Flight Without Formulae 158p PDF
Flight Without Formulae 158p PDF
Flight Without Formulae 158p PDF
2. What is an Aeroplane?
If you look up the definition of an aeroplane in a glossary,
you will find that it is described in some such terms as these:
1
2 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE WHAT IS AN AEROPLANE? 3
“A heavier-than-air flying machine, supported by aerofoils, that is still only on the threshold of being solved). The non-
designed to obtain, when driven through the air at an angle power-driven forms are gliders, sail planes and kites.
inclined to the direction of motion, a reaction from the air The distinction between a glider and a sailplane is a subtle
approximately at right angles to their surfaces.” one, the latter being a lighter type which is able to “soar” in
There’s a mouthful for you! When you have finished up-currents of wind. Every boy knows what a kite is, so I
reading this book, you may care to look at this definition again. I
will not trouble to explain it. It might be imagined that, in
If you do so, you will find that it is perfectly sound and is a these days, every boy knows what an aeroplane is, but un-
rather clever attempt to put a large amount of information fortunately there has been much confusion over the terms
into a few words. That is the object of a definition, and that is used for heavier-than-air power-driven aircraft.
why a glossary makes rather dull reading in spite of the care In an attempt to minimize the confusion, the British Standard
which has often been exercised to ensure that conciseness Glossary of Aeronautical Terms divides them into three types-
should not lead to misunderstanding. aeroplanes, rotorcraft and ornithopters. The term aeroplane
Many aeronautical books either begin or end with a glossary; includes aircraft which fly off the land and those which fly off
but I prefer to explain any terms which may be necessary as the water, and, of course, amphibians, which can fly off either.
:
and when we come across them. Even when explanation is This means that a seaplane is merely a particular type of aero-
necessary, the use of a hackneyed definition will be avoided plane so designed as to be able to fly off and on to water, and
because I want you to understand the term rather than learn therefore, to distinguish them, aeroplanes which can only fly
to repeat, like a parrot, a string of technical words. from land are classified as land planes. Seaplanes themselves
What, then, is an aeroplane ? may be divided into two types, float planes and flying boats.
All man-made contrivances which fly, that is to say which I It will be noticed that helicopters, and other types of rotary-
are kept in the air by forces produced by the air, are called wing aircraft-the distinction between the three types will be
aircraft. explained later-are, strictly speaking, not aeroplanes at all;
There are two main kinds of aircraft: those which are nor is the flapping-wing ornithopter, though that won’t worry
righter than air and those which are heavier than air. The us very much. Whether hovercraft are a form of aircraft is
former include airships, balloons, and captive or kite balloons; still disputable.
these are supported in the air not, as is commonly supposed, Fig. 1 and the photographs at the end of the book should
by the gas inside them, but rather by the air which this gas help to make the various terms clear. Fig. 2 shows the names
displaces. It is not the purpose of this book to deal with this of some of the main parts of a land plane; if you are not
type of aircraft, but a brief summary of the principles of their , already familiar with them have a look at them now, they will
flight will be given. The latter, or heavier-than-air type, help you to understand the rest of the text.
consists of many different forms which can conveniently be
grouped under two headings, power-driven and non-power- 3. Lighter than Air
driven-to which we should perhaps add a third, the very In the last section I promised to say a little more about aircraft
interesting man-power-driven (one of the problems of flight which are lighter than air.
*
LIGHTER THAN AIR 5
Ai? n Fin a n d
Intake
\;I
’ fRetrac&ble)
I Elevators
G Tail Plane
Rudder with
h;lr n ba’ance
TriraEing
I
Weight of ship
Weight of Balloon + Weight of Gas.
the water which it displaces is equal to the weight of the ship float; if the upward force is greater than the weight, the air-
itself (Fig. 4). The same ship will float higher out of the water ship will rise; if it is less, it will fall. A cubic foot of air weighs
when in sea water than in fresh water. This is because sea only about 0.08 lb (roughly 1; oz), and therefore that is the
water is heavier, and therefore a smaller quantity needs to be greatest weight which one cubic foot can support. So you will
displaced in order to support the weight of the ship. Only a soon see why it is necessary for the envelope of an airship to
small portion of a ship is immersed in the water, yet the same be so large and why the weight must be kept as small as poss-
principle is true of bodies which are totally immersed and which ible. The R 100 and R 101, the last two airships to be built
may even be incapable of floating at all. For instance, if a in Great Britain, had each a capacity of over five million cubic
lump of Jead or other metal is weighed in water, it is found to feet.
weigh less than when weighed in air, and this apparent difference In order to keep the weight of the airship itself as small as
in weight is exactly equal to the weight of water which is possible it must in the first place be made of the lightest
“
8 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE LIGHTER THAN AIR 9
materials available, provided of course they are of sufhcient gas tends to subtract from the lifting power of the displaced air.
strength. Secondly, a very light gas must be used in the enve- Thus, if an airship is filled with hydrogen, each cubic foot of
lope. Theoretically, the best thing which could be used in the envelope will support 0.0800 lb less 0.0055 lb, i.e. 0.0745 lb; but
envelope would be nothing, i.e. a vacuum; but in practice if filled with helium a cubic foot will only support 0*0800 lb
this cannot be done, because the pressure of the air outside less 0.0110 lb, or 0.0690 lb. If we multiply each of these by
5,000,000, they represent about 166 tons and 154 tons re-
spectively. Thus the use of helium instead of hydrogen in an
airship of this capacity will mean a loss of net lift of as much as
12 tons, and when it is remembered that the structure and
engines of the airship itself will weigh over 100 tons, it will
soon be realized that this loss of 12 tons is a very considerable
proportion of the useful lift of the airship. However, so great
was the fear of fire in airships, that the extra safety provided
was held to justify the use of helium in spite of this consequent
loss of lift.
F&. 6. Pressure inside and outside a balloon or airship We have said that a cubic foot of air weighs about 0.08 lb.
Now, this is only true of the air near the earth’s surface. As
the envelope would be so great that the sides would cave in we ascend, the air becomes very much thinner and therefore
unless the skin of the envelope could be made tremendously a cubic foot will weigh less, and each cubic foot will conse-
strong, in which case it would weigh so much that no advantage quently support less. So, if an airship is just able to float near
would be gained. However, even the lightest gases can exert the earth’s surface, it will be unable to do so at a greater
a pressure from the inside which will balance the pressure of altitude, because the weight of displaced air will not be sufficient
the atmosphere from the outside (Fig. 6), and this means that to support it. It is for this reason that ballast is carried; this
the skin of the envelope need have very little strength, and can be thrown overboard to lighten the ship when it is re-
therefore very little weight, provided it is gas-proof to prevent quired to climb. This is all very well while the climb is in
leakage in or out. The lightest gas in commercial use is progress, but what is to happen when we wish to descend?
hydrogen, and, for many years, this gas was always used in There is no means of taking on board extra weight, and there-
airships and balloons. Unfortunately, however, hydrogen is fore the only thing to do is to release some of the gas and
very inflammable, and its use added considerably to the dangers allow air to take its place, thus decreasing the weight of air
of lighter-than-air flying. So the gas helium came to be used, displaced, reducing the lift and allowing the ship to sink. It
in spite of the fact that it is much more expensive and twice as will be obvious that these processes cannot go on indefinitely,
heavy as hydrogen. as neither the ballast nor the gas can be replaced until the
Hydrogen weighs about OGO55 lb/cu ft and helium about airship returns to its base.
0.011 lb/cu ft, and in each case, of course, the weight of the Another problem is that, owing to changes in the pressure
10 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE LIGHTER THAN AIR 11
of the air outside the balloon or airship, it is not easy to very large; the large ship means expense, difficulties of housing
equalize the pressures inside and outside the envelope at all and manipulation on the ground, large head resistance, and
heights unless the volume of the envelope can change. Thus very considerable structural design problems. All these
it is that a toy balloon, filled with hydrogen at a reasonable difficulties, together with that of the fire risk, were courageously
pressure at ground level, expands as it rises and eventually tackled in various countries, but repeated failure caused such
losses in men and material in the period between the wars that
in Great Britain, at any rate, we felt compelled to stop any
further experiments on this type of aircraft. The wisdom of
this policy was much disputed, but the fact remains.
Until the outbreak of the Second World War, experimental
work on airships was still being carried out in Germany and
the United States; in the latter country the metal-clad airship
had been proved to be a practical proposition.
The war itself retarded rather than advanced experimental
work on the subject, and the steady improvement which has
taken place in aircraft of the heavier-than-air type is certainly
likely to decrease the chances of a revival of interest in
airships. But one can never be sure-as recently as 1958 a
new non-rigid airship of about one and a half million cubic
feet capacity was launched in the United States, and the
Germans have never completely lost their faith in this means
of transport.
eoJkm d Sea-led Of the other lighter-than-air types the free balloon may now
be considered as obsolete except for scientific purposes such
F&. 7. Stratosphere balloon
as the exploration of the highest regions of the atmosphere. There
bursts. To prevent such an occurrence with a real balloon it are also a few enthusiasts who still take part in ballooning as
is only partially filled at ground level and presents the ap- a sport.
pearance shown in Fig. 7. The captive or kite balloon was extensively used during the
1914-18 war as a means of observation for gunfire. After that
war its chief use seemed to be to provide spectators at the Royal
4. Lighter than Air-More Problems
,4ir Force Displays with the never-failing attraction of seeing
These are some of the problems of lighter-than-air flight, but it brought down in flames. In the Second World War the cap-
they are by no means the only ones. In order that an airship tive balloon again played its part; this time as a means of pro-
may carry a reasonable proportion of useful load it must be tecting important towns and ships at sea from attacks by enemy
12 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE THE ATMOSPHERE 13
aircraft; or, rather, to force raiding aircraft up to such a height lighter or heavier than air, the controls, the stability, all
that accurate bombing was rendered diffkult. And although such depend on the air and the forces which it produces.
balloons can have only a very limited use, either now or in the The most important property of the atmosphere, so far as
future, they still exist in reasonable numbers - which is more flying is concerned, is its density. The way in which this falls
than can be said for the free balloon or airship. off with height (Fig. 8) has already been mentioned in
connection with lighter-than-air flight, but it is just as important
\
5. The Atmosphere 14
0 IO 20 30 40 50 60 70
Height in thousands of feet
.
.
.
.
.
,.’
ft
000 . .-*0041b-l
. _
.
LIFT AND DRAG
him with oxygen, and heat his clothing artificially, while the
aircraft itself can hardly get sufficient support in air that has
not got one-quarter the thickness of the air near the ground.
17
. .
Nor is it surprising that estimates of temperatures in even
higher regions of the atmosphere vary very considerably-
.q.*‘/. . . ; . ., . . ,- between temperatures both above and below anything known
y9:‘, .., :‘..,., :;_.. on earth-when the air is so thin it isn’t the temperature of
3’: . . : . _ :. . ‘,) . .
qj.*:: . ‘. . ,, . .y, . . ,_ ., . *. the air that matters so much as the temperatures of the outer
A...’ .,: .,; ‘.
50,000 ft+-- -01 lb F I&b/@L( surfaces of the aircraft.
~;157°cY-Yy
. : : ._ . . ; ; . . .- ._ . But in these days of missiles, satellites, and spaceships, we
.
have become very interested, not only in the upper reaches of
the atmosphere, but in the space beyond it. These may not
be aircraft (as we have defined the term), and although they
may not even fly (according to our definition), no book on
flight, with or without formulae, can any longer leave them
out of consideration; we shall have more to say about them
towards the end of the book.
to the ground. In the example (b) given above, the aeroplane, 9. Wind Tunnels
although pointing towards the east, will actually travel in a We began our study of how an aeroplane flies by means of
south-easterly direction (Fig. 15); this is the main difficulty a practical experiment, even if it was only with a piece of
of aerial navigation, a subject which all pilots must learn. But cardboard. We need not feel ashamed of ourselves for begin-
there is yet another aspect of this air direction and ground ning in this way, for we are only following in the footsteps of
direction when we consider the climbing or gliding of an great men. The Wright brothers, the pioneers of power-driven
aeroplane; an aeroplane which climbs or glides against a head flight, were compelled, rather reluctantly, to resort to such
will appear to climb or glide more steeply when viewed from experiments before they were able to build an aeroplane that
the earth, although relative ?o the air the path of climb or glide would fly. Even at the present day, when our knowledge of
WIND TUNNELS 25
the theory of flight has advanced so much, the greatest designers
hesitate to use any new device until it has been tried out on a
model.
The most common method of experiment is to use a wind
tunnel (Fig. 17), in which the model is supported while the
air flows past it, the air being sucked through the tunnel by a
fan driven by an electric motor. As we have already noticed,
One would naturally expect the most valuable experiments that many so-called aeronautical discoveries would have been
to be those made on full-scale aeroplanes in flight. While it is obvious to everyone. For this reason attempts have been
clear that this must be the eventual test, there is much to be made to show the flow of air by introducing jets of smoke, and
said against it-when compared with the wind tunnel-for this is best done by using a small smoke tunnel and projecting
experimental purposes. Flying with new and untried devices the results by means of a lantern on to a screen. Very effective
may be dangerous, and it will certainly be expensive. The air demonstrations can be made in this way, but the difficulty is
is never steady, nor are conditions the same from day to day, to find a suitable smoke. Most smoke that can be produced in
and one cannot test separate parts, such as a wing, a strut or a large quantities, and is about the same density as air, is
wheel. So, with all its faults, there is something to be said for objectionable in some other way. After experiments with
the wind tunnel after all. complicated and difficult chemicals, the most satisfactory
results were eventually obtained with smoke produced by
10. Smoke Tunnels heating paraffin or burning cardboard or rotten wood.
Although the reader may have no chance of seeing experi-
One of our difficulties in experimental work is that we cannot ments in a smoke tunnel, he should always watch dust or
see the air, and it is the way in which the air flows that is so leaves being blown about, or tobacco smoke; a lot can be
important (Fig. 19). If the air were visible, there is no doubt learnt in this way. Very often short streamers, or tufts of wool,
are attached to models or aeroplanes, as all these are useful
aids towards “seeing the air.”
..
Centre of
J 3’:: :
5 ” i
Pressure, I ’9’ .:
find that it tends to turn the other way, the nose dipping I Weight Weight
1
downwards. With a little practice we can find a position such Fig. 21a. Balance Fig. 2Zb. Tail-heavy
that it does not tend to turn either way, and then we have
found what is called the centre ofpressure (Fig. 20). upwards, thus increasing the angle still more. This in turn will
cause the centre of pressure to move farther forward, and this
13. Stability and Instability -well, you can guess the rest. This is called an unstable state
of affairs-the mere fact that things become bad makes them
When the centre of pressure and the centre of gravity coincide,
tend to become worse. If, on the other hand, as we increase
the plane is balanced, or is in equilibrium (Fig. 214. If the
the angle, the centre of pressure moves backwards, it will
centre of pressure is in front of the centre of gravity, it is said
then be behind the centre of gravity and will tend to push the
to be tail-heavy (Fig. 21b) ; whereas if the centre of pressure
nose down again and restore the original angle. This is called
is behind the centre of gravity, it is nose-heavy. At present we
a stable state-when things become bad, influences are set up
are talking about a piece of cardboard; we are doing things in
which tend to make them become better again. As before,
a simple way at first, but we are all the time learning big
what is true of the cardboard is true of the aeroplane-if we
principles, and what is true of the cardboard is equally true of
want the aeroplane to be stable, and you can probably guess
an aeroplane weighing many tons.
that we do, then we must arrange for the latter conditions to
Now, all would be very simple if the centre of pressure
apply. How? That is a long story; but it will all come out in
always stayed in the same place, but unfortunately it does not.
due time.
34 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE AIR FLOW OVER A WING SECTION 35
has become unstable (Fig. 23), whereas, as a flat plate, it was
14. The Wing Section
slightly stable. We have discovered the only disadvantage of
Everyone nowadays knows that, although we still call an aero- the curved surface for aircraft that fly below the speed of
plane wing a “plane,” it is not, in the geometrical sense a
“plane” at all. It is a curved or cambered surface-in fact,
it is really made up of two surfaces, each with a different curve I
or camber. The technical name for such a wing is an aerofoil,
and the cross-section through an aerofoil is called an aerofoil
section (Fig. 22).
j--j+
(b) (C)
Fig. 22. An Aerofoil Section (a)
Fig. 23. Movement of centre of pressure
(a) Small angle-nose-heavy.
There are two reasons for curving the surface : first, a (b) Medium angle-balanced.
curved surface gives much better lift, and secondly, we must (c) Large angle-tail-heavy.
have thickness to give strength to the structure. Some old
sound ; but before we enlarge on that, let us turn to a further
books on the subject devoted a lot of space to the study of the
investigation of its advantages.
flat plate; and in the last edition of this book we were rash
enough to say that no flat surface had ever been used or was
15. Air Flow over a Wing Section
ever likely to be used for real aeroplanes. What a wonderful
example of how careful one has to be in this subject-instead If we wish to go upwards we must push something, or try to
of reaZ aeroplanes we ought to have said low-speed aeroplanes, push something, downwards. In climbing a rope one gets a
because in fact many supersonic aerofoil sections have some hold of it and pulls oneself upwards by trying to pull the rope
flat surface, though of course they must still have thickness to downwards. In going up a flight of stairs one puts one’s foot
give them strength.. on to the next stair and attempts to push it downwards, and
It is true that we began our study with a flat piece of card- the stair exerts an upward reaction by which one is lifted. It
board, but it did serve to explain terms like angle of attack, is true that in these instances neither the rope nor the stairs
lift, and drag. Besides, there was another reason: bend it into actually move downwards and it is better that they should not
a curved wing section and try it for yourself. It won’t fly so do so; but there are instances, such as in ascending a sandy
well as it did when it was flat-in fact, the chances are that it slope, where for each step upwards sand is pushed downwards.
will turn over on its back. You then may try to readjust the A drowning man will clutch at a straw-it is his last dying
weight because the centre of pressure is in a new position. If effort to get hold of something and pull it downwards so that
you do, it will probably turn over in the other direction. It he can keep himself up.
4
36 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE PRESSURE DISTRIBUTION ROUND A WING SECTION 37
An aeroplane is no exception to these rules; the wing is so reaction, or lift; on the other hand, the greater the disturbance
designed, and so inclined, that (in passing through the air) it caused by the motion of the wing through the air, the greater
will first attract the air upwards and then push it downwards will be the resistance to motion, or drag. Therefore the aim
and by so doing experience an upward reaction from the air. in the design of a wing, and in choosing the angle, is to secure
as much downwash as possible without at the same time causing
eddies OY disturbance. This is where the curved aerofoil is
superior to the flat surface (Figs. 24 and 25), and this also
explains why the angle of attack used in flight is so small. The
gradual curvature of the wing section entices the air in a down-
ward direction and prevents it from suddenly breaking away
from the surface and forming eddies, and although a larger
angle would give more lift, it would create more disturbance
_____------- -
and cause more drag.
___------- -- -- --
::.;. ...-“’
y&h.&+:::..:
.........
.--.:.::y: ........ ........
.:.....
..-;, ., , . _ ........
...... <.>&.z:. ...t., ............
F<,\ . . , . $ ‘\ < .......‘:.~h. .--.\
We have, so far, considered the reaction on the wing as if it
I......................................................
- A i rflrw ..c ....................................
‘-....................................................-
..::::.‘ ._
-....,..................................................-....................:..-
r..::l=:r-I:rr-.i~..~..~~.~~..:.-
~..cc.:::....~..:.:;
........... . .............
~
Reservoir
the pressure on the walls of the tube decreases, and vice versa.
Why ? The answer you will usually be given is simply Bernoulli’s
theorem. That doesn’t sound very convincing; and what is
Bernoulli’s theorem? Well, you have probably heard of the
idea of the conservation of energy-that energy may be trans-
formed from one form into another but that the sum total of
High-speed Flow,
Decreased Pressure all energy in the universe remains the same. Some people will
Fip. 29 tell you that it isn’t true ; but don’t worry about that, it is
true enough for the purposes for which we are concerned with
the London streets, and the well-disciplined speed-up through ! it. Well, Bernoulli’s theorem is a kind of special application
the Mersey tunnel. of this principle in so far as it concerns the flow of fluids-or
Now which of these two things happens when a fluid passes rather the streamline flow of fluids, because if the flow is
through the venturi tube? Is it compressed at the throat, or turbulent the theorem breaks down. In effect, the theorem
does it flow faster? The answer, in the case of water, is clearly states that, in streamline flow, the sum of the pressures exerted
that it flows faster; first, because water cannot be compressed by the fluid remains constant. Now, a fluid can exert pressure
(appreciably, at any rate); secondly, and perhaps more for two reasons: first, because of its movement-this is the
convincingly, because there are so many practical examples in pressure that we feel when wind blows against our faces-
which we can watch water and see how it speeds up as it secondly, because of the energy stored in it which makes it
passes through the throat-stand on a bridge and watch the ‘ exert pressure on the sides of a vessel even when it is not
water as it flows between the supporting pillars. The reader moving-this is the pressure exerted on the envelope of a
may not be so easily convinced about air, but the fact is that balloon, on the walls of a pneumatic tyre, or, to use the most
the patterns of air and water flow through a venturi tube are common example, the ordinary atmospheric or barometric
almost exactly the same (Fig. 29)-so much so that indis- pressure. The pressure due to movement we will call dynamic
tinguishable photographs can be taken-and measurements of , pressure, the other the static pressure.
