NASA-TN-D-8373

Low speed wind tunnel investigation of flight spoilers as trailing-vortex-alleviation devices on an extended-range wide body tri-jet airplane model

Note:

This document has not been validated by ESDU. It is provided to our users as a useful reference source.

Abstract:

An investigation was made in the Langley V/STOL tunnel to determine, by the trailing wing sensor technique, the effectiveness of various segments of the existing flight spoilers on an extended-range wide-body tri-jet transport airplane model when they were deflected as trailing-vortex-alleviation devices. On the transport model with the approach flap configuration, the four combinations of flight-spoiler segments investigated were effective in reducing the induced rolling moment on the trailing wing model by as much as 25 to 45 percent at downstream distances behind the transport model of 9.2 and 18.4 transport wing spans. On the transport airplane model with the landing flap configuration, the four combinations of flight-spoiler segments investigated were effective in reducing the induced rolling moment on the trailing wing model by as much as 35 to 60 percent at distances behind the transport model of from 3.7 to 18.4 transport wing spans, 18.4 spans being the downstream limit of distances used.

Author(s):
D.R. Croom; R.D. Vogler; J.A. Thelander

Indexed under:

  • None

Details:

NASA-TN-D-8373
Format:
  • PDF (from scanned original)
Status:
  • Original, issued 01 Jan 1976
Previous Releases:
  • None available