JF Ptak Science Books LLC Post 997
"Fling Saucers" weren't ten years old by the time that John C.M. Frost--an engineer from De Haviland--came up with the idea of re-fitting his swooping-shovel shaped idea for a rocket plane with a saucer-shaped one. He worked hard on his idea, spending some $400,000 on the project--Canadian. Frost was in Ontario and working for the government before the government stopped working for him, abandoning the undertaking (called "Project Y") just as the United States became interested in it.
There are numerous reports around the web on this aircraft, so I'll just provide a couple of starter links here and little commentary. What I was most intrigued by in this whole affair of producing a 2,500 mph hovercraft was that instead of having a U.S. Air Force star somewhere on the aircraft the thing could've been running around with a red Maple Leaf.
Don't get me wrong, I love Canada--went to school there, I did--but the idea of a combat-ready flying saucer with the maple leaf on it is just completely, well, wrong.
That's probably a good thing because John Frost was British, although he ended his life as a New Zealand citizen.
The maple leaf would have been perfectly appropriate, though.
Posted by: Charlene Vickers | 01 April 2010 at 11:40 PM