44 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE 45
WHY THE CENTRE OF PRESSURE MOVES
So, according to Bernoulli’s theorem, the sum of the dynamic
last, the aerofoil which we are trying to explain. Here there is
and static pressures remains constant-therefore, as the
no obvious venturi, but by looking carefully at the way in
velocity (and the dynamic pressure) goes up, the static pressure
which the air flows (Fig. 24) you will notice that the decreased
must come down. We cannot prove the theorem here, but,
pressures are where the streamlines are close together, where
what is perhaps more convincing, we can give several examples
the air is flowing with higher velocity as at the narrower
of its truth in practice. This is probably advisable, because it
portions of the venturi. As a general rule, the air flows faster
is one of those scientific principles which some people think
all over the top surface, and slower all over the lower surface.
are contrary to common sense-which seems to suggest that
The greatest velocity of all is at the highest point of the
common sense is more common than sense, but that is by the
camber on the rap surface, and here is the least pressure, as at
way. Have you noticed how the dentist attaches a tube to
the throat of the venturi. But-let us emphasize this once
an ordinary tap and in that tube is a small glass venturi,
again, because it is important-the best results will only be
from the throat of which another tube leads to your mouth?
obtained if the streamlines are kept flowing close to the surface;
The flow of water through the venturi causes a decrease in
as soon as they break away, on both aerofoil and venturi,
pressure which sucks moisture out of your mouth. Have you
there will be less decrease of pressure, less suction.
ever noticed how wind blowing through a narrow gap tends
One of the best ways of thinking about air, or water, flowing
to suck in leaves and dust towards the gap? Have you seen a
through a venturi tube or over an aerofoil is to think of how
draught through a slightly open door close the door, rather
the changes of pressure affect the flow rather than-as we have
than open it, as common sense might suggest? Have you
done so far-of how the flow affects the pressure. It is, after
noticed how in a whistle, or in most wind instruments, air is
all, rather like the chicken and the egg-one doesn’t know
sucked in towards the throat in the instrument? Two ships
which came first. A fluid flows easily from high pressure to
passing close to each other tend to be sucked together, and
low pressure; there is, in technical terms, a favourable pressure
this has often been the cause of collisions; similarly a ship
gradient-it is flowing downhill so far as pressure is concerned.
passing close to a wharf tends to be sucked in towards the wharf.
This is what is happening between the entrance to the venturi
But the best examples of all are from our own subject.
and the throat, or over the top surface of the aerofoil as far as
Consider the wind tunnel, for instance. When the air is
the maximum camber-the air is free-wheeling, it likes it. But
rushing through it, the pressure of the air outside is greater
than the pressure at the narrowest part of the tunnel where after the throat, or the point of maximum camber, the pressure
is increasing, the pressure gradient is adverse, the air is trying
the air is flowing fastest. If you doubt this, try to open a
to go uphill, if we are not careful it will stall-yes, just that!
window or door in the tunnel, and you will soon know all
about it. Venturi tubes themselves-sometimes double venturi
tubes, a little one inside a big one-are used for all kinds of 18. Why the Centre of Pressure Moves
suction instruments, for measuring air speed by suction, for
If we follow up this “pressure plotting” idea we shall find not
driving gyroscopes by suction. The choke tube in a carburettor
only confirmation, but explanation, of another phenomenon
is a perfect example of the practical use of a venturi tube, And
that may have puzzled us. If we plot the pressure round the
46 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE STALLING OR BURBLING 47
aerofoil at different angles of attack we shall find that the Before going into this we ought to mention that it is not so
pressure distribution changes, and that it changes in such a easy to define what we mean by “angle of attack” now that
way that as we increase the angle (up to a certain limit) the ten- we have the curved aerofoil surfaces instead of our original
dency is for the most effective pressures to move forward, thus flat plate. Clearly we must choose some straight line to rep-
causing the reszdtant forces to move forward, and so accounting resent the aerofoil-but what straight line? It sounds a simple
for the instability of the aerofoil (Fig. 23). On the other hand,
if we plot the pressure round a flat plate-not an easy thing
to do-we find that the pressure distribution changes in a
different manner, the resultant force tending to move back-
ward as the angle increases, making the flat plate stable (see
Section 14).
Fig. 31. Variation of lift with angle of attack when the air speed
Now, why does the lift fall off after this angle has been
reached? One would think that the increasing angle would 20. Lift and Drag again
create more downwash and consequently more lift. It is rather Now, it is the air flow and the consequent pressures, as described
natural that aeronautical engineers should have spent much in the preceding sections, that give us at one and the same time
time and study on this phenomenon, because flight would the Zift which enables us to fly, in heavier-than-air craft, and
become very much easier and very much safer did it not occur. the drag which tries to prevent us from doing so. Both are
By watching the flow of air over the wing-using smoke or really part of the same force, but owing to their very different
streamers so that they can see the type of flow-they have effects it is important to distinguish between them.
discovered that when this critical angle is reached thej?ow over One of the unfortunate aspects of this subject, from the
the top surface changes-quite suddenly-from a steady stream- point of view of those who learn it or teach it, is that one
lineflow to a violent eddying motion, with a result that much of constantly has to correct or modify one’s original ideas. What
the downwash, and consequently the lift, is lost (Fig. 32). As I am going to tell you now is a glaring example of this. You
50 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE
will have gathered from what you have read that lift is an
upward force and drag is a backward force. You will probably
claim-not without justice-that I have told you so (see
Section 6). Now I have got to tell you that that idea isn’t
true-or, rather, that it is only true in one particular case, i.e.
when the aeroplane is travelling horizontally (even then the
lift may be downwards, as it was on the model in Fig. 18). The
real definition of lift is that it is that part oftheforce on a wing
(or an aeroplane or whatever it may be) which is at right angles
to the direction of the air flow-or, what comes to the same
thing, at right angles to the direction in which the aeroplane is
travelling. Similarly, drag is that part of the force which is
parallel to the direction of the airflow. So you will see that the
upwards idea of lift and the backwards idea of drag are only
true for horizontal flight. In a nose-dive it is lift which will be
horizontal and drag vertical. So far as lift is concerned, the
correct definition is a rather silly one, because in ordinary
language the word lift surely implies upwards; that is really
my excuse for not telling you the truth earlier, because I did
not want you to get the impression that it was a silly subject.
Perhaps, by now, you have already realized that it is!
200 M.P.H. -
300 M.D.H. -
This is called the speed squared law-the lift and the drag
are proportional to the square of the speed. It is one of the
Plate 4. The surprising thing about the Airbus A320 is how ordinary it looks.
Internally it is packed with new technology, including a digitally controlled automatic
fundamental laws of the whole subject.
flight-control system (using electrically signalled “fly by wire” connections to the
control surfaces) which, for example, can sense dangerous atmospheric conditions
such as wind-shear and downbursts and fly the aircraft to its safe limits, where 22. Effects of Size
earlier jetliners might have had little chance of survival.
Both lift and drag also depend on the size of a body; large
bodies have more drag than small ones of the same shape;
large wings have more lift. Probably everyone knows this
too and it might even be said to be rather obvious, but there
is a little more in it than that. From this point of view “size”
used to be taken as meaning frontal area, i.e. what you see of
52 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE
EFFECTS OF AIR DENSITY 53
a body when viewing it from the front-in other words, its
Notice that the area of a full-scale machine is 25 times the
cross-sectional area when viewed from this position. For an
airship it would mean the area of the largest frame, for a strut area of a one-fifth scale model (Fig. 34) and 100 times that of
the maximum breadth times the length. The greater the frontal
area, the greater would be the drag-in direct proportion.
This, however, is another aspect of the subject in which
modern development is leading to a change in ideas. When
bodies were badly shaped, it was true enough that the frontal
area was the best way of thinking of the size of a body moving
through the air, but now that so much has been accomplished
in the direction of cleaning up and streamlining aeroplane
design, now that skin friction has become of so much relative Atth Scale a
importance compared with form drag, it is more correct to I ss.f?.
say that resistance is proportional to surface area or, as the Fig. 34. Frontal area
naval engineer would speak of it, to the wetted surface, the
surface which is washed by the air passing over it. a one-tenth scale model. This applies whether we consider
Provided bodies are of similar shapes it really makes no frontal area or wetted surface, or plan area.
difference whether we compare frontal areas or surface areas ;
for instance, a flat plate two inches square will have four times
the frontal area of a flat plate one inch square, and it will also 23. Effects of Air Density
have four times the surface area, and therefore, by both laws, Lastly, the I$ and drag depend upon the density, or “thickness”
four times the resistance (at the same speed). If, however, either of the air. The denser the air, the greater the forces it produces;
flat plate is faired to form a streamline body, the form drag
this, too, one would expect.
will, of course, be very much reduced because of the better Now, as we noticed when considering the atmosphere, the
shape, but we must not forget that there will be an actual air density decreases very rapidly as we climb. Even at 20,000
increase in the skin friction owing to the larger wetted surface
ft (by no means a great altitude for modern aeroplanes) the
and the greater velocity of air flow over it. Think over this, air density is only about one-half what it is near the ground,
because it is important, and it is apt to be forgotten in view of and for this reason the drag-other things being equal-should
the decrease in total drag. What it means, in practice, is that
only be half the drag at ground level, so obviously (that
it may not be worth while polishing a flat plate or a “dirty” dangerous word again!) it will pay us to fly high and thus
aeroplane, but it is very much worth while polishing a perfect
reduce resistance. But will it? What about the lift? And what
streamline shape or a “clean” modern aeroplane, in which
about “other things being equal”? That, of course, is where
skin friction has become the major type of drag. In the case the catch comes in; “other things” at 20,000 ft are far from
of lift it is usual to consider the plan area of the wing.
being equal to what they were near the ground, and it becomes a
54 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE ANALYSIS OF DRAG 55
very debatable question, and a fascinating problem, whether particular kind of aeroplane, probably a fairly slow weight-
to fly high or to fly low. We shall say more about it later. In carrier or bomber, while the thinner section would suit a
the meantime let us remember that lift and drag depend on the more general-purpose machine, and some other shaped
air density-other things being equal. section altogether would be needed for a high-speed machine.
Or again, considering the effect of changing the angle of
attack of a wing (keeping the speed constant), whereas the lift
24. Lift/Drag Ratio
increases steadily from 0” to about 15”, at which it reaches a
So when we try to get more lift by increasing the speed, or by maximum, the drag changes very little over the smaller angles
increasing the wing area or size of the aircraft, or even by with the result that the ratio of lift to drag is greatest (and may
flying in denser air, we also-other things being equal-get be as much as 24 to 1) at about 4”; it then falls off to, say,
more drag, and, moreover, get it in the same proportion; e.g. about half this value at 15” when the lift is a maximum. Of
if we double the lift we also double the drag. But if we try to course, once burbling occurs, the lift drops rapidly, the drag
get more lift by increasing the camber of the wing section, or increases rapidly, and the lift/drag ratio tumbles to something
by increasing the angle of attack, we shall still get more drag, like 3 to 1 at, say, 20”.
though not necessarily in the same proportion-and this is
rather important. The increase in lift is obviously a good
25. Analysis of Drag
thing-the increase in drag is obviously a bad thing-but what
is the net result?-good or bad? Of course, there are times Having considered the main factors on which lift and drag
when we want lift even at the cost of increased drag (we shall depend, let us concentrate for a moment on the unpleasant
find later that this is so when we are out for low landing speeds) ; force-drag.
there are other times when we will sacrifice everything, even Why is it unpleasant ? Well, lift is what we are seeking;
lift, for a decrease in drag (that sounds like speed records); it is what lifts the weight and thus keeps the aeroplane in the
but in the average aeroplane we shall get a clearer idea of what air, it makes flight possible, and is the friend of flight. Drag,
we are after if we consider the ratio of lift to drag, rather than on the other hand, is a bitter enemy. This backward force
the two quantities separately. contributes nothing towards lifting the aeroplane, and it
An example will make this clear; the figures are taken from opposes the forward motion of the aeroplane which is necessary
tests on actual wing sections. A certain shape of section gives to provide the air flow which in turn provides the lift. This
maximum lift 30 per cent greater than a rather thin section; forward motion is produced by the thrust and the thrust is
but, on the other hand, the best ratio of lift to drag of the provided by the power of the engine. This applies whether the
thinner section is 30 per cent greater than that of the thick engine drives a propeller or merely exhausts itself as a jet, or
section. This is typical of the kind of results which are obtained whether the engine is a rocket. The greater the drag, the
when wings are tested, and it accounts for the wide variety of greater the thrust and the greater the power needed. But more
shapes of wing section which are in practical use. What it engine power means more weight, more fuel consumption,
means is that the thicker section would be more suitable for a and so on. and therefore it is fairly clear that for economical
INDUCED DRAG 57
56 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE
the lift. However, it is no good complaining about this, and
flight we must make every possible effort to reduce the drag. we become so resigned to this drag from the wings that it has
So let us analyse it- split it up if we can into its various parts sometimes been called active drag. This is rather too flattering
(Fig. 35). a term, but it really implies that it is caused by those parts of
r
Induced Depends on aspect ratio the aeroplane which are “active” in producing lift; the term
Drag Greatest at low speeds
is comparative, it is the lesser of two evils, the greater being its
brother of Section 27, and it is really better to call it wing drag.
WING Form Depends on shape
-DRAG - Drag Goes up with square of speed
26. Induced Drag
But active drag, or wing drag, the drag of the wings, is in itself
1 Skin Depends on surface
-Friction Goes up with square of speed made up of various kinds of drag, and the story of the first and
most important of these is a fascinating study.
If we tie streamers on to the wing tips of an aeroplane, we
Form Depends on shape
Drag Goes up with square of speed shall discover that they whirl round and round as shown in
TOTAL the sketch (Fig. 36). Notice that they rotate in opposite
DRAG
Skin Depends on surface
Friction Goes up with square of speed
streamers rotated violently, and they continued to do so in the Fig. 37. The cause of trailing vortices
air until, after a few minutes, they were nothing but shreds.
The author and his colleagues dismissed the whole affair with edge cross each other and form what is really a series of
some such silly remark as “That was funny, wasn’t it?” Had eddies called traihzg vortices, which roll up to one big vortex
they been a little more intelligent they would have realized at each wing tip (Fig. 38). As a result of the wing-tip vortices
that a phenomenon of this kind does not occur without good
reason, and they would have followed it up by further ex-
periment-and maybe it would have slowly dawned on them
that this was one of the most significant facts of aviation and
one that was to influence the whole trend of aeroplane design.
But that discovery was left to others and, even then, it took
some time.
But what is the real significance, and what is the cause of
these vortices? We can answer the first question quite simply the air behind the wine
I. ---0 is
__ deflected
__---~--. downwards, that outside
L ,*..--L:-- ,c
and shortly by saying that we cannot stir up whirlpools the span being deflected upwards. Thus the ner alreww~ VI
without doing work; this work must be done by the engine, the air which actually passes the aerofoil is in a downward
and the whirlpools are nothing more or less than a form of direction, and so the lift-which is at right-angles to the air
drag tending to hold the aeroplane back. flow-is slightly backwards, and so contributes to what we call
The cause of the vortices is that the air tends to flow around the drag (Fig. 39). This is another, and perhaps more scientific,
the wing tip from the region of high pressure below the wing way of thinking of the drag caused by the wing-tip vortices.
to the region of low pressure above. A fluid always tends to The drag thus formed is called induced drag (another term
flow from high pressure to low pressure. This flow round which the highbrows claim for themselves) because it is a
60 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE
PARASITE DRAG 61
and various projections and protuberances, while at worst
result of the downward velocity “induced” by the wing-tip
they are more like Christmas trees than flying wings. These
vortices. In a sense, induced drag is part of the lift, and thus
extra parts, engines, radiators, dynamos, guns, bombs, aerials,
it can never be eliminated, however cleverly we design our
wheels, petrol tanks, or whatever they may be, all produce
wings. This, nuisance as it may be, is really the part of the
drag, but, except in a few instances of clever design, do not
drag which best deserves the name of “active” because it is
contribute towards the rift. Their drag, therefore, is considered
to be of a very vicious type, and is given the appropriate name
ofparasite drag. The ideal aeroplane would still have a certain
amount of active drag, but it would have no parasite drag.
We should get better performance; speed, climb, weight-lifting,
all would be improved, and at the same time fuel consump-
tion would be reduced. Obviously, therefore, it is well worth
the while of those responsible for producing aeroplanes to
study this problem of parasite drag, and to see how it can be
reduced to a minimum, if not banished altogether.
There are two distinct methods of reducing parasite drag.
One is to eliminate altogether those parts of the aeroplane
Fe. 39. Induced drag which cause it; the other is so to shape them and smooth their
surfaces that their drag is as small as possible. The first is the
essential to lift. So long as we have lift we must have induced most effective, but it has its limitations, and progress has been
drag. made by trying a bit of each method. The problem of elimina-
But before we leave this fascinating part of the subject we ting struts, wires, and projections is really a structural one,
must make a confession, prompted not so much, I’m afraid, and it has largely been solved in modern aircraft (Plates 27
by a conviction that honesty is the best policy as by the and 28). It is a question of getting strength by internal rather
knowledge that we will be found out sooner or later! Induced than external bracing, and by having “clean lines” generally.
drag does not increase with the square of the speed; on the At one time it was considered that the extra weight required
contrary, it is greatest when the aeroplane isjying as slowly as for making an undercarriage retractable during flight would
it can, i.e. just before the stalling angle is reached and we are be such as to outweigh the advantages which would be gained
getting the maximum lift for the minimum speed. by the reduction of parasite drag. We do not think like this
today; the undercarriage is one of those parts which is
27. Parasite Drag useless during flight-worse than useless, it is a parasite spoil-
ing the performance of the aeroplane. Even if it does mean
The ideal aeroplane would be all wing; it has, in fact, been
some increase in weight, even if pilots do forget (in spite of
termed a “flying wing.” Even modern aeroplanes often fall a
various alarm signals) to lower them for landing, the fact is
long way short of this ideal; at best they have fuselages, tails,
62 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE FORM DRAG 63
that nearly all modern undercarriages are of the retractable will be noticed that the more turbulent the air flow the greater
type. The tail wheel has gone the same way or has been elimi- is the resistance, and streamlining really means so shaping a
nated altogether in the tricycle or nose-wheel undercarriage, body that air (or water) will flow past it in streamlines, i.e.
while radiators were first retracted and then disappeared; the without eddying, and thus the resistance is reduced to a
“flying wing” may still be a long way off, but it is a great deal minimum. Streamlining is another instance in which an
nearer than it was twenty or thirty years ago. attempt to avoid figures altogether would leave us in the dark.
The problem of reducmg the drag of those parts which we How many people realize that by carefully streamlining a
cannot eliminate forms a fascinating study, so let us now turn flat plate, such as, for instance, a coin held at right-angles to
our attention to that side of the question. the wind (Fig. 41), we can reduce its resistance not by 20 per
,o*‘--=--------------==__-
c-,- -‘ ,,zI*--b-=---
- -
state of turmoil-called turbulence-and thus cause a lot of _ _ _ _ __--
-____------
-__--em-----
-----so -;:-f)yy-/;~~-
----_
_ _
- - -
_________- - - t - - - - - - - - _ -:‘.-i:jG;z- em__ -1:
drag, which is nothing more or less than the skin friction we -__-----
_______--
- - -
_-_-e-------m_
- - - - - - - me- -e-w__ ---_
- - -
--w_
-‘,--
-a__ ---z------
--*<,---==---=_-
- -
have been talking about. It is also the break-away of the f
- - -= ------*-
---_
- - --__ - -
-_ --=:I: - -
e-0
.9
Assuming that the wing is to be a double cambered surface, 32. Variable Camber
we still have to decide how much the camber shall be. Fig. 49
shows three typical sections with different top-surface cambers Some advantages result from large camber, others from small
camber, and the reader may wonder whether it is not possible
and so different thicknesses. Generally speaking, a large
camber on the top surface will produce good lift but large drag, to alter the camber of a given wing section so as to meet the
varying requirements of flight. To do so is certainly a prac-
not only induced drag, but form drag; for wings too have
form drag and skin friction in addition to their induced drag. ticable proposition, but it raises a problem which we shall
Different cambers on the under surface do not make so much always be coming up against in this subject-whether it is
worth while; that is to say, whether we sha!l gain enough to
difference to the lift and drag properties of the aerofoil, but
make up for (perhaps I should say, to more than make up for)
74 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE SLOTS, SLATS AND FLAPS 75
what we shall lose by the increase in weight of the mechanism leading edge of the wings, and merits are claimed (by their
involved and the increase in complication. All such devices inventors) for all of them. For some it is claimed that they
mean something more to go wrong, some extra lever for an give the greatest increase in lift, for others that they give the
already harassed pilot to worry about. greatest increase in the ratio of lift to drag, and for others that
Many ideas have been suggested, and many ingenious
devices patented, in attempts to provide the wing with a
“smoothly variable” surface, or even with a variable area.
