Lavochkin La-150 (a.k.a. Izdeliye 150 - Aircraft or Article 150) was the Lavochkin bureau's response to Joseph Stalin's order of February 1945 to design and build a single-seat jet fighter around a Junkers Jumo 004B turbojet. (Note:- All Lavochkin's jet aircraft were referred to in house, and at government level, as "Izdeliye 150" etc.. The use of the La-prefix was actually introduced by western intelligence bureau to help avoid confusion)
The La-150 was of distinctive pod-and-boom layout with a shoulder-mounted wing. Like the competitive designs from the Mikoyan-Gurevich and Yakovlev bureau, the La-150 was awarded a prototype/pre-series aircraft order, the first of the prototypes flying in September 1946 powered by the Soviet derivative of the Jumo engine, the RD-10 rated at 900 kgf (1,984 lbf). Unique among first-generation Soviet jet fighters in having a fuselage-mounted undercarriage, the La-150 featured a somewhat complex, overly robust and heavy structure and was, in consequence, underpowered. Excessive dihedral effect resulting from the wing positioning was rectified on the second, and subsequent, prototypes by drooping the wingtips, but excessive oscillation of the tail surfaces at high speeds resulting from inadequate stiffness of the tailboom could not be overcome. In the event, only five airframes were completed.
Data from Gordon, Yefim. Early Soviet Fighters.Midland Publishing.Hinkley. ISBN 1 85780 139 3
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