We are most familiar with under wing fuel tanks, has any operational aircraft ever used over wing fuel tanks?
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3What has the picture to do with your question, are you asking if this is an over wing fuel tank aircraft? – Mast Jan 08 '18 at 12:04
2 Answers
Early aircraft designs used gravity feed to supply the engines with fuel. All those designs had their tanks located above the wing, and in biplanes in the center of the upper wing. The picture below (source) shows an Etrich Taube with the cylindric fuel tank mounted above the fuselage.
The next application of overwing tanks were "Doppelreiter" fuel tanks (slipper fuel tanks) which were used on some German fighter airplanes in WW II. They were mounted above and behind the wing, and to everyone's surprise they had little impact on the top speed of the airplanes, and in case of the Me-309 helped to increase it slightly. They were the first practical application of Küchemann carrots and worked much like the flap track fairings of today's airliners.
FW-190 A with Doppelreiter tanks.
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2@Peter Kämpf "They were mounted above and behind the wing, and to everyone's surprise they had little impact on the top speed of the airplanes, and in case of the Me-309 helped to increase it slightly" How is it aerodynamically possible? Positively stunning anyway. – user721108 Jan 06 '18 at 20:41
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3@qqjkztd: Area ruling is the answer. At that time, nobody knew of it, so the effect cam as a surprise. – Peter Kämpf Jan 06 '18 at 20:49
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Any pics of the 309 with the tanks? There are none at the Wiki article linked... – FreeMan Feb 21 '24 at 19:18
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@FreeMan Nope, lots of drawings and plastic models with those tanks on the web, but no original photos, I'm afraid. We still have to wait for someone to upload one. – Peter Kämpf Feb 22 '24 at 07:41
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Both the Typhoon and English Electric Lightning used over the wing fuel tanks as standard equipment for many years. There may have been others.
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1Seen for Electric Lightening, but for the Typhoon? Seem more like conformal fuel tank(s)... – Kanchu Jan 06 '18 at 19:08
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2"Lightening" means "getting lighter". You mean "lightning": electrical discharge during storms. – David Richerby Jan 06 '18 at 21:28
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2The Typhoons fuel tanks in the picture are conformal fuel tanks, not overwing fuel tanks - the F-16 and F-15 also use conformal fuel tanks. The Typhoons conformal fuel tanks are also not in operation, they are still under development. – Moo Jan 07 '18 at 01:02
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8I was just thinking, for the many non-expert but who-doesn't-love-planes readers of this site .... you blokes should just include one word under photos like that, letting the reader know which photo is which. (Probably just "too obvious!" to you!) – Fattie Jan 07 '18 at 14:29
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3Also, note that the name of the manufacturer is "English Electric". It's "the Lightning, made by English Electric", not "the Lightning, an English plane made by Electric." – David Richerby Jan 08 '18 at 12:09
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1Very true, @DavidRicherby, but as the fuel is consumed by the Lightning, the tanks are lightening... ;) – FreeMan Feb 21 '24 at 19:19




