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Republic F-84 Thunderjet with Reverse Thruster

The US Air Force loaned a Republic F-84 Thunderjet to the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) Lewis Flight Propulsion Laboratory in the spring of 1954. NACA researchers soon modified the aircraft for the first demonstration of a reverse thruster. Republic built over 4000 Thunderjets between 1947 and 1953 for the military as a successor to the Lockheed F-80 Shooting Star. TheF-84s became successful multi-use aircraft during the Korean War. The use of traditional wheel brakes on high speed aircraft was problematic because the required braking system would weigh too much. The reverse thruster was developed as a method for stopping these aircraft without increasing the overall weight. Panels in the tail section near the jet engine’s nozzle opened up during a landing. These extended flaps not only caused resistance to the airstream but also reversed the engine’s thrust. In June 1964 Irving Pinkel, head of the Lewis Physics Division, oversaw a demonstration of this technology on an F-84 at the NACA laboratory. The side fuselage panels around the engine nozzle, seen closed in this photograph, opened up like wings and deflected the engine’s thrust towards the front of the aircraft, thus producing reverse thrust. The F-84 activated the reverse thruster and the aircraft moved backwards across the runway.

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