Few of these, however, have got beyond the stage of being
ideas, and the only devices that have proved really successful
in practice may be summed up under the headings of slots,
slats andJaps. These are perhaps more crude than a smoothly
variable wing would be, but they have won the day because
they combine effectiveness with simplicity-a combination of
qualities that is all too rare in modern aircraft but all the more
welcome when it can be found.
.
76 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE ASPECT RATIO 77
pointing. The original object of the slot was to delay the stall slat causes it to close while at high angles of attack, i.e. at low
of a wing and so obtain greater lift from it. speed, the air pressure causes the slat to move forwards and so
It has already been explained that the cause of the stall is open the slot. Sometimes, however, slots are controlled by a
the airflow breaking away from the top surface and forming lever in the cockpit, sometimes they are combined with flaps,
eddies. In a slotted wing this is prevented, or rather postponed, and sometimes they remain open all the time.
by allowing the air to pass through a gradually narrowing gap
near the leading edge, so that it picks up speed (a venturi in
fact) and is kept close to the surface of the wing (Fig. 52). The 34. Aspect Ratio
In addition to the cross-sectional shape of a wing, we must
consider its plan shape, especially the ratio of its span (or
or “&&” ’
Main aerofoioil length) TO ifs chord (or breadth). This is called the aspect ratio
of the wing. Fig. 53 shows how it is possible to have wings of
gap is really the slot-the small auxiliary aerofoil which forms HIGH ASPECT RAT IO
the top surface of the gap is called a slat.
Fig. 53. Aspect ratio
The effectiveness of slots varies with the type of wing section
to which they are fitted; in some instances the increase in
maximum lift reached may be as much as 100 per cent, while the same area but very different aspect ratios. We have said
the stalling angle is increased to 25” or 30”. From many points that induced drag cannot be altogether eliminated-because
of view the increased angle is a disadvantage, as will be ex- it is an inevitable result of lift. But it can be reduced, even
plained when we are considering landing, and perhaps this without reducing the lift, and that is where aspect ratio comes
has been one of the main causes of disappointment. in. Experiments indicate that there is a small but quite definite
Of course slots, like flaps, should be put out of the way when increase in efficiency as we increase the aspect ratio, keeping
they are not required ; otherwise they would tend to cause the area the same. That is why you will notice the very high
excessive drag. Fortunately this can be done automatically; at aspect ratios used on the wings of gliders, sailplanes, and
small angles of attack, i.e. at high speed, the air pressure on the aeroplanes designed for long-distance flying; all cases where
78 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE ASPECT RATIO 79
efficiency of the wing is of primary importance. But of this we cannot do in actual flight. As it happens, theory and
we shall have more to say later. experiment give extraordinarily similar results in this part of
At first it was rather difficult to explain why aspect ratio the subject, and prove convincingly that the greater the aspect
should be so important, because the elementary theory had ratio the less is the induced drag.
led us to believe that the lift of a wing depended on its area, and As so often happens in the study of flight, we find a fly in the
yet an aeroplane with a high aspect ratio wing was found to be ointment-a high aspect ratio has its disadvantages. These
more efficient than an aeroplane with a wing of the same area are chiefly structural-adding to the weight and thus eventually
but lower aspect ratio. The answer to this puzzle is induced cancelling out the effect of increased lift. Another bad point is
drag, the wing with the higher aspect ratio having less induced that a high aspect ratio makes a machine more difficult to
drag. manoeuvre, whether in the air or on the ground, and it takes
Why does aspect ratio affect the induced drag? To answer up more space in a hangar.
that let us go back to the fundamental cause of induced drag, Thus we must compromise on the question of aspect ratio,
the flow round the wing tip from the high pressure underneath just as we had to in deciding the amount of camber. Values
to the low pressure on top, and the consequent outward flow used in practice vary from 5 or 6 to 1 for fighters, which must
over the lower surface and inward flow over the upper surface be manoeuvrable, to as much as 20 to 1 for sailplanes, but
of the wing. Imagine a wing that gradually becomes longer there are certain rather freak examples right outside these
and narrower, the wing tips becoming farther and farther apart. limits-in both directions.
Clearly-I nearly fell into the trap of writing “obviously”!- We shall mention later the very low aspect ratios of wings
the influence of the flow round the wing tip on the flow over used in flight at supersonic speeds.
the remainder of the wing will become less and less until, if Before leaving the subject of induced drag-for the time
we reduce the thing to an absurdity by imagining a wing of being; we can never leave it altogether-we must once again
infinite aspect ratio, there would be no flow round the wing modify an impression that may have been left by an earlier
tips for the simple reason that there would be no wing tips. remark to the effect that it was a long time before practical
This state of affairs is not quite so absurd as it sounds because men realized the significance of wing-tip vortices, and so of
we can, in a wind tunnel, fake conditions of infinite aspect induced drag. If by practical men we mean the men who fly,
ratio. In a closed tunnel we can do this by making the span and perhaps even the men who design aeroplanes, then the
of the aerofoil such that it just fits into the tunnel and the tunnel remark is substantially true, but it is only fair to say that there
walls effectively prevent any flow round the wing tips; in an were other men, the greatest of whom were Lanchester in
open tunnel we can do it even more convincingly by testing a Great Britain and Prandtl in Germany, who studied, wrote
wing of which the span is greater than the width of the jet of air, about and preached the principles of induced drag-though
so the wing tips are outside the jet altogether. Fakes of this they didn’t call it that-in the very early days of aviation ; it
kind are, in fact, extremely valuable because they enable us to can even be claimed that Lanchester did so before any
confirm the theory by taking it to its limits; something that aeroplane ever flew.1 When one realizes that those principles
81
BIPLANES
80 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE
explain the importance of high aspect ratio, the advantages so effective; thus both upper and lower wings suffer. There is,
of the monoplane over the biplahe, and the modern ideas about in fact, an interference between the two wings and this is
economical flying, it seems rather hard that in their day these called biplane interference. Another way of thinking of it is
men were not considered as practical men, or even listened to to consider the induced drag, which is greater on a biplane-
by those who considered themselves to be so. But there.it is. with its four wing tips-than on a monoplane of the same
35. Biplanes
And so we come to biplanes. It is not easy to discover who d.. ... ..............
first thought of the idea of a biplane, i.e. of using two aerofoils, _.......................
w
-........,..,........-r
one placed above the other. Some people, of course, have . . . .Dlrccrion
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .--w
of Airflow
thought of putting even more planes on top of one another. Many -~ . . . . ..\........... --w
_...............,....... w
of our ideas about flight have, very naturally, come from birds, _ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .*
.
but the biplane idea seems to be a purely man-made invention
though some naturalists claim that there are biplane insects. A;
Fig. 54. Biplane interference
any rate, the first aeroplane to fly was a biplane, so the idea
is at least as old as the history of flight.
We noticed in an earlier paragraph that very large wing wing area, and so the overall lift/drag ratio of the monoplane
areas are required for flight, and the advantage of the biplane is better than that of the biplane.
was that this large wing area could be arranged in a more The biplane enthusiast, full of confidence owing to the
compact fashion, making the finished aeroplane more con- structural superiority of the biplane, persistently endeavoured
venient to handle both on the ground and in the air. The to minimize this disadvantage.
biplane structure seemed more suited than the monoplane His first idea was naturally to increase the gap, i.e. the dis-
to give us what we most required: strength without weight. tance between the two wings. This expedient had its effect in
So far the biplane seemed to have all the advantages; why, reducing interference, but very large gaps were needed to make
then, has it proved the loser in the long run? the effect appreciable, and very large gaps meant an increase
It is as a wing, as an aerofoil, that the monoplane has in structure weight, which, after a limit had been reached, out-
always been superior. Remembering how the pressure is balanced the advantage gained.
distributed round a wing section, let us put two such sections But our biplane fan was not yet baffled. He next tried to
together, one above the other, and observe the effect (Fig. 54). eliminate the interference by staggering the planes, in other
We find that the increased pressure on the under surface of words separating them horizontally rather than vertically.
the upper wing is not so effective as it was when it was When the leading edge of the upper plane was in front of the
alone-still less is the decreased pressure above the lower wing leading edge of the lower plane it was called forward or positice
82 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE BIPLANES 83
stagger; when behind it, it was called backward or negative The reader who is not used to flying may not realize the
stagger. Forward stagger definitely served its purpose, and seriousness of this question of field of vision. On the other
there was a small but appreciable increase in lift when com- hand, the reader who flies frequently has probably become so
pared with an unstaggered biplane of the same gap. Backward accustomed and resigned to seeing only a little less than
stagger, although it appeared hopeful, was most disappointing nothing during flight that he does not realize how many “blind
from this point of view; in fact it actually did more harm than spots” there are in the average aeroplane-whether biplane or
good. monoplane.
Stagger, however, had certain practical advantages, and for Anything that can be done to enlarge the pilot’s field of
this reason was adopted on most biplanes. Access to cockpits vision is a step in the right direction, and may well have turned
was usually improved, and, above all, the view of the pilot the balance in favour of stagger.
became more extensive. This latter point is very clearly shown The sesquiplane-or one and a half plane-was really a
in Fig. 55. compromise between a monoplane and biplane. The reader
may have noticed that we are frequently using that word
“compromise” ; no wonder, because it crops up in every part
of aeroplane design. A finished aeroplane is a compromise
from beginning to end. We want this, we want that; but we
cannot have both this and that, so we end up by having a bit
of each. The sesquiplane was a bit of a monoplane and a bit
of a biplane. The structure was that of a biplane and had its
consequent advantages; on the other hand, the lower plane
was so small that it caused hardly any interference with the
upper plane, which was therefore “almost a monoplane.”
Plates 3 and 5 illustrate this tendency towards a large upper
plane and small lower plane.
But even in a sesquiplane there were struts and wires to
connect the two planes, and when, further to tip the balance,
experience in structural design and the improvement of
structural materials, together with other advances in aeroplane
design, made it possible for a monoplane structure to be as
efficient as that of a biplane, designers came slowly but surely
round to the opinion that the .monoplane was the best type.
F&. 55. Angles of view So perhaps the birds, not to mention Lanchester and Prandtl,
The shaded areas shows the blind spots were right after all.
84 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE STRAIGHT AND LEVEL FLIGHT 85
36. Lift and Drag-A Summary @) The wing is pushed or pulled through the air at a small
angle called the angle of attack or angle of incidence.
We have so far considered the forces that act upon bodies due
(q) This motion produces a downwash which in turn causes
to their movement through the air, and how they experience
the upward reaction or lift.
lift, or drag, or both, according to their shape, speed, and so
on. We are now in a position to study something even more (I-) As the angle increases the lift increases up to a certain
interesting-the flight of the aeroplane as a whole-but, before angle called the stalling angle.
(s) Wing sections are curved or cambered, usually on both
doing so, let us sum up what we already know about lift and
drag : top and bottom surfaces.
(t) The decrease in pressure on the top surface is caused by
(a) A body that is pushed or pulled through the air causes the speeding up of the flow over that surface-as in a
a disturbance in the air and, in consequence, experiences venturi tube.
a force. (21) Slots and flaps are the most practical means of producing
(b) The amount of this force depends on the shape of the variable camber.
body, (v) The top surface of a wing contributes more lift than the
(c) on its speed through the air (actually, speed squared), bottom surface, the front portion more than the rear
(d) on its size, portion.
(e) on the smoothness of its surfaces, (w) The centre of pressure is therefore well forward.
(f> and on the density of the air through which it passes. (x) As the angle changes, the centre of pressure may move
(g) That part of the force which is parallel to the direction in a stable or unstable way-with most aerofoils the
of the air flow, that is to say which acts against the tendency is unstable.
motion of the body, is called drag. (v) Wings of high aspect ratio are the most efficient, because
(h) That part of the force which is at right-angles to the they have less induced drag.
direction in which the body is travelling is called lift. (z) After a long struggle the monoplane has won the day
(k) A wing is designed to give as much lift as possible with over the biplane.
as little drag as possible.
(I) Other parts of the aeroplane, if they cannot be eliminated Yes, we have exhausted the alphabet and, what is more
altogether, are designed to give as little drag as possible- important, we have already learnt the main principles on
the drag of these parts is called parasite drag. which flight depends.
(m) Drag caused by the shape of a body is called form drag-
this is reduced by streamlining.
(n) Drag caused by roughness of surface is called skin 37. Straight and Level Flight
friction. Let us now apply these principles to the flight of the aero-
(0) Wings also experience induced drag, as an inevitable planes as a whole. This is where it all becomes more interesting;
consequence of their lift. it is where the practical men, namely those who build and
86 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE THE FOUR FORCES 87
those who fly aeroplanes, will begin to see what we have been both of the wings and the parasite variety. The other impor-
leading up to. tant forces are the thrust which produces the forward motion,
The flight of an aeroplane may be divided into two parts: and the force of gravity, i.e. the weight of the aeroplane.
These forces, as for instance the drag, are made up of many
(a) Straight and level flight separate parts: there is the drag of the wings, of the wheels,
(b) M anoeuvres of the fuselage, and of all the other parts-they can all be added
When considering straight and leveI&ht we shall include up and produce one large drag. Similarly the weight is the
only that rather rare condition in which the aeroplane is added weight of all the parts, the lift may come from two
moving forward at constant air speed and neither losing nor
gaining height. Under the second division-manoeuvres-we
shall include taking off, landing, climbing, gliding, turning,
looping, and spinning-all these, and anything else that an
aeroplane may do when it is not in level flight.
It will be clear that the first is the smaller category; but it is
none the less of great importance, because it is the basis of
aeroplane design. We consider first the loads upon an aeroplane
in straight and level flight, then we consider all the other kinds
of flight chiefly in comparison with straight and level fright:
the loads are so many times more, or so many times less, than Fig. 56. The Four Forces
in straight and level flight.
To the pilot, too, straight and level flight has a significance
in that it is one of the first exercises that he learns in the air, and wings and perhaps also from the tail plane, the thrust from
thereafter it remains the basis of all other exercises. Strange the several blades of a propeller, or possibly from two or more
as it may seem, however, except on long-distance flights, pilots propellers or jets. But we can make a total of each one.
do not often indulge in straight and level flight-it is rather a Having done so, the forces must be balanced, they must be in
dull state of affairs unless one’s sole object is to get from one equilibrium, if we wish to maintain a condition of steady flight.
place to another, and even then quite a large proportion of Now, the four main forces act in different directions during
many flights are spent in climbing or descending. straight and level flight. The lift will be vertically upwards,
the weight vertically downwards, the thrust horizontally
forward, the drag horizontally backwards (Fig. 56).
38. The Four Forces To maintain a constant height the two vertical forces, lift
Now, an aeroplane is kept up in the air, and travels through and weight, must balance, must be equal. If you have not
the air, by means of the various forces which act upon it. We learnt mechanics you may be inclined to think that the lift
have already mentioned the Zift of the wings, and also the drug ought to be greater than the weight, ought to beat it, overcome
88 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE JET PROPULSION 89
it. If you feel like this, ask someone who understands mechan- provision of something to throw. If the process of throwing
ics to convince you ; he will probably have a difficult job, but things away is to continue, it is going to need an awful big
he ought to succeed in the end-because he is right. The lift store in which to pack them before you start, and they are
of the wings, then, must equal the weight, i.e. the weight of the going to weigh a mighty lot. In a ship we get over this by
whole aeroplane. using the surrounding water; the screw, the paddle wheel and
Now for the two horizontal forces-thrust and drag. Here even the oar, are each designed to get hold of some of this
you are going to give the expert in mechanics an even more water, and throw it backwards and thus produce the force
difficult job, because he has got to convince you that these, that propeIs the ship forwards. The onIy substance that is
too, are equal-the thrust is equal to the drag. He has got to available in large quantities near the aeroplane is the air itself;
tell you that when an engine is pulling a train forward along it is not by any means ideal for the purpose but it is better than
a level track at a steady speed, the engine is pulling the train trying to carry anything in the aeroplane.
forward with exactly the same force as the train is pulling the
engine back. It sounds strange but it is true. What is true of
the train is true of the aeroplane. Thrust equals drag-for 40. Jet Propulsion
steady flight. Any means of propulsion which depends on throwing the air
backwards is really a form of jet propulsion, and in that sense
39. Thrust all power-driven aeroplanes are jet propelled. But by common
Before going any farther we ought to think a little more about Source of Heat
the important force, thrust. We can only tackle the subject
very briefly here, and fortunately the reader who is interested Ram
due to
in how the thrust is produced has only to turn to a companion * 0 - J e t
Forward
book in this series-aptly named Thrust fir Flight-in which Motion i
he will find all he wants to know about it. ap i Nozzle i =
~~iff”rerplber
All we need say here is that there are several methods of I Direction of’ Motion
providing this force in aeroplanes, and they all depend on the
principle of pushing air, or something else, backwards with the Fig. 57. Principle of the ram-jet
object of causing a reaction, or thrust, in the forward direction.
If you stand on a slippery surface and throw something away usage the term “jet propulsion” has come to be applied only
from you, you will begin to slide in the opposite direction; to those forms in which there is no external propeller, the air
if you continue to throw things, you will continue to slide; simply flows into some kind of engine where it is compressed,
the more things you throw, the heavier they are and the faster partly by the natural ram effect and partly by the engine itself,
you throw them, the greater will be the thrust that you produce. then heated with the aid of some fuel, and having thus acquired
Now, there is an obvious practical difficulty about this, the extra energy rushes out at the other end faster than it came in.
90 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE PROPELLER PROPULSION 91
That is all there is to it, and that is one of its great virtues- larger in diameter and incidentally having much less velocity
simplicity. than that used in so-called jet propulsion. The rotating pro-
The engine itself may be of various types ranging from the peller blades act very much like the wings of an aeroplane, but
pure ram-jet (Fig. 57), in which there is really no engine at all we will deal with them in a later section; all we need realize
but merely a source of heat, to the Whittle type engine (Fig. 58), at this stage is that they produce a backward flow of air,
called the slipstream, of about the same diameter as the pro-
“0
Combustion
C.hnmhw peller itself. The propeller may be driven by any kind of
#Turbine
L c
.-, Velocity of
----32006
.-bft/sec. ~ S l i p s t r e a m
---->Thrust
-------33000lh
- ot
800 ft sec.
- -
--> 600mph.
/ ond over
L DirectIon of Motion
subsidiary correcting force is provided by means of the tail F&. 63. Action of the tail plane
plane.
new idea came along. This was the control or trimming tab
44. The Tail Plane fixed at the trailing edge of the elevators, and it will be described
The Americans call the tail plane a stabilizer-and it is a very in a later section in connection with control. These trimming
appropriate name. Its function is to provide a force of such a tabs proved so effective that they caused the adjustable tail
size and in such a direction as to correct any out-of-balance plane, in its turn, to become obsolete-or so it seemed-and
effects of the four main forces (Fig. 63). The tail plane force no one showed many signs of regret at its parting, because a
need only be small to be effective, because, being situated at fixed tail plane is very much lighter in construction and can be
the end of the fuselage, it has great leverage. Clearly, an made of cleaner design and better faired into the fuselage and
upward force on the tail will have a nose-heavy tendency; a the remainder of the tail unit; which may make it seem all the
downward force, a tail-heavy tendency. more strange that the adjustable tail plane has returned-but
In the early days of flying, tail planes were usually fixed at so it has, and even to some very modern aeroplanes.
some angle so chosen as to give the aircraft correct balance At the rear of the tail plane are hinged the elevators, with
under normal conditions of flight; this meant that aeroplanes which the pilot can upset the balance at will and thus manoeuvre
were apt to become very nose- or tail-heavy under other the machine into any desired position. On some modern types
100 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE STABILITY OF AEROPLANE 101
of high-speed aircraft, instead of having a separate elevator, roughest of seas. The chief causes of disturbances in the air
the whole tail plane is designed to move, forming what is are sudden changes of temperature, such as when there is a
called a slab tail plane - another return to an old idea. hot sun and drifting clouds. All kinds of convection currents
There are some types of aeroplane in which there does not are then set up, the hot columns of air rising, sometimes with
appear to be any tail plane in the ordinary sense of the word :
these types have sometimes been called tail-less, though
actually they have two tails instead of one, the wings being
swept back so that each wing tip has the same correcting effect
as an ordinary tail plane. There have been other instances in
which the tail plane was in front of the main planes, the canard
arrangement, and this idea too is tending to return, for all that
really matters is that there should be some means of introduc-
ing an extra correcting force when required.
leave the designer to it-all we can do is to get some idea of The side-slip, being a relative motion of the aeroplane
the problems which confront him-and after the designer has through the air, will naturally cause a wind to come from the
done his job let all those who load aeroplanes, and even pas- opposite direction to the side-slip (Fig. 68). This wind will
sengers who fly in them, remember that loads must be kept strike the wings and all the side surfaces of the aeroplane. If
well forward. the wings have a lateral dihedral angle it is easy to see that the
It might be mentioned that, as a factor influencing longi- effect of this wind will be to return the aircraft to an even keel,
tudinal stability, there is in most aeroplanes a longitudinal LifP
dihedral angle, i.e. the main planes are set at a greater angle to
the horizontal than the tail plane. This is not an essential for
longitudinal stability, but it is certainly usual. In this con-
nection, too, we ought to remember the downwash from the
main planes. This will cause the air to strike the tail plane at
an angle less than that at which it is set, and thus there may be,
in efict, a longitudinal dihedral angle although none is
apparent.
