UK to Demonstrate Flapless Aircraft in November
A scale model of a stealthy unmanned aircraft completely lacking
conventional control surfaces is expected to make its maiden flight in the UK by the end of November.
Resembling Boeing’s X-45 unmanned combat air vehicle, the University of Manchester’s so-called Integrated Demonstrator weighs 4.5kg (9.9lb) and will
fly at speeds of up to 9.7kt (17.9km/h).
“The Integrated Demonstrator will use two brushless-motor ducted fans for propulsion and it will be controlled remotely or by the autopilot software
Micropilot,” says the project’s chief engineer, doctoral student Russell Sparks.
The demonstrator uses fluidic thrust vectoring in the pitch axis and aerodynamic circulation control in the roll axis to enable flight without
conventional moving surfaces. In fluidic vectoring, a secondary jet parallel to the main flow over the curved exhaust surface entrains and redirects
the main jet’s thrust. The control technique has been tested on a ducted-fan-powered Schübeler Vector II model aircraft.
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