An Experimental Study of a General Aviation Single-Engine Aircraft Utilizing a Natural Laminar Flow Wing

850861

04/01/1985

Event
General Aviation Aircraft Meeting and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
Force and moment measurements, and surface flow patterns have been obtained for a one-fifth scale model of a single-engine general aviation aircraft utilizing a 15% thick natural laminar flow wing section. The data is for typical pre- and post-stall angles of attack, aircraft yaw attitudes, surface roughness and Reynolds number conditions. Results from a separate study of the wing alone are also given for comparison.
This comparison shows that the fuselage/tail assembly acts as a lifting body. The aerodynamic characteristics show marked deterioration with increasing surface roughness. In addition, the studies indicate that the transition on the wing is characterized by laminar short bubble separation. The aerodynamic characteristics are somewhat unaffected by the presence of mini-tufts. The flow visualization photographs clearly show the transition and separation regions, and document the effects of variations in angle of attack and yaw on wing body interference.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/850861
Pages
16
Citation
Ostowari, C., and Naik, D., "An Experimental Study of a General Aviation Single-Engine Aircraft Utilizing a Natural Laminar Flow Wing," SAE Technical Paper 850861, 1985, https://doi.org/10.4271/850861.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 1, 1985
Product Code
850861
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English