Some modern designs have exhibited an undesirable ten-
dency to pitch upwards, or tighten a turn at high speeds. This,
of course, is a form of longitudinal instability and one method
of preventing it has been to change the pressure distribution
over the wing by having a notched or saw-tooth leading edge.
Fig. 68. How lateral stability is obtained
49. Lateral Stability and then the side-slip will cease, since the forces will be
If an aeroplane rolls, forces must come into play so as to balanced once more.
This lateral dihedral angle is by far the most common and
restore it to an even keel.
most effective means of obtaining lateral stability, but, as in
In normal horizontal flight the lift will be vertically upwards
the case of longitudinal dihedral angle, it is not essential, and
and the weight vertically downwards, the two balancing and
maintaining equilibrium. If, however, the aeroplane rolls other methods are sometimes used.
over into some new position, the lift will become tilted, some Some modern types have a measure of negative dihedral,
or anhedral, on main plane or tail plane or both. This is usually
part of it acting vertically but some part acting sideways
towards the lower wing. The weight, on the other hand, will done for very practical reasons such as reducing the length of
still act vertically downwards. Thus there is nothing to balance undercarriage legs, but of course it does have an effect (possibly
adverse) on both lateral and directional stability which has to
the sideways component of the lift force, and the aeroplane
will side-slip to one side, the side of the lower wing. be taken into account in the overall design.
110 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE DIRECTIONAL STABILITY 111
Aeroplanes in which wings are high and the centre of gravity created on the side surfaces behind the centre of gravity will
low may be stable without any dihedral angle. Many high- tend to rotate it back into its original attitude. It is all a
wing monoplanes are examples of this type. The weight, being question of which influence wins.
low, acts like a pendulum when the aeroplane side-slips, the In deciding which will win we are concerned not only with
resistance of the wings to their motion through the air holding the areas of the various surfaces and of the pressures upon
them back and thus supporting the pendulum. As might be them, but also with the distance of each surface from the
imagined, this method of obtaining stability tends rather centre of gravity (which may be considered as the turning axis
towards a rolling motion from side to side. of the aircraft). It is only necessary to look at a view of the
A large amount of sweep-back may also provide lateral side elevation of an aeroplane to see what surfaces will have
stability without resorting to dihedral. most effect on directional stability. First, the fin and rudder.
Our discussion on the subject of lateral stability has as- These have both large areas and long leverage; in fact, the fin
sumed that the aeroplane has already rolled into its new posi- is the determining factor, and the designer decides its area solely
tion before any action takes place to restore it. Let us not from this point of view. Next the fueslage, especially the rear
forget, however, that even while the rolling is taking place, portion of it; the front portion is often of large area, and being
forces are called into play which tend to oppose the roll. This so far forward will have a bad effect.
is because the wing that is dropping will strike the air at a Wheels and undercarriage will not influence stability much
larger angle of attack, and thus receive more lift than the wing either way for three reasons : first, their side surface is not
which is rising. The restoring action is intensified if automatic very great; secondly, they are situated almost on the turning
slots are fitted near the wing tip, the increasing angle on the axis and thus have very little leverage or turning effect;
dropping wing causing the slot to open on that wing and thus thirdly, except for take-off and landing, they are tucked well
cause an even further increase in the lift. When at or near the away. The wings themselves, especially if they have a large
the stalling angle the increased angle of the falling wing (if not dihedral angle, present a considerable side surface to the air,
fitted with slots) may result in a decrease in lift-and that is but once again their turning effect is small. Even a propeller
the beginning of a spin of which we shall say more later. must be taken into account: its side area may be small, but
it is usually the most forward part of the aeroplane, and its
turning effect is definitely against stability; the same applies
50. Directional Stability to the forward portion of engine nacelles.
Directional stability depends on the fact that, if an aeroplane
is suddenly deflected so that it points in a new direction, it will 51. Directional and Lateral
temporarily, owing to its inertia, tend to continue to move in
the old direction. During this crabwise motion it will expose Watch a model aeroplane flying on a “bumpy” day; one of
all its side, or keel surfaces, to the air flow. The pressures thus the wings will drop, you will see quite clearly the side-slip (see
created on those side surfaces in front of the centre of gravity Section 49) towards the lower wing and the recovery caused by
will tend to turn it farther off its course, whereas the pressures dihedral, but you will also notice that the model goes off its
112 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE CONTROL 113
course and regains horizontal flight in a new divection, having may vary considerably in different types. The helmsman of a
turned towards the wing which was depressed. ship has only directional control; rolling and pitching depend
In a real aeroplane, if one of the wings drops owing to a upon the stability which is provided by the designer. But a
disturbance in the air, the pilot will often give a kick to the ship only travels, intentionally at any rate, in two dimensions,
rudder in the opposite direction. whereas an aeroplane travels in three, and must therefore be
These two practical instances-both really illustrating the controlled in its vertical movement as well as directionally.
same point-might, at first sight, appear to point to directional The submarine provides a better comparison, since it has both
instability, but they are actually excellent examples of the fore and aft and directional control. But a submarine is
results of directional stability. Lateral stability depends for more like an airship than an aeroplane, since it has the power
its effect on side-slipping, but SO does directional stability. I f to rise and fall by simply altering its efictive weight. An
an aeroplane is to be directionally stable, it must turn into a aeroplane cannot do this, and is dependent on its fore-and-aft
side-slip, and thus the side-slip necessary for lateral stability control or alteration of engine power for changes of
causes it to turn into the side-slip, i.e. towards the lower wing. height.
In the case of the model, it actually goes off its course-in the It may be argued-with some justice-that, although
case of the real aeroplane, the pilot may prevent this from directional and fore-and-aft control are obviously necessary,
happening by applying opposite rudder. So inseparable are there does not seem to be any more need for luferul control in
these two motions, rolling and yawing, that some people prefer an aeroplane than in a ship, submarine or airship. For com-
to group them both under the one heading of lateral stability. mercial work, long-distance flying and so on, aeroplanes
If an aeroplane is given too little lateral stability-in the without lateral control and relying entirely on their stability
narrow sense-and too much directional stability (in practical could be used, but they would be more slow and clumsy, and
terms, this means too little dihedral angle and too much fin therefore more dangerous, in rapid manoeuvres near the
area), the result of dropping a wing may be as follows: the ground, taking off, landing and so on. For all sporting and
aircraft will side-slip towards the lower wing, and two opposing fighting machines a high degree of lateral control is absolutely
effects will be brought into play, the dihedral tending to take necessary.
off the bank, the fin tending to turn the machine and thus The standard system of controls is by means of control
increase the bank. If the latter is the stronger of the two surfaces hinged at the rear of the tail plane (for longitudinal
tendencies, the rate of turn and the bank will both increase, control), along the trailing edges of the wings (for lateral
the nose will fall and the aircraft go into a steep spiral. This control), and at the rear of the fin (for directional control).
is called spiral instabifit~~. It should not arise in a well-designed A movement of the control surface will cause a force
aeroplane. due to the deflection of the air flow. The effectiveness
of a control surface will depend chiefly upon its area,
52. Control the distance from the axis round which it is intended to
However stable an aeroplane may be, the pilot must have the turn the aeroplane, and the velocity of air over the control
power to control it. The proportion of control to stability surface.
FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE
Upold force
on elevator when c&ml
column is pushed
forward.
portion h e l p s cant-rol
Lo move
I.
; turn.
other means of transport--the slower they fly, the more dan- \
!
I
gerous do they become. Later on this will be explained in more /
i
detail; at the moment we are only concerned with one aspect ,i
of the danger of flying slowly, namely the inefficiency of the I
‘\
control.
In Section 52 we mentioned that the effectiveness of a
control depends upon the velocity of the air over the control Increased drag
surface. Obviously the slower we fly the more sluggish and - Opposing turn
ineffective will be the control. Unfortunately, however, the
problem is even more serious than that, especially so far as Fig. 75. Difficulty of a turn at slow speed (large angle of attack)
lateral control is concerned. When an aileron is depressed,
the intention is to increase the lift on that wing. That, however, of the wing will cause a decrease in lift, which will tend to
is not the only effect: the drag will also be increased. Now, in lower instead of raise this wing and so tend to bank the aero-
order to make a correct turn, say to the left, we must bank or plane the wrong way.
roll the aeroplane by raising the right wing, and for this Much experimental work has been done with a view to
purpose the right-hand aileron will be lowered. The right solving this problem, or at least mitigating its effect. The need
wing should now go round on the outside of the turn, travelling for an aeroplane to fly slowly arises chiefly when near the
farther and faster than the left wing. But the increase in drag, ground, especially just after taking off and just before landing.
mentioned above, will tend to hold the right wing back and thus In these circumstances even the most modern high-speed
try to prevent the turn, the effect in some instances being very aeroplanes must fly comparatively slowly-indeed, paradoxical
powerful (Fig. 75). This phenomenon is known as aileron drag. as it may seem, the more we increase the speed of aeroplanes
The ailerons are in fact acting against the rudder and creating the more important does the problem of low-speed flight
a yawing effect in the wrong direction. become. This is also when an efficient degree of control is
This effect is particularly marked at low speeds, because most necessary so that obstacles may be avoided. Further, if
CONTROL AT LOW SPEEDS 125
124 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE
It is-to its credit-a simple idea, and one that is certainly
any error is made, there is insufficient height in which to
recover. Thus it is that the safety of flying is to a great extent a step in the right direction. -But it cannot be said to solve the
involved in this problem, and in the next few paragraphs we problem.
(6) Frise ailerons. In these much the same effect is gained by
shall consider some of the attempts which have been made to
reach a solution. so shaping the ailerons (Fig. 78) that the one which is depressed
The decrease in effectiveness of all the control surfaces
(owing to the slower flow of air over them) presents a problem
which is inherent in the system of control, and therefore no
.
140 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE LANDING 141
modern prevalence of runways, it may often be necessary to used, the aeroplane can fly at a larger angle of attack, and
land with the wind on one side, and this involves a special therefore more slowly, without stalling. Thus the landing
technique. When very close to the ground the forward velocity speed may be reduced, provided such an angle of attack can be
-relative to the air-is reduced to the minimum at which reached before the taiI wheel touches the ground. This means a
flight is possible. This is effected by increasing the angle of very high undercarriage, which, of course, will add to the drag
attack (by raising the elevators), so that, as the speed falls, the of the aeroplane when it is lowered, and which will be difficult
lift is still kept equal to the weight by the increase of angle. to make retractable. An alternative method would be to have
This process cannot go on for ever (as explained in Section 63), the wings adjustable so that their angle relative to the fuselage
because eventually we shall reach a stage when an increase in can be altered during flight just as some tail planes are. Unless
angle will, in itself, cause a decrease in lift, quite apart from such a device is used, slots cannot be employed to their full
the falling-off in lift due to the decreasing speed. Ordinary advantage in so far as reducing landing speed is concerned.
flight at any lower speed is impossible for that particular It is not always necessary to land as slowly as possible, and
aeroplane. good landings may be made on smooth ground at speeds much
The slowest and most effective landing will be made if the higher than the stalling speed. The aeroplane will, however,
aeroplane touches the ground just exactly when this condition land with its tail up, and the length of run after landing will be
of flight has been reached. It can no longer fly, its wheels are much increased. There will also be some danger of striking
just about to touch the ground, and thus it subsides gently on bumps on the ground which will cause the aircraft-which still
to the ground. In order to achieve this state of affairs it must has flying speed-to leave the ground again. If the pilot is
be possible to incline the aeroplane so that its wings are striking careful, this may not matter very much; but on the other hand,
the air at an angle of at least 15” before the tail wheel touches it may lead to dangerous bouncing. This is where the nose-
the ground. For this reason it will be found that when an wheel or tricycle undercarriage is interesting. With this device
aeroplane (not one with a tricycle or nose-wheel undercarriage) the centre of gravity of the aeroplane is in front of the main
is resting on the ground its wings are inclined at about 15” to wheels, and the aeroplane is prevented from going on to its
the horizontal, and if this is so, it means that a three-point nose by an extra wheel farther forward. In this way, two great
landing can be made at the lowest possible speed, i.e. the two advantages are achieved. In the first place, the aircraft becomes
main wheels and the tail wheel will touch the ground just as directionally stable when taxying (see Section 72). Secondly,
the aeroplane stalls. the danger of bouncing is lessened because even if the aeroplane
It is interesting to note that when the wings are very close lands at high speed it will pitch on to its front wheel, the angle
to the ground there is a slight, but noticeable, cushioning of attack will be reduced, the lift reduced, and it is less likely
effect, sometimes called ground efict-in other words there to bounce into the air again.
is just a little of the air-cushion vehicle, or hovercraft principle, If aeroplanes are to be in ordinary use among ordinary
involved in the landing of an aeroplane, especially one like a people (a state of affairs that has not been achieved after more
glider in which the wings approach very close to the ground. than sixty years of power-driven flight), they must be capable
Slots raise a problem in this connection. When slots are of landing in a small space. In order to obtain this ideal they
142 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE REDUCTION OF LANDING SPEED 143
must, first of all, be able to land slowly, which is the same thing Another method, and a very effective one, is to reverse the
as saying to fly slowly, but that is not all. They must be able to thrust of the jet.
approach the ground at a steep angle so that they can avoid
obstacles, such as buildings, trees, telegraph wires and such-
65. Reduction of Landing Speed
like on the boundaries of the landing-ground and also touch the
ground as close as possible to the near boundary (more will Can we expect aeroplanes of the future to land more slowly?
be said about this under the heading of gliding). Finally, they The answer is probably “yes.” We must remember, however,
must be able to pull up quickly after landing. that we are also trying to increase speed in the other direction,
and the more we increase the maximum speed, the more
difficult does it become to reduce the minimum speed. We
have really done very well in keeping the minimum speed of
the average aeroplane more or less the same while maximum
speeds have been steadily raised.
Let us consider what we must do to reduce landing speed.
The aeroplane is in flight just before it touches the ground.
To maintain flight, the lift of the wings must be equal to the
weight of the aeroplane. The lift of the wings depends on :
(G) Also reversible pitch propellers.
Fig. 82. Air brakes (a) The shape of the aerofiil section. (More top camber,
more lift.)
(b) The angle of attack. (More angle, more lift-but only
These important points have been sadly neglected until
up to the stalling angle.)
recently, and it was at one time considered a silly idea to fit an
(c) The air density. (Greater density, greater lift.)
aeroplane-the fastest means of mechanical transport-with
(d) The wing urea. (Greater area, greater lift.)
brakes. But then, retractable undercarriages, streamlining
(e) The velocity. (Greater velocity, much greater lift.)
and lots of other things which we know to be sensible today
were at one time considered silly. The run after landing can All these go to make up the lift; so if the last one, the
be reduced by wheel brakes and air brakes. An air brake is velocity, is to be as small as possible, all the others must be as
any means of increasing the air resistance, and the wings great as possible.
themselves, when inclined at a large angle, form a very efficient , Thus we shall reach the lowest landing speeds, taking into
air brake. Air brakes cannot, of course, reduce the actual account the five points mentioned above, with (a) a high-lift,
landing speed, i.e. the speed of flight just before landing, but big-cambered, thick aerofoil section. But this will spoil the
they can reduce the run after landing. Air brakes are becoming maximum speed. So what we really need is variable camber or
important in flight too, and Fig. 82 illustrates some of the ideas suitablejaps-the big camber to give us low speed, the small
that have been tried. . camber high speed.
144 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE WING LOADING 145
In recent years many new flaps and slotted flap devices have (b) Angle of Attack. About 15” is the maximum for an
been invented, with varying success, with the idea of decreasing ordinary aerofoil-improvement is made by slots or other
landing speed. Some of these, at the same time, act as air artificial means of increasing stalling angle and thus prolonging
brakes-and thus serve the useful purposes of steepening the the increase in lift. Unfortunately, however, very large angles
angle of glide and decreasing the run after landing, the two of attack are awkward for landing, since they necessitate a
high undercarriage.
(c) Air density. This is outside our control. Landing speeds
are noticeably lower at sea level than in mountainous country,
and in low temperatures than in high. But the air density is
an act of God, and we are helpless to alter it.
(d> Wing area. Increase the wing area, and we shall decrease
the landing speed. That is not quite so easy as it sounds. It
does, however, account for the ridiculously large wing areas
Variable-comber flaps Landing pitioa
which make many aeroplanes look so clumsy, and which
hamper so seriously their maximum speed. Another point is
that if we increase the wing area still more, we shall increase
the weight, and so our lift will have to be stillgreater to balance
the new increased weight, and we shall have gained nothing.
So far as maximum speed is concerned, retractable wings
which could be drawn in for high speed and spread out for
landing would seem to be a promising idea. But such devices
mean extra weight and additional complication to an already
over-complicated mechanism. However, variable wing area,
in some form or other, may yet come into its own; and variable
sweep, by swinging the wing, has already been proved to be a
Fig. 83. Slow-landing devices
practical proposition.
special instances where large drag is an advantage. Fig. 83 shows 66. Wing Loading
some of these devices, and it will be noticed that the slot and
the flap are sometimes combined in the form of a slotted flap. We now appear to have exhausted the possibilities; but that is
Nearly all flaps and slots, and indeed the wing itself, can be not so. We have considered means of increasing lift. The lift
made more effective as lifting devices at low speeds by blowing must be equal to the weight. Can we, perhaps, reduce the
air over them, and the air compressed in jet engines provides weight? This, too, will enable us to lower landing speed.
an effective means of doing this. Here is a fascinating problem, but unfortunately one that takes
146 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE
in the external shape and design of the aeroplane, and efficiency F&. 8.5. Gliding angle
/--
I iho
lrn .p.h.
(400-600 m.p.h.).
Falling bomb (800-1000 Heavy, small frontal area,
m.p.h.). streamlined.
Drag of l’ail
4 72. Taxying
Movement over the ground is called rax@zg. From the piloting
point of view this is not so easy as it may look, but it does not
raise many theoretical problems. There must, of course, be
control over the machine so that it can be manoeuvred into the
fielage best position for taking off. The engine and propeller or jets
are used to provide the thrust which pulls or pushes the aero-
plane forward. Owing to the low speed of movement on the
ground, the control surfaces are comparatively ineffective,
especially when taxying downwind. A following wind on the
ground may give rise to conditions quite unlike those experi-
enced in flight. The rudder and elevators become more effective
if the engine is opened up and the high speed of the slipstream
is allowed to flow over them. This does not apply to jets, where,
for obvious reasons, the jet does not strike the other parts.
Another difficulty of taxying in the tail-wheel type of aircraft
Weigkl’ Weighr is that, the centre of gravity being behind the wheels, the air-
Fig. 93. Loads during a nose-dive craft is directionally unstable when on the ground, the slightest
yaw being aggravated by the weight tending to swing farther
A nose-dive is one thing-getting out of it is another. The round. This is not so with the tricycle or nose-wheel under-
loads during the dive itself are unusual-and interesting for carriage, which is now the standard type on most large aircraft.
that reason. The loads experienced when the pilot pulls the A steerable nose or tail wheel is a great help. Taxying in a
machine out of a dive are interesting for quite a different strong tail or side wind is difficult, and in small aircraft it may
reason. They are similar in nature to the loads of ordinary be necessary for mechanics to hold the wing tips in order to
guide the aircraft. Two or more engines are a great aid to
flight, but they are very large. How large will depend on the
velocity of the dive and the suddenness of the pull-out. Suffice taxying and may enable an aeroplane to be turned about in its
\ own length. Reversible propellers or jets are even more
it to say that they may easily prove to be the greatest loads ever
TAKING OFF 185
184 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE
By taking off against the wind not only does one start with
effective, and wheel brakes, acting differentially on the two some relative air speed, and the length of run is thereby
wheels, are a tremendous advantage, and are always used on shortened, but, perhaps most important of all, the angle of
modern aircraft.
climb (as viewedfvom the ground) is increased and obstacles
on the edge of the aerodrome are more easily cleared. In these
73. Taking off days of runways it may not be possible to take off exactly into
wind; indeed when only one runway is used the wind may
After taxying into the best position, and turning into the wind even be at right-angles to the take-off run. This means not
or along the runway, the next problem is the take-off. In this only that the run will be longer but that the aeroplane, owing
again, the pilot has a number of things to think of, and it to its directional stability, will tend to turn off the runway into
requires skill and practice, but the principles are simple. The the wind, and owing to its lateral stability, will tend to bank
aeroplane being head to wind, or as nearly so as the runway away from the wind. It sounds rather alarming, but nowadays
in use allows, already has ~~nze air speed, and as it runs along pilots learn, even in their early training, the necessary tricks
the ground this air speed increases until the aeroplane becomes and technique of dealing with the situation, and in practice,
airborne. In order to take off in a small space, speed must be cross-wind take-offs-and landings-present little difficulty.
gained as rapidly as possible. In a tail-wheel type, the pilot The high wing loading of modern high-speed aircraft is
endeavours to raise the tail as soon as he can, thus presenting creating new problems in connection with taking off. Such a
the main planes at a small angle to the air and reducing the high speed is needed that rockets are sometimes used to
drag of the whole aircraft to a minimum; in a nose-wheel boost the thrust, or external assistance may be applied.
type this, of course, is not necessary, the wings already being Experiments with catapults have been proceeding for many
at a small angle. years, but the catapult is violent in action, and a trolley
Once the minimum flying speed has been attained, the
running on rails and driven by an electric motor or by rockets
aeroplane will actually leave the ground sooner if the tail may be found to give a better assisted take-off. It is curious
is lowered so that the wings present an angle of about 15” how such ideas-which occurred to many pioneers of flight-
to the air flow. This method might be used in an emergency are being revived to meet modern problems. Perhaps the most
(such, for instance, as having to clear a ditch), but it is apt to fascinating method that has been tried to assist take-offs is to
be dangerous in practice because the aeroplane leaves the mount a small, heavily loaded, high-speed aeroplane on a
ground in or near a stalled attitude, the controls being more lightly loaded but large high-powered aeroplane or
ineffective, the nose cannot be inclined further upwards or the flying boat. The larger aircraft takes off with the small one on
machine will stall, and the only way that speed can be gained its back or under its belly, and when reasonable speed has been
is to raise the tail, when there will be a danger of touching attained, the small aeroplane is released to go on its high-speed
the ground again. So it is better to pick up a reasonable speed journey while the mother craft returns to base. It is in this
before leaving the ground, even if one is approaching obstacles way that the X15, the American aircraft that holds the world
which have to be cleared or avoided. With sufficient flying speed record of 4,534 m.p.h. (1967), has been launched from
speed one can climb or turn; without it, one can do nothing.
186 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE AEROBATICS 187
a B52 Bomber at 45,000 ft. Another practical possibility is we have attempted with the more normal conditions. Let us
re-fuelling in flight, the aircraft taking off with a light load of be content with a few interesting notes about the most
fuel. important manoeuvres.
In the meantime, the only satisfactory way of dealing with From the structural point of view aerobatics are of extreme
the take-off of aircraft of high wing loading is to employ importance: an aeroplane may be strong enough for straight
variable-camber flaps. By taking off with the flaps partially and level flight, yet totally unsafe when flying inverted or in a
lowered the wing is converted into a high-lift wing, and the nose-dive. Instruments called acceZerometers are sometimes
taking-off speed is comparatively low. Once in the air the used to record the changes of load during the various manoeu-
flaps can be raised to the high-speed position. Unfortunately, vres, and the records obtained from these instruments have
however, flaps are not yet used to their full advantage for given us more valuable information than any abstruse theore-
taking-off purposes, the reason being that the extra drag tical calculations could ever do. The results may be summed
necessitates a longer run which may cancel out the good up by saying that during the standard recognized manoeuvres,
effects of a lower taking-off speed. The best way would be to when performed by a capable pilot, the loads in the structure
have a flap which was lowered gradually during the taking-off may be increased to four or five times those of straight and
run-but this is another complication. level flight. Occasionally the loads may be reduced, but this
Finally there are all the S.T.O.L. and V.T.O.L. types which is not serious so long as they are not reversed, as in inverted
are designed to give slow and vertical take-offs, just as they do flight. Notice that the figures given apply only to a capable
slow and vertical landings. pilot; a foolish and clumsy pilot can strain any aeroplane to
its breaking-point. Looping the loop was probably the first
recognized acrobatic manoeuvre, and remains to this day a
74. Aerobatics standard feature of any acrobatic display.
In the preceding sections we have considered various conditions A well-executed loop is rather like swinging a bucket of
of flight which are experienced by all aeroplanes. Whether water round in such a way that no water falls out when the
designed for military or commercial use, for speed or for bucket is upside down. The pilot, like the water, will be
weight-carrying, whatever their type or size, aeroplanes must sitting on his seat at the top of the loop without any danger
be capable of taking off, climbing, flying level, turning, gliding of falling out; unlike the water, he will probably be strapped
and landing. Beyond this certain types need not go; but others, in, but there will be no load on the straps. Just as the pilot is
such as fighting aircraft, must be capable of those much more in a normal condition-although not a normal position-so
violent manoeuvres which are usually classed as aerobatics. is the structure of the aeroplane, e.g. the load on the wings is in
Under this heading may be grouped looping, spinning, rolling, the usual direction (relative to the aeroplane) and has not
flying upside down, steep side-slipping, violent stalling, etc. er been reversed as it is in real inverted flight. In short, although
The path followed by the aeroplane during such manoeuvres the aeroplane is upside down at the top of a loop, the conditions
is very complicated, and it is not possible to reduce these are those of normal flight and not of inverted flight. All this
conditions of flight to any simple theoretical analysis such as applies to a good loop; in a bad loop-well, anything may
AEROBATICS 189
188 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE
60 mph- happen. Figs. 94 and 95 show the approximate changes of
_-s-a
speed and load during an ordinary loop on a slow type of
aeroplane. Notice that the path travelled is by no means a
circle.
The history of the spin is very different from that of the
loop; for many years spinning was one of the unsolved prob-
lems of aviation. Aeroplanes would commence to spin for no
apparent reason ; some of them would not come out of a spin,
whatever the pilot did with his controls, while others would
come out of it if he did anything-or nothing. Some would
spin fast, others slowly; some one way, some the other; some
preferred a steep “spinning nose-dive,” others a “flat spin.”
But the worst of it all was that no one seemed to know very
much about it. Pupils were taught that if they were got into a
spin it was not much use doing anything-they might try putting
Fig. 94. A loop the controls neutral, but no guarantee was given that it would
have any effect. It is no wonder that for a long time there
stood to the discredit of the spin the majority of all aeroplane
accidents. The pilot of today may be surprised to hear of this;
to him the spin is merely an acrobatic, amusing rather than
pleasant, a very effective means of impressing-and shaking
up-a passenger unaccustomed to flying, but not dangerous.
It is well that such pilots should realize that only after long
and careful experiment and research has most of the danger of
the spin been removed, and that the solution to the problem
became possible only when we learnt what a spin was.
What, then, is a spin ? It is an automatic rotation (sometimes
called auto-rotation) of the aeroplane, set up as follows. The
aeroplane is at, or near, the stalling angle, when for some reason
one of the wings begins to drop. When it does so a wind will
come up to meet it, and this, combining with the usual wind
0 a I minti from the front, will result in an increase in the angle of attack
AC C E L E R O M E T E R RECORD ’ on that wing. Now, at ordinary angles of attack, an increase
of angle will cause an increase of lift, which will restore the
Fig. 95. Record of loads during a loop
AEROBATICS 1 9 1
FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE
:+ng to its normal position ; but being at the stalling angle,
One wing drops the l$t on this wing will decrease, and thus the wing which is
&eady dropping will lose lift and will automatically continue
m drop. Meanwhile the nose will drop, owing to the loss of
Stolliag lift, and auto-rotation, or spinning, will set in (Fig. 96).
The attitude of the aeroplane may vary tremendously, the
@e path is a very steep spiral, the forward and downward
weeds are both comparatively low; but what is most important
is that the wings are stalled, and therefore the action of the
controls may be feeble, completely ineffective, or even have
a reverse effect. This explains the original puzzle-we did not
During spin know that the aeroplane was stalled, and even if we had done,
Large angle OF attack. we would not have known how to gain control when stalled.
Forward speed low. It also explains why devices which prevent or postpone stalling
Downward epecd low.
Aeroplane stalled. and which give better control at the stall, such as automatic
Loads above normal, but &ts, also tend to prevent spinning or, at least, to give control
do not vary very much. pver the spin. The size and position of all the tail surfaces,
Wch as fin, rudder and tail plane, also influence the tendency of
4he aeroplane to spin.
S The reader may have noticed that we have given both to
Nailing and to spinning the doubtful credit of being the cause
$f the majority of aeroplane accidents. The reason for this
90’ Roll
.
200 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE THE PROPELLER 20 1
go forward the same distance in one revolution, the parts near travel plus the small angle of attack needed to give the thrust.
the tip travel faster and farther in their circular motion than You see the path of an ordinary aerofoil in normal flight is
those near the boss. The portions of the blade near the tip horizontal, or 0”, and the wings are set at the small angle of
may be compared to men climbing a gradual slope to reach attack of say 2” or 3” to the horizontal, so it is much the same
the top of a hill, while the portions near the boss are like men idea.
climbing the same hill on a steeper path. If both are to reach Since the pitch of a propeller depends on the forward speed
the summit at the same time, those on the gradual slope will and the revolutions per minute, the efficiency can only be at
travel farther and faster (Fig. 101). its best when the forward speed and the revolutions per minute
correspond. This is a disadvantage in modern aeroplanes
because every effort is being made to extend the speed range.
For this reason much energy was devoted to solving the prob-
lem of producing a propeller with variable or controllable
pitch, so that its blades could be rotated during flight to the
best angle for the particular air speed and engine speed. Such
a propeller has the additional advantage that the pitch can be
altered to suit the changing density of the air with altitude, a
higher pitch being needed to maintain a grip on the thinner
air. Prejudice, mechanical difficulties, and the extra weight
and complication involved all tended to retard the progress of
this invention; but in spite of them all, its advantages were
Fig. 101. Analogy between the paths travelled by different recognized, and the technical problems were solved. One
sections of a propeller blade and paths of varying steepness consideration caused people to think of some kind of control-
to the summit of a hill lable pitch as a necessity rather than a luxury. The high
maximum speed of modern aeroplanes means that the pitch
It has been stated that the propeller blade strikes the air at a of propellers must be high, so that for each revolution they can
small angle, like the aerofoil. But the pitch angle of the pro- travel forward a long distance. High pitch means that the
peller, even at the tip, where it is smallest, may be as much as blades are set at a large blade angle. When travelling forward
20” or 30”. In explaining this, the different gradients up the at the speed for which they are designed the blades will, of
hill will help us again (Fig. lOl), because these represent the course, strike the air at a small angle. But when the aircraft is
paths travelledby the different parts of the blade. It is true at rest on the ground, or is starting to move slowly over the
that they have been straightened out into straight lines instead ground for take-off purposes, the blades will meet the air at
of spiral curves, but that is only to make them simpler to such a large angle (perhaps 70” or more) that they will be
understand. Now, actually, any particular part of the blade is completely “stalled,” and thus the lift or thrust will be very
set at the angle required for the slope on which that part must small and there will be difficulty in taking off.
202 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE THE PROPELLER 203
It was for this reason that the two-pitch propeller became diameter of the propeller, or their chords. Now the efficiency
popular. Without giving all the advantages of real variable of a propeller, like that of a wing, is greater when the blades
pitch, this propeller could be set in one of two positions, thus have a high aspect ratio, that is to say when the propeller
giving a fine pitch for taking off and a coarse pitch for high- has a large diameter and the blades have narrow chords. But
speed flight. An improvement on the two-pitch type was the alas, large diameters mean high tip speeds, greater stresses,
constant-speed propeller. In this, the blade angles are auto- and less strength to carry them, and-the final deciding factor
matically changed during flight in such a way as to absorb the -difficulty in clearing the ground without making the under-
power of the engine while always allowing it to run at the same carriage unduly high. So in modern propellers efficiency has
speed. This type of propeller is now in common use, and
variable pitch has been even further extended to include
feathering and braking. Feathering means turning the blades
so that, when the propeller is stopped, they offer the least
resistance; it is used in cases of engine failure. A propeller
can be used for braking in two ways: first, by turning the
blades so that they are at right-angles to the direction of motion
and thus offer the maximum resistance-the exact opposite to
feathering, in fact ; secondly, by turning the blades even \vJ
farther and then opening up the engine so that the propeller fig. 102. The slipstream
gives a thrust in the reverse direction-this is called reversible
pitch.
The propeller must absorb the power given to it by the engine; to be sacrificed, diameter has to be restricted, and the chords
otherwise it will simply race and have no effect. This means of the blades have to be widened, sometimes right up to the
that it must have sufficient blade area, and that is why with tip, so as to absorb the ever-increasing power.
increasing power of engines there was a tendency for the Just as the wing provides lift by pushing the air downwards,
number of blades to increase from two to three, four, and even so the propeller provides thrust by pushing the air backwards.
five. But there is a limit to the number of blades that can be The backward flow of air is called the slipstream (Fig. 102).
fitted into one hub-and five is about the limit-and so we But the rotating blade of the propeller also pushes the air
came to contra-rotating propellers, two propellers one in sideways, causing the slipstream to rotate. The diameter of
front of the other and rotating in opposite directions. These this rotating high-speed column of air remains very nearly the
were advocated for a long time-because of their other same as that of the propeller, at any rate for the short distance
advantages-but only came into their own over this problem it travels over the aeroplane itself. One cannot see the wake
of absorbing the power. left behind by the aeroplane as one can when standing on
Another way of increasing the blade area so as to absorb the stern of a ship, but if one crosses this wake in another
more power is to increase the length of the blades, i.e. the aeroplane one soon realizes its existence.
204 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE MULTI-ENGINED AEROPLANES 205
The slipstream has most unpleasant effects on the aircraft.
76. Multi-Engined Aeroplanes
Owing to its velocity being higher than that of the aircraft
itself, all parts in its wake will have extra resistance, and in the The reader may feel that throughout most of this book we
normal type of single-engined aircraft these parts will include have assumed that we are dealing with single-engined aircraft.
fuselage, tail unit and parts of the undercarriage and centre If this is so, it has only been to establish principles. In most
section-in fact a very large proportion of those parts which of the problems we have dealt with there is no essential
cause parasite drag. Furthermore, the pulsating, unsteady difference between aeroplanes with one engine and those with
high speed flow which is usually set up causes wear and tear two or more. However the engines are arranged, the combined
of the skin or covering, and draughts and noise in cockpits thrusts will always give a resultant thrust which corresponds
and cabins. Another difficulty is that, owing to its rotation in to that of a single and more powerful engine. This does not
one particular direction, the effects of the slipstream are not mean that there are no advantages in multi-engined aircraft;
symmetrical : it will strike one side of certain parts such as the advantages there undoubtedly are, but they are advantages in
fin and tend to rotate the machine or make it yaw from its safety and reliability rather than in the theory or principles of
course. flight with which we have been concerned.
But one good effect of the slipstream is that it improves the Provided that flight can be maintained with one engine, the
rudder and elevator control at low speeds, and especially when gain in reliability by using two engines is obvious; unfortunate-
taxying; the extra speed of air flow which the slipstream causes ly there were at one time twin-engined aircraft which could
over these control surfaces may be used most effectively. not fly on one engine, and in such cases an extra engine is a
In the pusher type of aeroplane we were saved from the liability and not a source of reliability. Many modern types
ravages of slipstream and flying became quieter and in every have four or more engines, they can be flown very satisfac-
way more pleasant. However, certain snags cancelled out torily on any three, and can maintain level flight on any two ;
these benefits. The weight was too far back and balance and the reliability thus gained is of inestimable value on long
stability were difficult to obtain; it was also impossible to flights across the sea or over difficult country.
obtain a satisfactory arrangement of the tail unit, and the The problem of making a twin-engined aircraft capable of
propeller could not easily be kept clear of the ground for lan- flight on one engine is not a simple one. It is not just a question
ding purposes. But whatever its merits or demerits, the true of lack of power (although that may be serious enough), but
pusher aeroplane-such as the original Wright machine-is one has to counteract the tremendous turning effect of the
practically non-existent today. Or is it?-aircraft driven by remaining engine. This needs powerful rudder control, and,
jets or rockets, especially when these are at the rear, are surely to be fully effective, the rudder in propeller-driven aircraft
pushers, and they certainly save us from most of the slipstream must be in the slipstream of the remaining propeller. Since
problems though they add a new one in that the slipstream is either engine may fail, there should be a rudder in the slip-
hot, and so must not be allowed to strike parts of the aircraft stream of each propeller. A bias gear may be introduced so
at all, and may even do damage to aerodrome surfaces. that the rudder can be set to give a permanent turning effect
206 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE FLYING FAULTS 207
in one direction without the pilot having to exert continuous wonders in one type may be completely ineffective in
pressure on the rudder bar. another.
The turning effect in multi-engined aircraft resulting from Apart from these mysterious faults-accidents of design we
the stoppage of one or more engines will clearly be more serious might almost call them-aeroplanes develop from time to
if the engines are far apart. This is another disadvantage of time a tendency to fly incorrectly if left to themselves; to fly
propellers having large diameters, but it is also the clue to say with one wing lower than the other, or to tend to turn to
one of the great advantages of multi-engined jet propulsion right or left, or to be nose- or tail-heavy.
as against multi-engined propeller propulsion. The difference Now, our attitudes towards these faults has changed com-
is clearly illustrated in the examples of multi-engined aero- pletely in the last thirty years or so-indeed, since this book
planes of both types which will be found in the Plates, and in was first published. In the old days, and especially in the case
which it will be noticed how close the nacelles of the jet of biplanes, aeroplanes were more adjustable than they are
engines can be, both to the body of the aircraft and to each now, and if for any reason they got out of true, the rigger was
other. But this is not always so - for there are structural and able to adjust them by the simple process of slackening and
other advantages in spreading the load along the wing. A modern tightening wires.
trend in the design of multi-engined jet aircraft is to locate the But whether we like it or not, those days are gone, and with
engine nacelles at the rear of the fuselage and on either side them the rigger himself; very little, if any, adjustment can be
of it - who said that the true pusher had disappeared? made to the “rigging” of the modern aeroplane on the ground.
But another significant change has taken place too, and it is
just as well that it has, because with all the rigidity of the
modern aeroplane, and all the precision that is put into its
77. Fly&Faults manufacture, it is still apt to develop flying faults, and it
Those readers who are unaccustomed to flying may imagine would be most unfortunate if there were no means of correcting
that an aeroplane, being a mechanical device, ought to behave them. But now they are so easy to correct by trimming ad-
with the precision of a machine. Perhaps it ought, but it cer- justments in the air that the pilot hardly recognizes them as
tainly does not. Aeroplanes seem to possess faults, tempers flying faults at all.
as bad and habits as vicious as those of any human being. These changes represent progress, but they have had one
Such faults may never be cured and the type in consequence unfortunate result. The tracking down of flying faults, the
never come into general use. On the other hand, some slight diagnosis as it were, and the application of the remedy,
modification has often been found to turn failure into success; provided the essential link between the theory of flight and
miracles have been performed by the substitution of a four- the practice of flight; there was no better way for practical
bladed propeller for a two-bladed one, by alterations of men like the rigger and the pilot to learn the principles of
fin or tail plane, by change of engine, and so on. The flight than to try to puzzle out what was wrong and how to
reasons for the remedy are often as obscure as the reasons put it right. Nowadays if the aeroplane tends to fly with one
for the fault, and, what is more, remedies which produce wing low the pilot just turns a knob; he may or may not know
I
FLYING FAULTS 209
208 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE
what happens when he turns the knob, but it is almost certain would be sufficient to rig the ailerons so that when the control
that he doesn’t know why he had to turn it, i.e. what was column was central the left aileron (if flying left wing heavy)
making the aeroplane fly with one wing low. was slightly depressed and the right aileron neutral or slightly
So, to help the reader to understand, I am going to ask him raised. This might have some effect, but the result is likely
to use his imagination and to put the clock back to the days to be disappointing; the ailerons would tend to find their
when flying faults had to be diagnosed and corrected by the own level, the control column would move slightly over to
rigger on the ground ; or, if he prefers it, to think of the faults the left, and the aircraft would still tend to fly left wing low.
as applying to a model aeroplane which even today can Those who are not pilots themselves often seem to imagine
usually be adjusted sufficiently to correct the faults. that a pilot tries to fly straight and level by placing his control
Suppose, for instance, that an aeroplane tended to$y with column and rudder bar in central positions. But pilots fly
one ofits wing.s Zower than the other unless the pilot pushed the chiefly by feel; if, with hands off, the aircraft flies on a level
control column over to the opposite side to raise the lower keel, the pilot does not bother if the control column is one inch
wing. Perhaps it would be better to say that the left wing was to the left, nor will he report the machine as flying right wing
heavy, and that the pilot had to lift it in order to fly on an even low. It wouldJIy right wing low if he put the control column
keel. If this fault develops in a model it will actually fly with central, but he does not; he lets it stay where it wants to be.
one wing low-with consequences that will be mentioned What the pilot notices is when he has to push the control
later-unless it is equipped with some automatic stabilizing column to right or left in order to make the aeroplane fly on
device, or can be controlled by radio from the ground. an even keel. If we can make the left-hand aileron tend of
Now, ideally, the rigger or the owner of the model should its own accord to keep in a lower position than the right-hand
first discover the cause of this or any other fault. But in aileron, then the required result will be achieved. In the “good
practice this has its disadvantages; for aeroplanes, like human old days” this was sometimes done by fitting elastic to the con-
beings, seem to have peculiar “kinks”, and of two apparently trol column from the side of the cock-pit, and tightening the
identical aeroplanes, one may fly with one wing heavy and the elastic according to the amount of bias required. Nowadays
other will not. Both may be checked all over, all dimensions this is done by use of the trimming tabs which were described
may be found correct, and yet the one will continue in its bad in Section 57.
behaviour while the other flies perfectly. In such circumstances, While we have pointed out that the chief aim was to make
if some adjustment could be made to the faulty aircraft so as to the aeroplane fly correctly-provided, of course, that nothing
make it fly correctly, this should be done even if the rigging was done to cause danger or spoil performance-it is inter-
dimensions were incorrect after the adjustment. For what really esting to consider what might have been the possible causes
matters is whether the aeroplane can be made to fly correctly. of a machine flying with one of its wings low. For example,
On the old biplanes the accepted method of achieving this suppose that it was the left wing. The torque of a propeller
result was to increase the rigger’s angle of incidence on the revolving clockwise (as seen from pilot’s cockpit) would tend
wing which tended to fly low, to decrease it on the opposite to make the aeroplane revolve in the opposite direction, i.e.
wing, or to do a little of each. It might be thought that it to drop the left wing. Probably the designer would have
210 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE FLYING FAULTS 211
allowed for this somewhere in his calculations; if he had not, tabs. By this method we are certainly applying the remedy
that might have been the cause. without discovering the cause; so much so that there is a
Too much incidence on the right-hand wing would cause danger of a fault which is really due to a distorted structure or
extra lift on that wing, too little incidence on the left-hand incorrect loading not being reported. It should be remembered
wing would cause a loss of lift. Either or both of these might that an aeroplane may be trimmed to fly hands off even when
make the left wing heavy. If the camber on the left wing was there is some serious fault in its rigging or loading; but it can
distorted, or if there was anything to decrease its lift, it would never fly at its best in such a condition, and therefore nose- or
tend to fly low. tail-heaviness should always be tested by flying the aircraft
If there were some large weight such as a bomb or a full with the trimming tabs in the correct position for normal
petrol tank on the left wing without a corresponding weight flight.
on the other wing, the left wing would tend to drop. This is Clearly the aeroplane will be nose-heavy if either the centre
rather obvious, and it is most likely that the cause of it would of gravity is too far forward or the centre of lift is too far back.
have been equally obvious. It is very sensitive even to slight movements to these two big
Some books used to tell you that incorrect dihedral on one forces. Air-worthiness regulations lay down that the centre of
of the wings might be the cause. But suppose, for instance, gravity shall be within narrow limits. Very careful loading of
there was 1” too much dihedral on the left wing-quite an aircraft is always necessary, and sometimes ballast weights
, must be carried so as to keep the centre of gravity within the
appreciable error-the aeroplane would, in theory at any rate,
adjust itself so that there was no side-slip, i.e. so that there required limits, in spite of the fact that weights may cause a
was the same @ective dihedral angle on both sides. The falling-off in performance. For instance, in some two-seater
pilot would then be sitting on a seat inclined 4” to the
horizontal. No one who has ever flown can think of this as a
very serious matter; incidentally, too, neither would the air-
craft be flying with the left wing low, nor would the left wing
be heavy.
An aeroplane too may be either nose- or tail-heavy-this
time we use the more sensible terms, and this time we feel
justified in using the present tense, because even the most
modern of aeroplanes can exhibit this fault, and if the cause instruments or the ground very carefully he may allow the
is in incorrect loading, it can be discovered and rectified. machine to yaw several degrees off its course before he notices
Before the days of adjustable tail planes and trimming tabs it. Another annoying feature of the fault was that the cause
this was the most common of all flying faults. We do not hear was difficult to detect, and in some instances there was no
so much of it nowadays, not because it does not occur, but obvious remedy. If the tendency to turn off the course was
because it is so easily remedied by the pilot during flight; all sometimes to one side, sometimes to the other, then it was
that is required is a slight adjustment on the elevator trimming really a question of directional instability, and both pilot and
FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE I NSTRUMENTS
212 213
rigger were more or less helpless; it was a matter for the de- throughout the airframe. In the aeroplane structure itself, the
signer to investigate and possibly to fit a larger fin. If, on the danger of vibration is that it may lead to the type of flutter that
other hand, the tendency was always to turn in one direction, has already been mentioned (Section 59) in connection with
e.g. to the left, it was possible to apply some form of opposite control.
rudder effect, and the universal modern method of doing this We do not pretend to have considered all the faults that may
is by using trimming tabs on the rudder. occur in flight. It was stated at the outset that each particular
Before leaving this subject, we ought perhaps to mention aircraft may have its own individual faults, and this applies
that, in this case as in the others, any obvious causes of the even more so to the separate types. Some are difficult to land,
trouble should be investigated first. For instance, any obstruc- others easy ; some will tend to spin when they should not,
tion on the left-hand wing will cause extra drag on that wing others will not spin when one wants them to do so; some may
and thus cause the aircraft to yaw to the left. So powerful is have faults of stability or control or be subject to little tricks
this rudder effect of extra drag on one wing that it has often to which the pilot must become accustomed; very often the
been suggested that some means of increasing the drag on each designer is quite unaware of these features until the test pilot
wing as required would make a better “rudder” than the con- has put the aircraft through its paces, and by that time, unless
ventional design. the fault is really serious or dangerous, little can be done about
One of the most puzzling of all the faults to which an aero- it. Thus the type will go into service with all its individual
plane is liable is that of excessive vibration. When we consider characteristics, and pilots and all who work on it will have
all the rotating and reciprocating parts in an elaborate aero pIenty of little things to grouse about; but after all-1 was
engine, the revolving propellers and the comparative flexi- going to say “It is only human!“-well, it comes to much the
bility of all the parts of the structure, it is hardly surprising same thing-nothing can be perfect, and perhaps it is just as
that vibrations should occur, and it needs some experience to well that aeroplanes are no exception to the rule.
detect the change, sometimes a gradual one, from the inevit-
able vibration which must always be present in such an 78. Instruments
elaborate construction to the vibration which indicates some
fault in the mechanism. If this latter vibration is allowed to The dashboard of a modern motor car is an attractive enough
continue unchecked, the chances are that it will go from bad sight to anyone who is fond of gadgets, but it is nothing in
to worse and may very soon end in disaster. All cases of comparison with the cockpit of a modern aeroplane. In both
vibration should be investigated at once, and this differs from the motor car and the aeroplane there is much significance in
the other faults in that the cause must be detected before the the word “modern.” The early cars may have been fitted with
remedy can be applied. The range of investigation is also a speedometer of doubtful accuracy and a clock which usually
larger; and it is by no means confined to the structure of the remained at the same hour for weeks on end, but some of the
aeroplane. Many cases in practice have been wrongly diag- early aeroplanes had nothing at all in the way of instruments, and
nosed. A loose propeller, an irregularly running engine, or an “‘: even when they did, the pupil pilot was severeZy discouraged
overtight bracing wire, all may cause a vibration which is felt f from taking any notice of them. “Flying by instruments”
.x
214 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE THE AIR-SPEED INDICATOR 215
was a term of reproach. The proper way to find your way 8.. the old machine rather than any bird-like instinct that enabled
about the country was to look at the ground (if you could me to land safely after that alarming experience, but I did at
see it); the proper way to know whether you were flying at the least feel that there was some sense in what my instructor was
right speed, banking at the correct angle, and so on, was to saying when he indulged in a long but very unchurchmanlike
“fly- by instinct,” whatever that might mean. No wonder the sermon, of which the text was “Thou shalt not fly by instru-
popular Press of those days called us “bird-men.” Small ments.”
wonder, perhaps, that they usually added the epithet “intrepid” ! But, happily or unhappily, those days are past; the modem
As for the engine, well, who cared what the oil pressure was? pilot, though he may still try to develop his bird-man’s in-
Usually there was none, because the oil was just splashed about stinct (which he now describes more vividly as$“ing by the
all over the place, and we were supposed to be such mechani- seat of his pants) is taught to use and to trust his instruments,
cally minded bird-men that we could at once detect whether and at times he is entirely dependent upon them. He even does
the engine was running at the correct speed. a course of instrument flying, in which he is shut up in a box
Mind you, there was much sense in the ideas of those early not only during flight, but sometimes for taking off and landing
days. For one thing, you had to learn top’, it was not just a as well; he is rated according to his ability and given cards of
question of being clever enough to keep a lot of needles all various colours as evidence. This may seem to be going a bit
pointing to their correct readings; and secondly, the instru- far, but after all, one cannot find one’s way across the Atlantic
ments of those days were often so unreliable that it may have by instinct; and fog, the greatest enemy of flying, defeats not
been wiser to trust to one’s rather doubtful bird-like instinct. only the most bird-like of all airmen, but even the birds them-
I often recall an early solo flight in which I was gliding in to selves.
land in an old Caudron; the machine was easy to fly, it was Thus it is that the aircraft of today is equipped with a great
a glorious summer evening, and everything in the garden multitude of instruments, and that these have been so developed
seemed lovely-so lovely in fact, and so calm was the air, that that they have now reached a very high degree of accuracy and
I was watching my air-speed indicator and trying to keep the reliability. To describe them all in a book of this kind is
needle steady at 50 m.p.h. When it went round to 52, I eased clearly out of the question-a mere catalogue would fill a
the stick back a little; one did not lean instrument flying in whole paragraph-therefore we must content ourselves with
those days, but I did at least expect the needle to go back to mentioning a few interesting points about those instruments
50. Naturally it was somewhat surprising, but not yet alarm- which most nearly concern the actual flight of the aeroplane.
ing, to see it move to 55. Ah well, the stick must come farther
back, and so it did; but the needle did not go back, it went on 79. The Air-Speed Indicator
to 60, then 65,70, 80, 100. . . . No, I didn’t wake up in hospi-
tal; it is difficult now to say at exactly what figure I did wake Throughout the book we have talked of air speed, and we have
up; but when I did, and looked over the side, the nose of the repeatedly noticed the close connection with angle of attack.
machine was sticking up in the air, well stalled, and there was In taking off, climbing, straight and level flight, turning, glid-
a not very inviting wood down below. It was the qualities of ing, and landing, there is a best speed for each, while for the
216 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE THE AIR-SPEED INDICATOR 217
purpose of flying from one place to another the navigator must tube is by no means atmospheric, and the static pressure is
know both the air speed of the aeroplane and the velocity of taken from some other part of the aeroplane altogether. But
the wind. It is true that he would prefer to know the ground wherever the pitot head, and the static vent, may be, metal
speed, but no instrument can be devised to measure this direct- tubing is used to communicate the pressures to the instrument
ly, and the pilot much prefers to know his air speed. in the pilot’s cockpit, the pitot tube being connected to one
The usual type of air-speed indicator consists of a thin side of the metal box and the static to the other. When the
corrugated metal box very like that used in an aneroid baro- aeroplane is at rest relative to the air, the ordinary atmospheric
meter. At some convenient place on the aeroplane, where it pressure will be communicated by the tubes to both sides o f
Small Holes the box and the instrument needle will be at “0,” but when
Static Tube. To Static
b0000
000 Chamber travelling through the air the pitof, or open, tube will record a
higher pressure, depending on the air speed, while the static
tube will still record the atmospheric pressure. The instrument
(/p3GziT then reads the difference between these two pressures which is
automatically translated by the dial into miles per hour or
c
Pressure Tube knots.
The pressure on the pitot tube, just like all air resistances,
Fig. 10.3. Pitot-static head
will go up in proportion to the square of the speed, e.g. at
will be exposed to the wind yet not affected by slipstream or twice the speed the pressure will be four times as much, and
other interference, is placed the pitot-static head (Fig. 103). thus we can understand why the numbers round the dial of the
This consists of two tubes, one of which has an open end facing instrument, 50, 60, 70 m.p.h., and so on, are not equally
the air flow-called a pitot tube. The other is closed at the end, spaced.
but along the sides are several small holes which allow the When we fly higher, the density of the air will become less,
atmospheric pressure to enter, and this tube is called the static and since the difference between the two pressures depends on
tube. In modern types the two tubes are often combined into the density as well as on the air speed, the indicator will read
one, the static tube being concentric with the pitot tube, and incorrectly. We call the speed recorded by the instrument the
outside it (Fig. 104). Sometimes the pressure near the pitot indicated air speed, and the real air speed the true air speed.
The error is quite appreciable; for instance, when the indicator
Static reads 100 m.p.h. at 30,000 ft, the true air speed is about 160
n-Tube
m.p.h., and at 40,000 ft a reading of 100 m.p.h. on the instru-
Airflow a
ment means that we are really travelling at more than 200
Small Holes m.p.h.
in Static Tube
To Pressure There is, however, rather an interesting point about this
Chamber
incorrect reading of the air-speed indicator at height. Just in
Fig. 104. Concentric pitot-static tube the same proportion as the pressure on the metal box is reduced
218 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE THE ALTIMETER 219
by the smaller air density, so is the lift on the wings correspond- to mark off or calibrate the scale of an altimeter so that each
ingly reduced, and thus a higher speed is necessary to support pressure corresponds to a definite height; the best that can be
the aeroplane in flight. Therefore the stalling speed of the done is to assume some average set of conditions of tempera-
aeroplane will increase with height, but at this increased speed ture and pressure, to mark the scale of the instrument to suit
the air-speed indicator will continue to read, when the aero- these conditions, and then correct the readings for any large
plane is about to stall, the same stalling speed as when near the departure from such standard conditions.
ground. The error, in other words, has a distinct advantage This set of average conditions has been laid down, and, as
from the pilot’s point of view in that, whatever the height, the mentioned in Section 4, is called the International Standard
aeroplane stalls at the same indicated speed. Other speeds of Atmosphere (Fig. 11). When an aeroplane makes a test flight,
flight, such as the speed for maximum range, are affected in the or some attempt on an altitude record, the height which counts
same way. is not the height reached according to the altimeter, nor is it
True air speed can be measured by a system of rotating vanes the actual height above the ground; it is the height which we
or cups called an anemometer. This instrument is used at estimate it would have reached had the conditions of the atmos-
meteorological stations for measuring wind velocity, but it is phere all the way up corresponded to those of the Standard
not very satisfactory for use on aircraft. For navigational Atmosphere. It is not a very satisfactory state of affairs, but
purposes elaborate instruments have been devised for measur- we cannot do any better until we can devise an instrument
ing true speed, but they are outside the scope of this book. which will really measure height, instead of just pressure.
Not only does an altimeter fail to record the correct height
when flying, but it does not necessarily read zero when at sea
80. The Altimeter
level, since the atmospheric pressure varies considerably from
The word “altimeter” means “height measurer.” Would that time to time at the earth’s surface. After all, that is how a
the instrument were true to its name! The so-called altimeter barometer works, and the altimeter is only a barometer. For
which is used in aeroplanes is nothing more or less than an this reason, altimeters are fitted with an adjustment so that
aneroid barometer, such as is used to measure the pressure of they can be made to read zero (or the height of the aerodrome)
the atmosphere for the purpose of forecasting the weather. before starting on a flight. It does not by any means follow
The only real modification is that the dial is marked in thou- that they will read zero on return to earth. In a flight of a few
sands of feet instead of in inches or millimetres of mercury, hours there may be considerable change in atmospheric pres-
and this makes it just about as capable of measuring the height sure, and there is also a certain amount of lag in the instru-
as the barometer is of foretelling the weather. What it does do ment. For these reasons it is very important when flying over
is to record thepressure. As we go up, the pressure goes down, high ground or mountainous districts in foggy weather not to
because there is less weight of air on top of us; but unfor- put too much faith in the altimeter. Although this is usually
tunately the rate at which the pressure goes down varies from impressed upon pilots, accidents have occurred from this cause.
day to day, depending chiefly on the temperature and other Modern altimeters are very much more sensitive than the
effects, which also vary from day to day. Thus it is impossible old types. Some of them have three hands, one making a
220 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE NAVIGATION INSTRUMENTS 221
complete revolution every 1,000 ft, the next one every 10,000 ft, as essential a part of the equipment of an aircraft as it is of a
and the third in 100,000 ft. There is hardly any lag in such an ship. It is true that in clear weather there are certain advantages
instrument; in fact, such sensitivity would be of no advantage in following by means of a map the landmarks on the ground
if there were any serious lag. Another refinement is that, in- rather than in trusting to the compass, so much so that at one
stead of turning the dial to set the zero, the pointers are moved, time some pilots used to argue that a compass was unnecessary,
and when they read zero a little window at the bottom of the and in any case could not be trusted. One point which used to
instrument gives the reading of the barometer. A great ad- be brought up against it was that when one entered a cloud or
vantage of this method is that if one can find out, by radio or fog, i.e. just when the compass was needed, it used to go round
other means, the reading of the barometer at any aerodrome at and round. The reason it did so is now well known-it went
which one wishes to land, one has only to set this reading on round and round because the pilot was steering the machine
the altimeter and, whatever may be the altitude of the aero- round and round in circles, chasing his own tail, yet thinking all
drome, the hands will all point to zero or, by an alternative the time that he was going straight ahead. If you do not
setting, to the correct height of the airfield, when the aircraft believe that this is possible you can never have been on a
touches the ground. This is a great help in instrument moor or a large, open field, or even on a wide road, in a
flying. thick fog.
But, however sensitive the barometric type of altimeter may But in these days pilots are better educated; they know that
be, it still cannot measure true height in the atmosphere, except sooner or later they will have to fly through clouds or fog or
under a very unlikely set of standardized conditions. over the sea, and that in such circumstances, if the aircraft is
Is it possible, then, to measure the true height of an aircraft not fitted with radar devices, the compass is their only guide.
above sea level? In certain instances it can be done by taking There is, however, one respect in which navigation by compass
three simultaneous sights from the ground, or by various can never be quite so satisfactory in the air as it is on the sea.
radio and radar devices, or by some echo system such as is used In deciding on the correct course to steer one must make allow-
for submarines. ance for the wind, and the wind is a very uncertain and change-
But, for most purposes, the altimeter, the aneroid barometer, able quantity. It is true that the navigator by sea must allow
with all its faults still holds its own, and though we never know for currents and tides, but usually these are smaller in com-
how high we are flying we can either assume ignorance and parison with the speed of the ship then the wind may be com-
hope that the altimeter is right, or we can try to be very clever pared to the speed of the aircraft, and, what is much more
and work out how high we ought to be. Special “computers” important, the strengths of the currents and tides are usually
are provided for this purpose. very accurately known and can be listed in tables and on
charts, whereas no one knows from one hour to another from
81. Navigation Instruments what direction and with what velocity the wind may blow.
For this reason, a wise pilot will whenever possible check up
For any kind of cross-country flying the magnetic compass, his compass by radio direction-finding, and by landmarks on
until the introduction of radar in the Second World War, was the ground.
222 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE FLIGHT INSTRUMENTS 223
The aircraft compass has been so much modified from the
ship’s compass that it is scarcely recognizable as the same
instrument. In comparison with the mariner’s compass it must 82. J?light Instruments
be lighter in weight, quicker to take up its new reading yet After the stress that was laid in an earlier paragraph on the
damped so that it does not oscillate too much; able to with- number and variety of instruments which are used on modern
stand very low temperatures at great heights; to put up with aircraft, it may seem rather strange to dismiss all the others
the vibration of the machine; and, perhaps most difficult of in a couple of paragraphs. But the fact is just that there are
all, to continue its job as a compass when the aeroplane takes so many that it would be unreasonable to attempt to describe
up attitudes such as no ship would ever experience. them here. The three already mentioned-air-speed indicator,
In common with its opposite number, the aircraft compass altimeter and compass-may perhaps be considered as those
must be corrected as far as possible for deviation, i.e. for errors most directly concerned with the subject with which we have
produced by magnetic material in the aircraft. This correction been dealing, the flight of the aeroplane as such. To these
is made, just as on a ship, by “swinging” the aircraft, i.e. should perhaps be added the turn and side-slip indicator, in
turning it round on a compass swinging base on the ground so which the slip needle or ball has replaced the old cross-level,
that it points towards the known compass points and correcting which was nothing more than a spirit-level with a very pro-
the reading by placing small correcting magnets in slots above nounced curve, placed laterally across the aeroplane. The
or below the compass. The correction can never be complete, needle or ball makes an excellent indicator of side-slip, as was
and a small table of “deviations” is usually put on the instru- explained in Section 70 when the turning of an aeroplane was
ment board in the cockpit. Again, like the ship’s compass, being considered. It has sometimes been called a “bank
the aircraft instrument being what it is, i.e. merely a magnet, indicator,” but this is really a bad name for it, since the aero-
will point along the magnetic meridian and not the true plane may have its lateral axis inclined at a large angle, e.g. in
meridian. This error is called variulion, and its value varies at a steep bank, yet the slip needle or ball will remain central-
different parts of the earth’s surface and also from year to because there is no side-slip. It is a simple instrument, yet a
year, but all this and many other interesting and important very important one, and possibly the pilot’s best guide as to
points in connection with the compass really come under the whether he is flying correctly or not.
subject of aerial navigation and cannot be discussed in this But it was the gyroscopic type of instrument which revolu-
book. The same applies to the multitude of electronic devices tionized instrument flying. A gyroscope (more familiar
which have revolutionized the navigation of aircraft; these perhaps as a top-incidentally a very scientific toy) is a rapidly
have enabled us to “see” our way in the dark, and in fog, and rotating wheel which possesses two main features. First, its
through the clouds, and navigation in all these conditions can axis of rotation tends to remain rigidly fixed in space; second-
be as easy nowadays as it was when we used to follow the rail- ly, if an attempt is made to tilt its axis it will tend to rotate
way lines on a clear day-as easy, that is, once we have learnt about a third axis. Consider, for instance, the front wheel of
to operate and interpret the instruments correctly and pro- a bicycle; if it is tilted over so that its top goes to the right,
vided, of course, that they don’t go wrong. the whole wheel will turn to the right (that is why it is possible
FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE FLIGHT INSTRUMENTS 225
224
to ride a bicycle without one’s hands on the handlebars). These two instruments together-the artificial horizon and
This second property of a gyroscope is called precession. the directional gyro-are the basis of “George,” the robot or
An instrument panel in a modern aeroplane may contain at automatic pilot, which not only detects any tendency of the
least three instruments which depend on gyroscopes. They are aeroplane to yaw, pitch or roll but, having done so, moves the
usually driven by suction from an engine-driven pump or from controls until it is once more flying correctly. That sounds
double venturi tubes exposed to the air stream, and may wonderful indeed; but it is no longer fantastic to imagine
revolve at 10,000 r.p.m. that in the future aeroplanes will be flying about, carrying and
Perhaps the most striking of all such instruments is the dropping bombs, and perhaps even fighting each other, with-
artz@%zZ horizon, which shows the position of a small model out any pilots at all-indeed guided missiles are already doing
aeroplane relative to a horizon marked on the instrument. just this.
If the nose of the real aeroplane goes down, the model goes The third gyroscopic instrument in common use is the turn
below the horizon; if the nose goes up, the model moves above and side-slip indicator, which has already been mentioned.
the horizon. If the aeroplane banks to right or left, so does The lower needle on this indicates the rate of turn and is
the model. Even if the pilot cannot see the real horizon at all, worked by the precession of a gyroscope; the upper needle
if he is flying on the darkest of nights, or “under the hood,” indicates side-slip and is worked by a pendulum.
he can always tell the attitude of his aeroplane. Only those who There are not many other instruments concerned with the
have tried to fly “blind” can possibly conceive the value of actual flight of the aeroplane. The air temperature is needed
such an instrument. It is worked by a gyroscope which is so for various corrections to speed, height, and so on in record
mounted that its axis does not move even though the aeroplane or test flights, and for this purpose an ordinary thermometer
(and with it the case of the instrument) may pitch or roll. may be fitted on some exposed part. A rate-of-climb indicator
Simpler in principle, but no less useful in practice, is the or, to be more exact, an instrument which shows either rate of
directionaz gyro. This detects any turn of the aeroplane, just ascent or rate of descent, is usually fitted to modern aircraft,
as the artificial horizon shows pitch or roll. It is very like a and, like so many of these modern luxury instruments, is of
compass except that, instead of possessing the property of great value in instrument flying. A machmeter, which will be
pointing towards the north, it will remain in any position in mentioned in the following paragraphs, is indispensable in
which the pilot likes to set it. Actually it is marked off in high-speed aircraft.
degrees just like a compass, and the pilot usually sets it to Apart from the aircraft itself the engine or engines will need
correspond to the compass course. The reader may well ask revolution indicators, oil-pressure gauges, oil-temperature
what its justification may be, seeing that it seems to act like a gauges, air-pressure gauges, fuel-pressure gauges, boost
compass, though lacking the chief attribute of the latter. The gauges for superchargers, water thermometers for water-
answer is simple. The directional gyro responds more quickly cooled engines, fuel flowmeters, fuel-contents gauges, and so on.
to the slightest turn, it settles down at once after a turn, it is On the electrical side there may be anything varying from
unaffected by accelerations and the various magnetic errors of the simple switch used for the engine ignition to a complete
the compass. system of lighting and heating, dynamos and motors, and
226 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE THE SPEED OF SOUND 227
full radio and radar installation with all its attendant a noise, by clapping hands or with a pistol or whatever it may
instruments. be, the air is rapidly compressed and the pressure wave travels
For high flying, oxygen apparatus must be installed, and until it strikes your ear drum thus enabling you to “hear” the
this needs special instruments all to itself as does the pressuri- noise. From the familiar examples of a gun being fired, or a
zation of cabins. bomb exploding, or thunder and lightning, we know that we
Incidentally, we must not forget what is perhaps the most see before we hear, in other words that light travels more
useful of all man-made instruments-the clock or watch. quickly than sound. Light, at 186,ooO miles per second,
For any kind of serious flying it is indispensable. travels so fast that in considering examples of this kind (not
of course in astronomy, etc.) the time that it takes to reach
the observer can be neglected, and we can say that the differ-
83. High-Speed Flight ence between the time when we see a thing happen and the time
But the time has come to fulfilthe promise, made in Section 11, when we hear it happen represents the time taken by the sound
to say something more about high-speed flight and the special to travel from the source of sound to our ears. So it is not at
significance of the speed of sound. It is rather a daring venture all difficult to get a rough estimate for ourselves as to the rate
to attempt to translate the advanced treatises that have been at which the sound travels and to use this for estimating the
written on this subject into the simple language that one has distance of the source of sound ; many people, for instance,
tried to use in this book, and one feels very humble about it, estimate the distance of a thunderstorm by counting (not always
especially since one cannot claim to have had any practical at the correct rate) the seconds between the flash and the crash.
experience of this kind of flight. But the duty is clear, for The speed at which sound travels under normal atmospheric
nowadays no book about flight-whether with or without conditions has, of course, been measured accurately and is
formulae-can be complete without it. So here goes! found to be about l,lOOft/sec or, as neur as matters, 760 m.p.h.;
this means that it takes rather less than 5 seconds to travel a
mile.
84. The Speed of Sound Now, if something that makes a noise-what better example
The difference, as explained in the earlier section, is that, than an aeroplane?-is travelling towards you at this speed,
whereas in low-speed flight the air behaves as though it were you will not hear it coming; for the simple reason that the noise
incompressible, in high-speed flight its property of compres- it makes is travelling at the same speed as the aeroplane. If it
sibility not only matters but becomes of extreme importance. travels towards you faster than the speed of sound you will
The pressures caused by the movement of the aeroplane hear it coming after it has gone. This isn’t silly, it is true; and
through the air, the pressures that are the cause of lift and drag, there is an excellent practical example in the rifle bullet. It
are communicated in all directions to the surrounding air. may be small comfort to a soldier to know that if he hears a
The speed ut which the pressure waves travel is the same as that bullet coming towards him he is quite safe because it has
at which sound travels in air; this is not surprising because the already gone past him-but there it is. And there is another
travel of sound is the travel of a pressure wave. If one makes point in mentioning this example in that it shows that there is
228 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE MACH NUMBERS 229
no reason whatever why bodies should not travel through the If the argument has been followed so far it will be quite
air at speeds higher than that of sound, so the idea that was so clear that, if the aeroplane moves at the speed of sound, the
often quoted in the popular Press of a kind of “impenetrable “warning” will have no time to get ahead, the air will not be
barrier” at that speed is nonsense-as we all know now, but
didn’t a few years ago. Rifle bullets travel at 2 or 3 times the
speed of sound, and have done so for quite a long time. S o
Airflow
now do many other things, including a number of types of
aircraft.
We can only detect these sources of noise by the effect on
our ears-though if an aeroplane, or a bullet, passes very close
to us we may feel pressures on other parts of our body-but
the air itself, through which these sound or pressure waves Airflow
travel, is very sensitive to them and adjusts itself accordingly.
So it is that when an aeroplane moves through the air at speeds
well below that of sound the pressure waves are able to travel Fig. 105. Effect of lowering 0ap on air flow in front of aerofoil
ahead (as well as above and below and behind). They “warn”
the air that the aeroplane is coming and that, for instance,
dejected before it strikes the aeroplane, and it will come up
there is a high pressure underneath the wing and a low pressure
against it with a sudden shock. That, in effect is what happens-
above it, so it will be easier for the air to go above. As a result
and that is the significance of the speed of sound.
of this warning much of the air that would otherwise have
flowed below the wing curves upwards and flows above it.
The truth of this can be shown by a most delightful experi-
ment in a smoke tunnel; a model wing section fitted with a 85. Mach Numbers
split flap is placed in the tunnel; when the flap is lowered Since the speed of sound is so important it is sometimes con-
streams of smoke a long way in front of the wing change venient to speak of the speed of aeroplanes in relation to the
direction and go over the wing instead of below it; when the speed of sound and to say that they are travelling at half, or
flap is raised they go below it again. Anyone who has seen such three-quarters, or nine-tenths of the speed of sound, or even
an experiment needs no further convincing that the air is at the speed of sound itself or at two or three times that speed.
“warned” of what is coming (Fig. 105). This is expressed in terms of Mach numbers, a Mach number
These experiments can be shown both in air and water; of 0.5 simply meaning that the aeroplane is travelling at harf
both behave in the same way-as if they were incompressible. the speed of sound. Thus the Mach numbers in the examples
Other experiments and measurements confirm that there is no given above would be, respectively, O-5, O-75, 0.9, 1, 2 and 3.
appreciable change in the density of the air when it flows under Here, at least, is a highbrow term which anyone can under-
these conditions. stand. It is so simple, in fact, that the reader may well ask
230 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE FLIGHT AT TRANSONIC SPEEDS 231
why it is necessary at all-if the speed of sound is 760 m.p.h., word transonic. Our subject then falls into three quite distinct
we know that when an aeroplane is travelling at 380 m.p.h. it parts, i.e. flight at subsonic speeds which is what we have so
is travelling at half the speed of sound; why wrap the thing in far considered, flight at transonic speeds which has problems
mystery by saying that it is travelling at a Mach number of 0.5 ? all of its own, and flight at supersonic speeds in which we are
Well, as it happens, it isn’t-in this case-just an attempt to in a new world altogether and all the rules are so much the
blind people with science. An observant reader-especially if opposite from what we have already learnt that it reminds us
he has already fallen into some of our traps-may have noticed of Alice Through the Looking-glass.
that we have been rather careful throughout this argument not
to give the actual speeds of rifle bullets and so on, but just to 86. Flight at Transonic Speeds
compare them with the speed of sound-and that when we first
said that the speed of sound was, as near as matters, 760 m.p.h., But Alice was fortunate in that in her dream the barrier, in her
we specified under normal atmospheric conditions. That is the case the looking-glass, melted away, and she found herself all
clue. The rate at which sound travels in air depends on the tem- of a sudden in the new world. It was not quite so easy to get
perature of the air (it depends on other things, too, but tem- through the barrier which divides flight at subsonic speeds
perature is the controlling factor); the lower the temperature from flight at supersonic speeds. Not unnaturally we approached
the lower the speed of sound. Thus at the temperature of ground this barrier with considerable caution. We didn’t quite
level conditions of the International Standard Atmosphere (con- know what was going to happen, and what did happen was
ditions which rarely apply in practice) the speed of sound is apt to be alarming-all the more so because it differed in
about 760 m.p.h.; while at the temperature of the stratosphere different types of aircraft.
(above about 37,000 ft) it is about 660 m.p.h. So at 700 m.p.h. Perhaps we didn’t know it at the tim.e, but it was the near
an aeroplane may be travelling below the speed of sound, at side of the barrier, the approach to the speed of sound, that
the speed of sound, or above the speed of sound, according to proved the most difficult to negotiate.
the temperature at the time. What matters is not that it is We were also very much in the dark because, just when the
going at 700 m.p.h. but at what fraction of the particular speed wind tunnel might have been most helpful, it came up against
of sound it is travelling-in other words what matters is, not its the barrier itself-it got choked, and we couldn’t reach the
speed, but its Mach number. speed of sound at all. It was more difficult to get through the
When there is no need to specify the actual Mach number speed of sound in wind tunnels than in actual flight.
and we only wish to indicate that a body, or the air flow, is Even now we know less about flight at transonic speeds
travelling at less than the speed of sound, at the speed of sound than we do about flight at supersonic speeds, and of course
or above it, it is usual and convenient to use the Latin words we cannot fly at supersonic speeds without first going through
and to speak of subsonic, sonic, and supersonic speeds. the barrier, though if there is plenty of power in hand there is
As we shall soon see, it isn’t just at the speed of sound that something to be said for getting through it quickly. But first
curious things happen, but over quite a range of speeds which let us take it steadily, for we shall then see more clearly the
include that speed, and it is useful, therefore, to introduce the significance of the range of speeds which we class as transonic.
232 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE THE SHOCK STALL 233
pressure gradient of a most vicious kind, a hill so steep that it
87. Shock Waves is almost vertical. But, whereas with the speeds we were
considering in Section 17 the air was warned that there was a
Now, what happens when we approach the speed of sound? hill ahead, and if the hill was too steep it wouldn’t even approach
All we have said so far is that the air is no longer warned of the hill, at the speeds we are now considering it gets no such
our approach and so it comes up against the aeroplane with
a shock. The evidence of this is the appearance of a shock Shock 1 Wave
=
wave, a sharp dividing line going out from the surface of the body Supersonic Airflow/F
ZZ
or wing and representing a sudden drop in the speed, and an
increase in the pressure and density of the air (Fig. 106). These
Sudden increase of
pressure and density
and fall in velocity
90. Sweepback
In our earlier attempts to approach the barrier we naturally con-
centrated on avoiding the shock stall-and its consequences.
That is why for attempts at the speed record we waited for
hot days; on the face of it rather an extraordinary thing to do
because, generally speaking, we can expect to get better per- Fig. 109. Sweepback for transonic speeds
formance out of both engine and aeroplane in cold dense air.
But success at that time depended upon keeping the Mach
number as low as possible for the speed attained, and as has
already been explained, the speed of sound is higher in warm - or should we say sweep - he not only delayed the shock
air, and so the Mach number is lower for the same airspeed. stall and made the approach to it more gentle, but reduced its
The designer, too, had his part to play in the approach to severity when it did come. Generally speaking, too, the greater
the barrier. He already knew the first need-slimness-be- the sweepback the greater is the effect. How and why does this
cause this had been required as a means of reducing drag even happen? Well, as so often, a simple explanation may be criticized
with the old-fashioned ideas of what constituted high-speed as not being entirely correct, but in this case it isn’t far wrong
flight, 300 or 400 m.p.h. But with the realization of the signifi- and accords fairly well with the facts.
cance of shock waves and shock drag, and how they first arise The speed of air flowing over a swept-back wing can be
owing to the speeding up of the airflow over a cambered sur- considered as having two parts, or components, i.e. that which
face, it becomes more than ever necessary in approaching the flows across the chord of the wing (at right angles to the lead-
barrier to keep the camber low, to have wings with a low ratio of ing edge), and that which flows along the span of the wing
240 FLIGIJT WITHOUT FORMULAE VORTEX GENERATORS 241
towards the wing-tip (parallel to the leading edge). Fig. 110 generally either of the wedge or ramp type, or of the bent-tin
shows these two parts, and how the greater the sweepback the type (Fig. 111) ; and they are situated at rather surprising
less is the airspeed across the chord of the wing compared with places such as on the top surface of a wing not far behind the
the speed of the aircraft as a whole. Now the formation of leading edge. Their name, “vortex generators,” aptly describes
their function-but surely the last thing we want to do is to
generate vortices, especially when we want to fly fast! It is
rather strange, and the explanation really lies in the small
Leading Leading
Edge
fziiz?&
TYPe iwe
Plan Views
I Jl I A ,
I
Elevation
with little if any difference between the cambers of the top and
bottom surfaces, and symmetrical in the fore and aft directions,
i.e. with the front half the same shape as the rear half (Fig. 112).
Sweepback will, of course, affect the plan form of the wings,
but it is the sweepback of the leading edge which is most
important; the trailing edge may be parallel to the leading
edge, but for structural and other reasons usually has less
sweepback than the leading edge, giving a tapering plan form,
and in the extreme may even be at right angles to the body,
giving the so-called delta shape (Fig. 113). This, with its aspect
ratio of 1 or less, is a sharp reminder that in attacking the sound Plate 9. Here seen turning away from the photographic aircraft, the British
Aerospace EAP (Experimental Aircraft Programme) is intended to lead to a new
barrier we have forgotten all about induced drag, economical European multirole fighter. Note the pilot-controlled canard foreplane, large kinked-
flying - and all that sort of thing. Sweepback, and even the delta mainplane and ventral inlets to the twin engines.
delta shape, can be applied to the tail, and to the vertical sur-
faces such as fin and rudder, as well as to the wings; but of
course the delta shape in itself can take the form of a flying
wing, and there is then no need for a separate tail unit.
THROUGH THE BARRIER-AND BEYOND 243
Attempts to reduce shock drag have resulted in the bodies
of some high-speed aircraft having acquired a waist line in
accordance with the area rule. This is a term which has now
come into common use - and misuse - so we should at. least
give it a mention. Like many principles of design it is rather
more complicated, and has more applications, than is commonly
supposed, but fundamentally it is a means of avoiding the bulges
which cause shocks by keeping the cross-sectional area of the
aircraft as nearly constant as possible, or at least changing only
Jet
F&. 113. Delta wing for F&y. 114. Showing the effect of
supersonic flight area rule on a fuselage
Plate 10. Though to save money the two Grumman X-29A experimental FSW 93. Through the Barrier-and Beyond
(forward-swept wing) aircraft were partly built from components of existing air-
craft, the unique wing is entirely new. Such a wing was aeroelastically impossible The term “barrier” is quite a good one, perhaps “hurdle”
(it would have been torn off by air loads) until the advent of carbon-fibre com-
posite structures. The FSW can lead to aircraft that are safer, smaller, more agile would be even better, for the greatest difficulties lie in getting
and more efficient. through it, or getting over it-according to which metaphor
244 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE THROUGH THE BARRIER-AND BEYOND 245
Subsonlc Flow we prefer. It is at the barrier that we meet the shock wave for
Subsonic Flo;
the first time, the changes in trim, the juddering, the sudden
Subsonic Flow rise in drag and loss in lift. On the far side we find ourselves in
a strange new world, a world in which we are all beginners and
have to learn about flight, both in theory and practice, all over
Incipient Shock Wave
[Sudden increase of Pressure ond Density
again-the land of compressibility.
F
Foil in Veloctty And, just as a whole book was needed to describe what Alice
found in looking-glass land, so a whole book would be needed
Subsonic , z+sLzwz
(b) MzO.8 to describe this land of compressibility. Several such books
Flow
have now been written, but perhaps in these last few sections
Supersonic E Subsonic Flow
of our book we can at least get some idea of the fascination of
the study of this new kind of flight.
y Fully develo e d Shock Wove During the passage through the barrier, i.e. at transonic
t!E Increase oP Pressure and Densrty
Fall In Velocity
Subsonic Flow
speeds, or between Mach numbers of about 0.75 and 1.2, there
have been sudden changes of drag and lift. These have been
Sonic Flow (c) M- I.0 caused by the formation and movement of shock waves, to-
gether with the effects of the shock wave on flow in the boundary
Subsonic Flow
layer. Fig. 115 shows in pictorial form typical changes in
shock wave pattern as we pass through the barrier. A small
shock wave first appears on the upper surface of the wing at
about the highest point of the camber-this is what we would
expect since this is where the air is flowing fastest. As the
Mach number increases, this shock wave becomes more in-
tense, extends farther from the aerofoil surface and moves
backwards. Then another shock wave starts to form on the
lower surface-rather farther back than the top one, again as
we would expect. With still further increase of Mach number
both the shock waves move farther back until they reach the
trailing edge. Then, soon after the whole wing is moving
above the speed of sound, i.e. at a Mach number greater than
1, another shock wave appears ahead of the leading edge.
