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NACA-RM-A54H26 REV A

The application of a simplified lifting-surface theory to the prediction of the rolling effectiveness of plain spoiler ailerons at subsonic speeds

Organization:
NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
Year: 1954

Abstract: INTRODUCTION
As a result of the current interest in the application of retractable spoiler ailerons as lateral controls on high-speed aircraft, a considerable number of tests have been made using various types of spoiler configurations. The results of some of these tests are presented in references 1 to 10, and reference 11 contains a bibliography of spoiler information.
The great number of wing-plan-form-spoiler combinations possible, however, creates a need for a method of predicting spoiler rolling-moment effectiveness which accounts for as many of the variables involved as possible. In reference 7 and 9 are presented the results of two attempts to predict spoiler effectiveness. Each of these methods is based on the application of a flap-effectiveness theory. The agreement of experimental and predicted results is good for unswept wings. For a swept wing, however, the method of reference 9 is inapplicable since the method was developed using the antisymmetrical span loading of unswept wings only. Reference 7 described an empirical modification to this method to account for the effects of sweep; however, a comparison of the predicted and experimental spoiler effectiveness shows the predicted values to be too high for spoilers on swept wings.
It is the purpose of this report to describe a method of predicting spoiler rolling-moment effectiveness based on the simplified lifting-surface flap theory of reference 12. To apply this flap theory to spoilers, it was necessary to obtain test data of spoilers on two-dimensional wings, and to employ an empirical correction when predicting the effectiveness of partial-span spoilers on swept wings. The results of applying the present method to the configurations described in references 1 to 8 (see table I and fig. 1) and the comparison with the experimental data are presented herein.
URI: http://yse.yabesh.ir/std;jsery=autho162s7D8308/handle/yse/187581
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    NACA-RM-A54H26 REV A

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contributor authorNASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
date accessioned2017-09-04T18:04:42Z
date available2017-09-04T18:04:42Z
date copyright01/01/1954
date issued1954
identifier otherGHMCWDAAAAAAAAAA.pdf
identifier urihttp://yse.yabesh.ir/std;jsery=autho162s7D8308/handle/yse/187581
description abstractINTRODUCTION
As a result of the current interest in the application of retractable spoiler ailerons as lateral controls on high-speed aircraft, a considerable number of tests have been made using various types of spoiler configurations. The results of some of these tests are presented in references 1 to 10, and reference 11 contains a bibliography of spoiler information.
The great number of wing-plan-form-spoiler combinations possible, however, creates a need for a method of predicting spoiler rolling-moment effectiveness which accounts for as many of the variables involved as possible. In reference 7 and 9 are presented the results of two attempts to predict spoiler effectiveness. Each of these methods is based on the application of a flap-effectiveness theory. The agreement of experimental and predicted results is good for unswept wings. For a swept wing, however, the method of reference 9 is inapplicable since the method was developed using the antisymmetrical span loading of unswept wings only. Reference 7 described an empirical modification to this method to account for the effects of sweep; however, a comparison of the predicted and experimental spoiler effectiveness shows the predicted values to be too high for spoilers on swept wings.
It is the purpose of this report to describe a method of predicting spoiler rolling-moment effectiveness based on the simplified lifting-surface flap theory of reference 12. To apply this flap theory to spoilers, it was necessary to obtain test data of spoilers on two-dimensional wings, and to employ an empirical correction when predicting the effectiveness of partial-span spoilers on swept wings. The results of applying the present method to the configurations described in references 1 to 8 (see table I and fig. 1) and the comparison with the experimental data are presented herein.
languageEnglish
titleNACA-RM-A54H26 REV Anum
titleThe application of a simplified lifting-surface theory to the prediction of the rolling effectiveness of plain spoiler ailerons at subsonic speedsen
typestandard
page30
statusActive
treeNASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA):;1954
contenttypefulltext
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DSpace software copyright © 2017-2020  DuraSpace
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