Canard Certification Loads — A Review of FAA Concerns

871847

10/01/1987

Event
Aerospace Technology Conference and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
Since the first airplane was certified in 1927, the standard configuration has been with the main lifting surface or surfaces forward of the stabilizing surface. Although some of the advantages of the canard configuration were recognized quite early - by the Wright Brothers, for example - canard surfaces have been used to date only as additional control surfaces on some military airplanes, and on some amateur built airplanes.
As a result, the Airworthiness Regulations of Reference 1 address only tail aft configurations. When FAA was first approached regarding certification of a canard configured small airplane, an FAA/Industry Empennage Loads Working Group was formed to develop technical proposals for the necessary rule changes and policy. The concerns addressed by this working group are discussed in the following sections.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/871847
Pages
11
Citation
Barnes, T., and Gabriel, E., "Canard Certification Loads — A Review of FAA Concerns," SAE Technical Paper 871847, 1987, https://doi.org/10.4271/871847.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Oct 1, 1987
Product Code
871847
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English