Winter, you are so wrong about the aircraft proposed.
The design of the aircraft is completely feasible. Your idea of 'the engines are on the weakest part of the wings' will not hold up to squat as well as the flat boxed nose of the model.
and here is my proof...
http://www.aerospaceweb.org/aircraft/recon/sr71/sr71_schem_01.gif
The main wings has a reinforced titanium boxframe spar in the wing that holds those two huge engines to the main body. And they are on the 'thinnest' part of aircraft Oh, and did I mention that the aircraft has an unclassified speed of MACH 3+. And it is still considered one of the most advanced designed aircraft of this century.
As for your boxed nose idea.... all you have to do is look at the F-117. It is a faceted aircraft. There are no 'soft edges' on that aircraft anywhere.
So, before you start denying the idea of 'futuristic' designs, take a look at modern and development aircraft before judging what is feasible and isn't.
I can tell you all the things that your Stilleto class interceptor is incapable of doing in real life which would render it a useless interceptor of anything over MACH 0.9
Regards....
Bollocks. What is it with people on this forum and handwaving up 'proof'? Here are some actual facts.
1. The Blackbird is 6-7 times as large as this proposed fighter. The 'thinnest' part of the SR-71 is about as thick as the entire fuselage on this craft. It's also a hell of a lot more aerodynamic, and even with that ultra-aerodynamic design, the sharp edges of the Blackbird (tail, leading edge of wing, etc.) reach temperatures upwards of 1000 Fahrenheit. This is just an indication of the forces you have to deal with at hypersonic speeds.
If you had actually bothered to look at that drawing you posted so proudly, the engine mounts are vastly larger -- they connect to several
metres worth of titanium wing at the near side of the fuselage -- with swooshes out to the weaker part of the wing to reinforce and create a more aerodynamic surface.
NOT COMPARABLE WITH BOXES SLAPPED ONTO A WEAKER FORWARD-SWEEPING PART OF A WING.2. The nose is not 'faceted'. It's a bloody drag trap. It creates a pocket where air can't flow over the craft but is forced to bash directly into it, totally unlike the F-117 and its very pointy nose. If this thing were to catch a bad piece of wind at Mach 3, that's like running the whole craft into a mountainside. (Direct quote from my engineer friend.)
3. The poor use of angles on this thing makes it about as radar-stealthy as a brick with a jet engine.
4. Where's the landing gear going to go? You want to include three metres worth of telescoping landing gear to handwave the useless spiky bits underneath the engines?
You can stop wanking over the Blackbird now, please. I'd also appreciate if you refrain from any further accusations and start using real science.
Regards,
Winter