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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 July 2016
At the Symposium in April last year the Society met to consider how design and operation of quiet aircraft related to the often conflicting economic and environmental pressures. The prospects for quieter aircraft and engines were discussed from many technical points of view. The message emerging from the discussion was that, compared to the improvements made in the past 10 years, and which would be available now at the cost of replacing existing noisy, older generation installations, further reductions in noise at source would be very much harder to win. Moreover, they would be made against a steeply-rising trend of overall detriment to performance and direct operating cost.
So far as the possibilities are concerned for further reductions in the noise of subsonic propulsion engines, if we are to have more than modest, evolutionary improvements in levels, there will need to be radical changes affecting engine design, such as a definite move towards lower jet velocities.
Paper presented at the RAeS Spring Convention on ‘Seeds for Success in Civil Aircraft Design in the Next Two Decades’ held on 19th/20th May 1976. Paper No. 396.