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Experimental Research on 4-Duct Tandem VTOL Aircraft Configurations

Published 2019-07-12 From Langley Research Center 2 authors

Attribution

This is the abstract and citation. Full text lives at NASA NTRS — we link out rather than host. All credit to the authors and Langley Research Center.

Abstract

Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.

This paper presents a brief summary of several wind-tunnel investigations conducted at the Langley Research Center of the NASA to study the aerodynamic and stability and control characteristics of several VTOL aircraft configurations powered by four tilting ducted propellers arranged in tandem pairs. Specifically the two rear ducts could be mounted close alongside the upper rear portion of the fuselage with small wing panels attached to the outboard side of the ducts or could be mounted outboard on the tips of a small wing located high on the rear portion of the fuselage. The two front ducts were always mounted close inboard on the forward part of the fuselage and could be mounted either in a high or low position on the fuselage. The results of the investigation indicated that aircraft of this type could have acceptable aerodynamic and static longitudinal and lateral stability and control characteristics in both transition and normal cruise flight except for the possible qualification that the lateral force due to sideslip is abnormally high and might cause the aircraft to be too sensitive to side gusts.

Authors

  • Mc Kinney, M. O. NASA Langley Research Center
  • Newsom, W. A. NASA Langley Research Center

Keywords

  • VTOL AIRCRAFT

Citation: Mc Kinney, M. O., Newsom, W. A. (2019). Experimental Research on 4-Duct Tandem VTOL Aircraft Configurations. Langley Research Center. NASA NTRS ID 19620001441. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/19620001441 ↗