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2023 | Book

Flight Testing

Analysis of the Spin Dynamics of a Single–Engine Low–Wing Aeroplane

Author: Steffen Haakon Schrader

Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg

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About this book

As spinning is still involved in around 60% of all aircraft accidents (BFU, 1985 and Belcastro, 2009), this aerodynamic phenomenon is still not fully understood. As U.S. and European Certification Specifications do not require recoveries from fully developed spins of Normal Category aeroplanes, certification test flights will not discover aeroplane mass and centre of gravity combinations which may result in unrecoverable spins. This book aims to contribute to a better understanding of the spin phenomenon through investigating the spin regime for normal, utility and aerobatic aircraft, and to explain what happens to the aircraft in terms of the aerodynamics, flight mechanics and the aircraft stability. The approach used is to vary the main geometric parameters such as the centre of gravity position and the aeroplane’s mass across the flight envelope, and to investigate the subsequent effect on the main spin characteristic parameters such as the angle of attack, pitch angle, sideslip angle, rotational rates, and recovery time. First of all, a literature review sums up the range of technical aspects that affect the problem of spinning. It reviews the experimental measurement techniques used, theoretical methods developed and flight test results obtained by previous researchers. The published results have been studied to extract the effect on spinning of aircraft geometry, control surface effectiveness, flight operational parameters and atmospheric effects. Consideration is also made of the influence on human performance of spinning, the current spin regulations and the available training material for pilots. A conventional-geometry, single-engine low-wing aeroplane, the basic trainer Fuji FA-200-160, has been instrumented with a proven digital flight measurement system and 27 spins have been systematically conducted inside and outside the certified flight envelope. The accuracy of the flight measurements is ensured through effective calibration, and the choice of sensors has varied through the study, with earlier sensors suffering from more drift than the current sensors (Belcastro, 2009 and Schrader, 2013). In-flight parameter data collected includes left and right wing α and β-angles, roll-pitch-yaw angles and corresponding rates, all control surface deflections, vertical speeds, altitude losses and the aeroplane’s accelerations in all three directions. Such data have been statistically analysed. The pitch behaviour has been mathematically modelled on the basis of the gathered flight test data. Nine observations have been proposed. These mainly cover the effects of centre of gravity and aircraft mass variations on spin characteristic behaviour. They have all been proven as true through the results of this thesis. The final observation concerns the generalisation of the Fuji results, to the spin behaviour of other aircraft in the same category. These observations can be used to improve flight test programmes, aircraft design processes, flight training materials and hence contribute strongly to better flight safety.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Introduction
Abstract
Spinning of an aeroplane is for an average pilot a totally unknown flight mode. According to the European Certification Specifications (EASA, 2012) the definition of spinning is:
Steffen Haakon Schrader
Chapter 2. Literature Review
Abstract
Research into spin flight dynamics has been conducted since around 1912 (Martin et al., 1988) when the first report of a spin was recorded as “Parke’s dive” and only two spin accidents were recorded prior to the First World War. The first aviator who was able to demonstrate a method to recovery from such a Parke’s dive was Harry G. Hawker. He, together with Sopwith and Sigrist founded the Sopwith Aviation Company at Brookland (UK) in 1912.
Steffen Haakon Schrader
Chapter 3. Measurement System for Spin Test Data Acquisition
Zusammenfassung
For the required flight tests, a set of variables need to be recorded. In order to ensure that the correct measurement facilities were obtained with the correct precision, ranges and resolution; a set of requirements were identified (see below). The company messWERK was identified as having measurement facilities which were able to meet these requirements.
Steffen Haakon Schrader
Chapter 4. Preparation of the Aeroplane and the Spin Trials
Abstract
In the following section the preparation of the utilised aeroplane for the spin trials is described.
Steffen Haakon Schrader
Chapter 5. Spin Description
Abstract
In the following section, the physical mechanisms of spinning are described in-depth.
Steffen Haakon Schrader
Chapter 6. Mathematical Spin Test Data Analysis
Abstract
As discussed in Chap. 2 (Literature Review) the aeroplane’s pitch angle, θ, (and its behaviour over time) is an important characteristic spin parameter. According to ‘traditional’ pilot thinking an aeroplane enters a flat spin and by that, control surfaces are likely to be shielded when the CG is moved backwards. This means the crew and the aeroplane are in danger. By analysing this particular parameter, a straight and effective approach to a scientific spin investigation is conducted and a starting point for a modern spin analysis is laid
Steffen Haakon Schrader
Chapter 7. Flight Test Data Comparison
Abstract
The aim of this Chapter is to investigate whether the results from, and the observations about, the Fuji FA – 200 -160 are generalizable to the other aircraft in the same category.
Steffen Haakon Schrader
Chapter 8. Conclusion
Abstract
In the following section the results and findings from Chap. 5 to 7—based on the aims, principal objectives, corresponding research questions and subsequent observations—are summarized. For an improved readability the original research questions are repeated here. Note that for each research question a list of the observations which contribute to answering the question are given in brackets.
Steffen Haakon Schrader
Chapter 9. Recommendations for Further Work
Abstract
As this research project is opening up an entire field of flight mechanics research on a modern level with a combination of mathematical (theoretical) and measurement (practical) methods which have not been utilised for spin research, the work at hand finishes with more questions than answers. Due to this, only the main areas for recommendations are mentioned as every below mentioned field includes much more detailed and specific opportunities for research.
Steffen Haakon Schrader
Chapter 10. General Understanding of Spinning and Supporting Material
Abstract
In the following section material for the general understanding of spinning and supporting material are provided.
Steffen Haakon Schrader
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Flight Testing
Author
Steffen Haakon Schrader
Copyright Year
2023
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Electronic ISBN
978-3-662-63218-5
Print ISBN
978-3-662-63217-8
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-63218-5

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