraft designed in the United States in the 1950s.

Development

In fall 1957, Northrop submitted a proposal to the United States Air Force for a subsonic high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft, having capitalized on their earlier N-165 design study. The concerns by CIA pilots that the Lockheed U-2 was being tracked by radars on spy missions over the Soviet Union prompted Northrop to make low observable technology a part of the N-204 design, as was later done with the Lockheed A-12.[1]

Although Northrop estimated that the N-204 could go into service in 1960, the N-204 project did not proceed to the hardware stage.[1]

Design

The N-204 was similar to the Lockheed U-2 and Yakovlev Yak-25RV in having long, straight wings like an ordinary sailplane, and a v-tail. However, the engines of the aircraft were not buried in the wing roots or podded under the wings, but instead were buried in the outboard end of the wing center-section.[1]

Specifications (estimated)

Data from [1]

General characteristics

Performance

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Chong, Tony, 2016. Flying Wings & Radical Things: Northrop’s Secret Aerospace Projects & Concepts 1939-1994. Forest Lake, Minnesota: Specialty Press.
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