After this, further increases of speed have little effect on the
shock wave pattern except that the shock waves take up a
Fig. 115 more acute angle to the surface of the wing, and the bow
246 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE SUPERSONIC FLOW 247
wave may become attached to the leading edge. These are in shock wave pattern, which in turn cause pressure changes
indications that the whole flow is supersonic, both in front of over the wing, and these in their turn are what affect the be-
the waves and behind them, whereas in transonic flight the haviour of the aeroplane.
flow behind the shock wave is subsonic. The comparative stability of the shock pattern on the far
Figs. 116 and 117 show the changes of lift and drag as we side of the barrier is likewise reflected in the curves of lift and
pass through the barrier; these are caused by the changes drag which no longer fluctuate violently, and in the behaviour
of the aeroplane which no longer suffers juddering or violent
changes of trim. In short, flight at supersonic speeds is steadier
than flight at transonic speeds; we are right in it, as it were, not
half in, and provided we learn our new subject and design
aeroplanes to suit the new conditions there is no particular
difficulty and we know what to expect.
LIFT
High-speed Flow
Decreased Pressure
except for slight variations, expand and then contract-just Fig. 120. Supersonic airflow over a supersonic aerofoil inclined
the opposite to a venturi. In effect a kind of inverse venturi at a small angle of attack
tube (Fig. 118) is needed to give the same results in supersonic Contrast with Fig. 24, showing subsonic flow over a subsonic aerofoil.
250 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE SONIC BANGS 251
But whereas in subsonic flow the cross-sectional shape is of economical flying; it might almost seem that lift has been
more important than the plan form, in supersonic flow the forgotten, and certainly most of the weight lifting is now done
plan form is more important than the cross-section. At low by thrust rather than by the lift of the wings.
supersonic speeds, if that is not a contradiction in terms, the
96. Sonic Bangs
So far, we have only considered the effect of shock waves on the
flight of the aeroplane-but that is by no means the whole story.
It will be noticed in the diagrams that the shock waves, the
sudden increases of pressure, although they occur and may be
most violent at the surface of the wing or other parts, extend
outwards from the surface, becoming less severe, it is true, but
none the less having an effect at considerable distances from
the aircraft.
If an aeroplane flying straight and level at supersonic speed
were to fly close over the head of an observer on the ground-
which God forbid!-the observer would be hit, more or less
literally in this case, first by the bow shock wave, then by the
trailing-edge shock wave, then by one or two shock waves
from the tail plane, all in quick succession, and interspersed by
a few more from the body and other parts. Two or three of
these bangs might stand out from the rest, but more probably
it would all sound like a roll of thunder, and damage might be
done by the shock, not only to people but even to buildings.
These are the sonic bangs that we hear so much about, even if
we haven’t experienced them ourselves, and they pose one of the
Fig. 121. Supersonic plan shapes most serious problems in connection with supersonic flight.
There is nothing very new about sonic bangs: the crack
heavily swept-back leading edge retains the advantage that it of a rifle bullet, the thunder caused by a lightning flash, the
had at transonic speeds and the plan shapes shown in Fig. 121 the blast of an explosion and even the crack of a whip are all
are all possibles. At really high Mach numbers such as occur examples of the same phenomenon; but these are only iso-
with missiles the rectangular wing may come into its own lated incidents, unlikely to occur at frequent intervals, and not
again, and there are advantages in square-shaped wing tips. usually of such intensity as to break windows, shatter green-
Poor old aspect ratio has been forgotten, and with it all ideas houses or even disturb one’s sleep.
252 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE OTHER PROBLEMS OF SUPERSONIC FLIGHT 253
The bangs caused by supersonic aircraft are, however, a at these speeds, and we have to rely on the jet engine, if not the
very different matter, and seem likely to become such a nuisance ram-jet and the rocket-eventually perhaps atomic energy.
that they may hinder progress in the development of such The controls are too heavy for manual operation, and power-
aircraft, more especially the supersonic airliner like the Anglo- driven controls become a virtual necessity-usually with some
French Concorde. Of course, in considering the effect of an artificial “feel” introduced to make the pilot feel at home.
aircraft flying low and directly overhead, we have taken an Another difficulty arises because the control surfaces them-
extreme case to illustrate the point; and, as one would expect, selves are not so effective as in subsonic flight-this for two
the bangs are less severe, more dispersed and less distinct the reasons : first, that they are working in that part of the air flow
farther one is from the aircraft, in other words, the higher it which tends to separate from the surface; and secondly,
is flying and the greater the distance its flight path from being because they do not have any effect on the flow over the surface
directly overhead. But even from considerable heights the bangs in front of them-this flow doesn’t even know when the con-
can be objectionable, as has been amply proved by experiments trol surfaces are moved-and it will be remembered that the
over selected areas both in this country and in the United States. main effect of moving the control surfaces at subsonic speeds
Unfortunately too the greater the speed the greater are the bangs is to alter the flow, and the pressures, over the front parts of
and, what is not so obvious perhaps, the greater the weight of the surface.
the aircraft - or what comes to the same thing, the more it At Mach numbers of about 2 an entireIy new problem arises,
manoeuvres and increases the wing loading - the more severe due to the rise in temperature caused by the motion of the
is the effect. aeroplane through the air and the consequent skin friction;
Can anything be done about it? Unfortunately the answer this essentially practical problem, sometimes rather mis-
is, Not much-short of not flying at supersonic speed! For the leadingly called the heat barrier, may prove very difficult to
immediate future the only course seems to be to limit speeds solve, and may be the limiting factor in the speeds which can
until great heights are reached, or perhaps even to prohibit be achieved in the next few years, even if we learn to accept
supersonic flight over land at all. It seems rather a drastic the sonic bangs. No doubt its impact will be softened by in-
remedy, but there does not appear to be any alternative unless sulation of the surfaces, by improved materials used for the
the public can be persuaded to put up with the nuisance in the surface skin, and by refrigeration devices; but the term “heat
cause of progress (? )-after all, we have already had to put up barrier” is misleading because, unlike the sound barrier, it is
with a good deal in this cause. not just a hurdle, something to be got over and left behind; it
gets worse and worse as we go faster and faster-it will always
be with us when we fly at high speeds in the atmosphere.
97. Other Problems of Supersonic 3?light
Fortunately, however, it will not, like sonic bangs, affect
Though the conditions of supersonic flight are more steady people on the ground.
and more predictable than those of transonic flight, the drag The frailty of the human body may be another limiting
is of course very high, which means that great thrust is required factor, though more from the point of view of the accelerations
to maintain flight. The propeller is not a practical proposition involved in reaching these speeds, or in slowing down again,
254 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE THE FUTURE 255
or in manoeuvres; the human body doesn’t seem to provide extension of the wings either in span or chord, and variable
any serious problem in regard to steady flight-at any rate at camber or new types of flap.
any “reasonable” speeds. The rocket or missile gets over this difficulty by its vertical
But perhaps the greatest problem of supersonic flight, and or near-vertical take-off, by passing so quickly through the
the one that we are most likely to forget, is that aircraft cannot subsonic and transonic stages, and by our lack of concern
reach this condition of flight without going through all the whether it returns to earth whole or in bits, or even at all!
stages of subsonic and transonic flight-and we know enough Maybe the missile points the way for the manned aircraft of
the future, but those who man it will want these problems
solved first.
-_-
THE WING SECTION 273
14. The Wing Section
UPDATE TO Many things about aeroplanes are not only far from obvious
but, perversely, the opposite of what one might expect. A classic
FIFTH EDITION example is Bernoulli (Section 17). Many people find it hard
to believe that, when a fluid such as air passes through a ven-
From 1970 to the 1990s turi tube, the pressure is lowest at the narrowest point, provided
the flow is subsonic. Once they latch on to the idea of the total
by Bill Gunston internal energy of a flow, so that (provided temperature stays
about the same) increasing speed must mean decreasing pressure,
they at last begin to comprehend how a wing with a profile
resembling Fig. 22 actually works. You can demonstrate the
lift over the upper surface of a wing by holding a sheet of good-
quality paper horizontally in front of your lower lip so that you
The subtitle to this book is “How and why an aeroplane flies
can blow across it. The paper naturally sags down, but, the
. . . ” In the following pages I have endeavoured to bring the
harder you blow, the more it rises to the horizontal position
story up to the end of the 20th Century. Kermode had little to
(Fig. 129). Note: you blow across the sheet, not under it.
say about what aeroplanes were made of, so I have generally
ignored the whole vast subject of structures and stressing, though
even in today’s world of computers and graphic displays, with
which you can redesign an aeroplane in seconds, aircraft
designers still spend as much time on the structure as on
everything else put together. Kermode also said little about No blowing
systems. When he wrote the original book in the 1930s
aeroplanes had a simple electrical system, rather like that of
a car, and sometimes a rudimentary hydraulic system to work
such new devices as flaps and retractable landing gear. I have
deliberately avoided getting too deep into modern systems,
except in the unavoidable case of the flight-control system. I
have also avoided helicopters and autogyros (Kermode wrote
a book about helicopter flight) and also spaceflight, with the
exception of space vehicles able to fly in the atmosphere and
land like other aeroplanes.
The new text is subdivided according to the sections of the Fig. 129 A sheet of paper
original book.
274 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE
Traditional
aentle lift
19. Stalling
Plate 12. This amazing aircraft, the Voyager, flew round the world non-stop Modern fighters are designed to retain control within a range
(26,678 miles, 42,934 km) on 14-23 December 1986. It was crewed by its creators, of flight conditions - speed, altitude and AOA (angle of attack)
Dick Rutan and Jeana Yeager, who had to fly with care every inch of the way. - very much greater than anything seen previously. The Grum-
man F-14 Tomcat, for example, has been flown to positive AOA
exceeding 90” and to negative AOA of 55’) remaining under
control throughout. A major factor in this achievement is the
276 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE REDUCING DRAG 277
lift generated by the large upper surface of the fuselage and More recently, designers have added various forms of winglet
inlet ducts. The Northrop YF-17 was often flown at a sustained or wingtip fence, which are a prominent feature of the latest
AOA of 34” in level flight and 63” in high-speed pull-outs, transport aircraft. These fixed aerofoils are often very effec-
this aircraft’s conventional unswept wing being assisted by a tive in generating an opposing flow around the wingtip to that
large LEX (leading-edge extension). resulting from the basic difference in pressure, so that the net
The point can be made that modern fighters, especially in result is hardly any vortex at all. At the same time, for best
manoeuvres, generate powerful vortices and other off-surface efficiency, subsonic wings need to have high aspect ratio. A
flows which are made visible by condensation. Condensation typical jetliner of the 1950s (Comet 4) had an aspect ratio of
also takes place through the supersonic expansion ahead of the 6, rising to 7 with the 707. Today the 757 has a ratio of 7.77,
shockwave during flight through moist air at close to Mach 1 the A310 reaches 8.8 and the A320 no less than 9.4.
(see the second and third sketches from the top in Fig. 115).
Passage through the shockwave then causes almost instantaneous
evaporation, restoring invisibility. Thus a fighter making a Mach 27. Parasite Drag
0.9 flypast may often appear to be towing a giant cloud through As commented earlier, the most efficient modern transport
the sky, this having an elliptical shape in front view (because aeroplanes have large fuselages and relatively small, highly
this is the way lift is distributed from tip to tip, see Fig. 13 1) loaded wings. It has been repeatedly found that the all-wing
and an approximately diamond shape in side view. aircraft is not the best answer, except for the special case of
Aerodynamicists are now realizing that condensation can be a the latest combat aircraft designed according to “stealth”
great help in seeing what the air is doing as it flows around technology. This attempts to make them invisible to radars,
aircraft. human eyes, infra-red sensors and at other wavelengths, and
also silent. Of course, a perfect “stealth” aircraft is unattainable,
but the all-wing machine appears to get closer than conventional
shapes.
they are moulded into adhesive-backed transparent film, which Today there are many ways of using BLC, most of them being
is then wrapped around an engine nacelle or other part. With various forms of what has become known as powered lift -
deeper understanding, and improved manufacturing processes, use of engine power to augment lift. Two of the most important
such riblets will be incorporated into the original aircraft skin. methods are USB and the EBF. The latter, the externally blown
We must rethink Fig. 44! flap, could equally be covered in Section 33. It comprises mount-
ing jet engines, normally turbofans, ahead of the wing. so that
the jets blow directly back past the wing undersurface. When
30. The Boundary Layer the flaps are lowered, their effectiveness is augmented by the
Since 1950 the acronym BLC, for boundary-layer control, has fact that they deflect not only free atmosphere but also the jets.
become very important. An odd form of BLC is seen in Fig. Of course, the flaps have to be particularly strong, and prob-
45, which shows an idea that failed to deliver its theoretical ably made of titanium to withstand the jet temperature. USB,
promise. Most modern BLC systems work by blowing air at upper-surface blowing, involves mounting similar engines so
high pressure through narrow slits, the air often being ejected that the jets blow back across the top of the wing. The high-
as a thin sheet moving with transonic speed. This has a very velocity jets stay attached to the wing surface, and remain
powerful effect in controlling the boundary layer, usually in attached even when the flaps are lowered. This is because of
preventing it from breaking away from the surface. This can the Coanda effect, the propensity of a fluid flow to remain
reduce drag, improve flight control, greatly increase the effec- attached to a surface, even one that curves away. The effect
tiveness of flaps and achieve many other objectives. can be demonstrated by letting a tap run gently on to a bottle
Blown flaps are described later in Section 33. They are fit- held horizontally (Fig. 132). Instead of running off both sides
ted to the British Buccaneer attack aircraft, designed in the early
195Os, but this aircraft shows BLC in a much more developed Wats3 from tap
form. Hot compressed air bled from the engines is blasted
backwards at supersonic speed through slits 0.025-0.047 in
(0.6-1.2 mm) wide along the top of the wing leading edge.
IJr-
This greatly enhances lift in the low-speed regime, allowing
a small wing to generate enough lift at relatively slow takeoffs
and landings, as needed for carrier operation. It is important
that a low-level attack aircraft should have a small wing, because
this reduces the buffeting and shaking in high-speed flight
through dense air, which with a large wing would greatly reduce
crew efficiency. In the landing regime more air is blown from
slits ahead of the flaps and drooping ailerons, again dramatically
increasing lift with flaps lowered to an angle at which, in the what actuali
Y happow
of the bottle the water curves round and runs off as a single
stream from the bottom. In the same way, the large jet, mov-
ing at about the speed of sound, curves round the top of the
wing and down across the depressed flap, even when the latter
is at a sharp angle (approaching 90”). Lift of the wing can be
more than doubled by this technique.
ing its airspeed or attitude (useful on the approach). If spoilers Fig. 137 The spectrum of VTOL aircraft
open on one side only they act as a roll control. After landing,
some or all spoiler sections may be opened symmetrically to are once again the subject of intensive research. Among these
act as lift-dumpers, killing residual wing lift and thus, by are the ejector jet and the tip-drive fan-in-wing aircraft.
increasing the weight on the wheels, making braking more Both these are attempts to improve efficiency in hovering flight
effective. by making the supporting jet(s) bigger. As in jet propulsion
systems, there is a complete spectrum of VTOL aircraft (Fig.
67. STOL and VTOL 137). A Harrier is about the optimum if you want to combine
VTOL with high speed. Such aircraft almost never operate at
No branch of aircraft design has made more progress in the VTOLs; they are actually STOVLs, making a short (but
past 20 years than the related families of STOL and VTOL. violently accelerating) run in order to add wing lift to vectored
Whereas the cyclogyro and ornithopter can be forgotten, other engine thrust and thus carry more fuel and weapons. Then, at
forms of powered-lift aircraft have gone from strength to light weight, they make a VL. Their efficiency is poor in
strength. Even ideas explored in the 1960s and then dropped hovering flight, so they try to spend as little time as possible
292 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE MODERN WAYS OF TURNING 293
in this operating mode (except at air displays). If hovering is There are many possible arrangements for conventional
important, answers include various forms of tandem fan, or the STOL aircraft, such as blown (Coanda) flaps, USB and EBF.
RALS (remove augmented lift system) in which air bled from These have already been described.
the engine is piped to auxiliary lift jets where fuel is burned,
or the fan-in-wing or the ejector jet. The former pipes com-
pressed air from one or more propulsion engines (or the whole 70. Turning
flow from their jetpipes) and pipes it to drive turbine blades The Harrier’s ability to vector (control the direction of) its jet
arranged round the periphery of giant fans, rather like multi- thrust gives it a tremendous advantage in combat. Many pilots
blade helicopter rotors, which are normally hidden inside the have been disconcerted to find a subsonic Harrier make a seem-
wings and nose. After take-off on the upthrust from these giant ingly impossible “square turn” simply by quick Viffing
fans, the lift system is hidden by closing doors and the aircraft (VIFF, vectoring in forward flight). Today American engine
turns into a jet. Of course, if you fill the wings with fans there companies are developing two-dimensional (square rather than
is not much roan for fuel. The ejector idea pipes air (or the circular) nozzles for fighter jet engines which can provide the
whole jet) from the main engine(s) and blasts it downwards pilot with a limited amount of VIFF capability. Other aircraft
through multiple nozzles in huge vertical ducts in the middle are exploring the possibility of using both canards and rear
of the aircraft. With doors open above and below, a giant airflow elevons in order to do things previously impossible: tilt the nose
is entrained which lifts the aircraft much more efficiently than up or down whilst continuing in level flight; rise or fall whilst
would the jets alone. But again, filling the middle of a fighter keeping the fuselage level; slide to the left or right whilst con-
with empty space might not seem a good idea. tinuing to point dead ahead; or slew the nose to left or right
Perhaps a much better idea, provided you are happy to fly whilst continuing to travel ahead in a straight line. The advan-
at less than about 400 mph (644 km/h), is to use tilting rotors. tages of such controls for aiming guns or bombs need no
Bell flew a tilt-rotor aircraft in 1955, but it was not until recently emphasizing.
that a modern version appeared. Today Bell and Boeing are
expecting to build over 1,000 V-22 Ospreys, which have
6,000-horsepower engines mounted right on the tips of the wing. 78. Instruments
Each engine drives a huge propeller. For stowage aboard ship
the propellers and wing fold into a compact space. When From 1903 until about 1983 aircraft gathered more and more
unfolded, with the engines tilted vertically upwards, the Osprey instruments. Today, in the latest fighters and airliners, almost
takes off vertically. In hovering flight it is about as noisy as all the traditional electromechanical dial instruments have been
a helicopter, and far more efficient than any jet-supported air- swept away. Instead the pilot faces several big MFDs (multi-
craft, so it is well suited to rescue missions, anti-submarine function displays) looking like colour TVs. On these he can
warfare and other hovering duties. When the engines are tilted call up every fact he needs to know (far more than the old
forwards the aircraft becomes a turboprop, able to fly at about instruments could tell him). Instead of being continuously con-
400 mph and with about three times the range of an equivalent fronted by dozens of dials which he has to interpret, he is told
helicopter. only what he needs to know. One MFD might be a vertical
294 FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE INTO SPACE 295
display showing attitude, altitude, storms or mountains ahead 99. Into Space
and so forth. Another might be a horizontal display, showing Since this section was written numerous Astronauts have visited
where he is going, distances and ground features. If everything the Moon, using the lunar-orbit rendezvous technique, and the
works properly, there is no need to display information on the Shuttle programme has shown that space launch vehicles can
complex systems, but as soon as anything goes wrong the pilot be flown back to a normal landing and used many times. British
is instantly informed. By touching the display, or surrounding Aerospace and Rolls-Royce have, in the Hotol (horizontal take-
push-switches, he can call up information on the fault in com- off and landing) shown that it is practicable to build a true
plete detail. Warning of it can be radioed ahead so that ground “aerospace plane” which both takes off and lands from nor-
engineers know all about it before the aircraft arrives. mal runways, flying out into space on each mission. Hotol saves
weight and cost by burning oxygen from the atmosphere
whenever this is possible.
88. The Shock Stall
Today’s supersonic aircraft experience no significant nose-up
pitching moment of the kind implied in Fig. 107. Instead they
experience an inevitable nose-down pitching moment caused
by rearward migration of the centre of lift.
90. Sweephack
The implication that a transonic or supersonic wing must be
slim, swept and thin is misleading. One has only to look at the
wings of some modern fighters to see that they can have rounded
leading edges and no sweepback, while the wing of the Shuttle
Orbiter (which can lift at speeds exceeding Mach 20) is one
of the most blunt in the sky.
Illustrated with diagrams and photographs throughout, this book does not
claim to teach the reader how to fly, but will continue to be a clear and vivid
account of how and why on aeroplane flies. As such it will be a valuable
introduction for all trainee pilots, aeronautical engineers and the interested
aircraft enthusiast.
1 I S B N Cl-582-02b78-7 1