Investigation at High Subsonic Speeds of the Use of Low Auxiliary Tail Surfaces having Dihedral to Improve the Longitudinal and Directional Stability of a T-Tail Model at High Lift

1957 
An investigation of the use of low auxiliary horizontal-tail surfaces to alleviate the pitch-up tendency at high lift of an airplane configuration having a T - tail has been conducted in the Langley high-speed 7- by 10-foot tunnel. The basic model had a wing with an aspect ratio of 3, a taper ratio of 0.143, and an unswept 80-percent chord line. The Mach number for most of the tests extended from 0.60 to 0.94 and the angle-of-attack range was from -2 deg. to approximately 24 deg. at the lowest test Mach number. A preliminary study of a systematic series of auxiliary tails indicated that the pitch-up tendency at high lift encountered on the basic model could be greatly alleviated by use of a relatively small, very low-aspect-ratio auxiliary horizontal tail. This tail was located radially with respect to the fuselage center line with 30 deg. negative dihedral and therefore provided a significant favorable increment to directional stability of the model throughout most of the test angle-of-attack range.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []