Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-wxhwt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-11T13:11:23.050Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Aerodynamic technology — the role of aerodynamic technology in the design and development of modern combat aircraft

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 July 2016

T. McMichael
Affiliation:
British Aerospace, Military Aircraft Division, UK
K. McKay
Affiliation:
British Aerospace, Military Aircraft Division, UK
M.J. Walker
Affiliation:
British Aerospace, Military Aircraft Division, UK
C. Fielding
Affiliation:
British Aerospace, Military Aircraft Division, UK
G. Lockley
Affiliation:
British Aerospace, Military Aircraft Division, UK
P. Curtis
Affiliation:
British Aerospace, Military Aircraft Division, UK
B. Probert
Affiliation:
British Aerospace, Military Aircraft Division, UK
C. S. Lee
Affiliation:
British Aerospace, Military Aircraft Division, UK
G. Moretti
Affiliation:
British Aerospace, Military Aircraft Division, UK

Abstract

This paper examines the changing role aerodynamic technology plays in the design and development of modern combat aircraft. It reviews several aspects of aerodynamics which contribute to aircraft performance and handling characteristics. It considers the importance of a range of technologies, the contribution each makes to the final integrated solution and comments on the compromises necessary through the design cycle to optimise the overall weapon system, sometimes to the cost of one of the component technologies. The technologies discussed are in no way exhaustive but attempt to encapsulate the breadth of the subject, to illustrate its diversity and to point the way for the future development if aerodynamic technology is to continue to make an important contribution to the design of combat aircraft.

Each of the component technologies are discussed in terms of the contribution it makes, the tools and techniques used to predict, analyse and interpret the technology contribution, and the requirements for the direction of the development of the technology for the future.

Before considering the technologies themselves it is important to understand the environment in which they will be used, which increasingly conditions the manner in which they are employed and suggests the direction for their development.

This paper begins, therefore, by briefly reviewing the changes to the environment in which the fighter pilot operates and the manner by which his requirements, and therefore the specification of the aircraft, are defined before going on to look at the overall contribution each technology makes in the design process.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society 1996 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1.AGARD Flight Mechanics Panel WG-19 AR-314 Operational Agility.Google Scholar
2. Nelson, J.R. and Smith, T.D. Improved combat performance using relaxed static stability and a spin prevention system (FBW Jaguar), AGARD conference proceedings No 409, 1986.Google Scholar
3. McCuich, A. and Caldwell, B. Development of flight experience of the control laws and the aeroelastic solution in the Experimental Aircraft Programme, In: Advances in Flight Control, Taylor and Francis, 1996.Google Scholar
4. Gibson, J.C. The Definition, Understanding and Design of Aircraft Handling Qualities, Delft University of Technology report LR-756, 1995.Google Scholar
5. Ramsay, R.B. AGARD Conference Proceeding No 556 Flight flutter testing of combat aircraft.Google Scholar
6. Shanks, G., Gale, S., Fielding, C. and Griffith, D. Flight control and handling research with the VAAC Harrier aircraft. Advances in Flight Control, Taylor and Francis, 1996.Google Scholar