INITIAL LIFT OFF ATTEMPTS were conducted with debris guards mounted to the engine intakes, the main engine debris guards carrying 24 temperature probes, the lift engine debris guards carrying 12 temperature probes each. Various methods of thrust management were looked at in order to investigate recirculation during vertical take‐off. All these tests indicated that vertical take‐off is not effected by intake temperature rises due to recirculation. It was found that because of the engine arrangement, jet separation from the surface takes place sufficiently far away from the fuselage to prevent reingestion of hot gases into the intakes. When increasing forward speed the aircraft catches up with the upgoing engine exhaust gases which separate from the ground at a point in front of the aircraft. During rolling take‐offs in the speed range between 30 KIAS and 40 KIAS these exhaust gases can be reingested by the cruise engine intakes, if the nozzles are rotated to angles more than 70dcg from the fuselage horizontal datum. Temporary recirculation has also been experienced during lift engine light‐up when low energy exhaust gases are reingested into the cruise engine intakes. This phenomenon disappears, as soon as lift engine speed exceeds 20 per cent.
Article navigation
Review Article|
August 01 1973
Flight tests results Available to Purchase
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2059-9366
Print ISSN: 0002-2667
© MCB UP Limited
1973
Aircraft Engineering (1973) 45 (8): 24–26.
Citation
(1973), "Flight tests results". Aircraft Engineering, Vol. 45 No. 8 pp. 24–26, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb035067
Download citation file:
96
Views
Suggested Reading
A Technology Challenge
Aircraft Engineering (November,1990)
The Hatfield Wind Tunnel Facility of Hawker Siddeley Aviation
Aircraft Engineering (November,1965)
Military V/S.T.O.L. Transport Aircraft: A review of the background to current jet lift tactical transport proposals
Aircraft Engineering (May,1966)
British Patent Abridgments
Aircraft Engineering (February,1963)
Experience with High Performance V/STOL Fighter Projects at MBB
Aircraft Engineering (May,1982)
Related Chapters
I. North Wales
Civil Engineering Heritage: Wales and West Central England, 2nd edition
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
