gambit
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The Ho-229 flying wing design was for long range, not for low radar observability. Everyone knew of the flying wing design, all the way back to the 1920s...Nearly three decades later, a more serious attempt at radar "invisibility" was tried with the Horten Ho 229flying wingfighter-bomber, developed in Nazi Germany during the last years of World War II. In addition to the aircraft's shape, the majority of the Ho 229's wooden skin was bonded together using carbon-impregnated plywoodresins designed with the purported intention of absorbing radar waves. Testing performed in early 2009 by the Northrop-Grumman Corporation established that this compound, along with the aircraft's shape, would have rendered the Ho 229 virtually invisible to the top-end HF-band, 20-30 MHz primary signals of Britain's Chain Homeearly warning radar, provided the aircraft was traveling at high speed (approximately 550 mph (890 km/h)) at extremely low altitude - 50–100 feet (15–30 m).[3]
Horten Ho 229 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Northrop YB-35 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The B-35 was the brainchild of Jack Northrop, who made the flying wing the focus of his work during the 1930s.
The Horten Brothers certainly knew of radar and its effects on bodies, but what they did not know was how to manipulate those behaviors because in order to manipulate those behaviors, they must have all the computational powers of today's technologies. The use of carbon powder was only an attempt to reduce the effects of those behaviors, again, not because they had any precise knowledge on how to manipulate those behaviors.