The B777 high lift test
in the 12-Foot Pressure Wind Tunnel
by Dale Satran
February 1998
There were several research goals for this test.
The B777 aircraft was already certified and in public use but there were
some discrepancies between previous wind tunnel test data and the flight
test results. The research goals were to establish a high Reynolds Number
database for a full-span model in the 12-Foot Pressure Wind Tunnel, to
evaluate stability and control characteristics, and to evaluate a new
high lift design.
The model mounting system is different in the 12-Foot
from the mounting system used in other wind tunnels where the B777 had
previously been tested. The 12-Foot mounting system created some wind
blockage and upwash, which could not be directly corrected for in this
tunnel entry. In other words, the data could not be compared directly
with data from previous wind tunnel tests. The data from the test was
useful to the B777 program but only incrementally. A future test was planned
to account for the model mounting interference by testing the model upright
and inverted. Unfortunately at this time, that test has been canceled
due to budget cuts.
The incremental data from the test provided Boeing
with some new insights into the performance of the B777. A large matrix
of different control deflections were documented for different tunnel
conditions. Several minor configuration changes were evaluated for future
incorporation into the B777 configuration. The Advanced high lift design
work was unfortunately eliminated due to budget cuts.
As a part of this test, we built a semi-span model
to be tested in the National Transonic Facility, NTF, which is a cryogenic
wind tunnel. The NTF has the capability of testing the B777 model at flight
Reynolds Numbers. When the data from that test is available, it will be
compared to the full-span data from the 12-Foot and other wind tunnel
tests. One of the results will be to determine what Reynolds Number is
required to accurately predict the performance of an aircraft.
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