EFW N-20
The EFW N-20 Aiguillon was Switzerland's first indigenous jet fighter project. The Swiss Federal Aircraft Factory developed a design for a four-engined swept winged fighter following the end of the Second World War. An unpowered sub-scale N-20.01 glider and a turbojet powered test aircraft, also sub-scale and known as the N-20.02 Arbalète, were test flown. A fighter prototype N-20.10 Aiguillon was built but never flown, and a twin-engines N.20.20 Harpon was also proposed but not followed up.
The Arbalète and Aiguillon are on public display at the Flieger Flab Museum, Dübendorf.
Design and development
The aircraft was to be powered by four turbofan engines buried in the wings, with the bypass air feeding cold-air tunnels each side of the engines including a combustion chamber where additional thrust could be gained. The bypass air could be deflected though large slots on the upper and lower wings to act as aerodynamic flaps or thrust reversers. Two engines could be shut down in flight to increase range. It was planned that the N-20 would carry its armament in a detachable weapons bay, capable of carrying large loads of cannons, rockets or bombs.It was initially planned that the aircraft's engines would be designed and built in Switzerland by Sulzer. Sulzer only built a turbojet though, the Sulzer D-45, with a thrust of. Of these engines, D-45.01 was used in a test rig between 1950 and 1951 and the second engine, D-45.04 was used until 1955 in a test rig. The D45.04 is part of the Dübendorf museum N-20 display. For the development of the bypass-engine DZ-45 Sulzer expected a development contract worth 10 million swiss francs that never materialized.
The Armstrong Siddeley Mamba turboprop was then chosen as the basis for the N-20's prototype engines, with the propeller reduction gear replaced by a low pressure compressor. This powerplant was named Swiss Mamba SM-1; the conversion was carried out in 1948 by EFW, with only six engines built. One of the spare engines is today part of the Swiss Museum of Transport, at the Flieger-Flab-Museum Dübendorf. Flight tests of the engine began in October 1952 under a De Havilland Mosquito. The proposed development into the SM-5 for the production aircraft was very similar to the DZ-45 proposed by Sulzer in 1947.