Is it possible anymore to produce aircraft in the scales seen in world war two,
It's an industrial process. There's absolutely no reason not to.(No! You can't send housewives & teenagers & old folks to build Raptors!)
your joking right? car experts to assemble fighter jets? but anyway nope completly different, with fighter jets you wanna create lift in the aircraft while F1 you wanna do the opposite and keep your vehicle on the ground. If it was that easy, the Chinese toy factory could be used to create tanks, armoured personal carriers, etc.. ;P Car technology is basically at its limits with little more technological evolution, while fighter jets are still in its infincy, with boundaries of flight still yet to be tested in theory and practical.Would the UK be at an advantage due to the number of high tech sports car manufacturers? I imagine if we got really desperate we could put the F1 technical teams to work on manufacturing the the more complex parts of the Eurofighter.
Aluminium alloy frames with a stressed aluminium alloy skin riveted to them (my grandfather spent the war making those rivets - and for other aircraft types, of course), held together by metal longitudinal stringers. A few bits of spruce in some low-stress areas, but I think that was only in very early models, like the fabric-covered ailerons..... Spitfires were peices of wood with a thin skin of metal with a lump of iron up front. To mass produce you just needed more people.
I was thinking about the fact that the people are all highly qualified engineers who are used to working with Carbon Fibre, complex engines and systems.your joking right? car experts to assemble fighter jets? but anyway nope completly different, with fighter jets you wanna create lift in the aircraft while F1 you wanna do the opposite and keep your vehicle on the ground. If it was that easy, the Chinese toy factory could be used to create tanks, armoured personal carriers, etc.. ;P Car technology is basically at its limits with little more technological evolution, while fighter jets are still in its infincy, with boundaries of flight still yet to be tested in theory and practical.
Have you looked at the electronics in a car nowadays? Car technology is developing very quickly - you just don't see it.your joking right? car experts to assemble fighter jets? but anyway nope completly different, with fighter jets you wanna create lift in the aircraft while F1 you wanna do the opposite and keep your vehicle on the ground. If it was that easy, the Chinese toy factory could be used to create tanks, armoured personal carriers, etc.. ;P Car technology is basically at its limits with little more technological evolution, while fighter jets are still in its infincy, with boundaries of flight still yet to be tested in theory and practical.
Aston Martin...Would the UK be at an advantage due to the number of high tech sports car manufacturers? I imagine if we got really desperate we could put the F1 technical teams to work on manufacturing the the more complex parts of the Eurofighter.
What? The UK produces most of the F1 cars as well as all the cars for A1 GP and a lot of the Rally Championship cars as well. One thing the UK doesn't lack is know how where Motor sport is concerned.Aston Martin...
And?
None...
Oh wait there are some ex TVR employees waiting for a job but It's not very handy is the wings or weapons would fall of in flight...
I agree any prolonged large scale conflict involving major powers would probally go nuclear before long. But for the sake of this discussion I was assuming it would not.^^ Before you can field some mothballed returned-to-service jets, we all might see nuclear mushrooms rising all around the globe.
Any prolonged conflict leads to involvlement of more countries &or escalation to more deadlier systems in the inventory.
Lots of car, lorry, etc. factories in the UK (two big ones within cycling distance from here), & lots of automotive designing (do you think firms like Nissan & Toyota do all their design work in Japan?). But what he was discussing, & you are obviously unaware of, is the pool of engineering & design expertise in the motor racing industry. The F1 (and rally, & other motor racing) teams are actually engineering design & test firms, employing thousands of highly qualified & skilled people.Aston Martin...
And?
None...
Oh wait there are some ex TVR employees waiting for a job but It's not very handy is the wings or weapons would fall of in flight...