Saturday, April 4, 2020
Grumman X-29 By Pace Essays (419 words) - Edwards Air Force Base
  Grumman X-29 By Pace    I have chosen to do my book report on the book "The Grumman X-29", by Steve    Pace, for a couple of reasons. I've seen the X-29 in flight at an air show and  was mystified by its wing design. I asked myself how could something like that  fly at all? This book shed some light on the mysteries of how the X-29 flies and  performs. I am going to tell you a little about the book and the X-29, so sit  back relax and enjoy the fruits of my reading labor. The X-29 is a single-engine  aircraft 48.1 feet long. Its forward-swept wing has a span of 27.2 feet. Each    X-29 was powered by a General Electric F404-GE-400 engine producing 16,000  pounds of thrust. Empty weight was 13,600 pounds, while takeoff weight was    17,600 pounds. The wing substructure and the basic airframe itself are aluminum  and titanium. Wing trailing edge actuators controlling camber are mounted  externally in streamlined fairings because of the thinness of the supercritical  airfoil. The aircraft had a maximum operating altitude of 50,000 feet, a maximum  speed of Mach 1.6, and a flight endurance time of approximately one hour.    Overall, VFC, like the forward-swept wings, showed promise for the future of  aircraft design. The X-29 did not demonstrate the overall reduction in  aerodynamic drag that earlier studies had suggested, but this discovery should  not be interpreted to mean that a more optimized design with forward-swept wings  could not yield a reduction in drag. Overall, the X-29 program demonstrated  several new technologies as well as new uses of proven technologies. These  included: aero elastic tailoring to control structural divergence; use of a  relatively large, close-coupled canard for longitudinal control; control of an  aircraft with extreme instability while still providing good handling qualities;  use of three-surface longitudinal control; use of a double-hinged trailing-edge  flap at supersonic speeds; control effectiveness at high angle of attack; vortex  control; and military utility of the overall design. The book was overall very  informative in the sense that all terms and ideas were explained clearly and  simply in order to communicate to the general public better versus someone who  is educated in the aeronautics field. I highly recommend this book to someone  looking for a little overall knowledge of the X-29, but if you are looking for  in-depth report and analysis you should look elsewhere.    Bibliography    NASA Dryden Flight Research Center Document number: FS-98-04-008 DFRC    Responsible NASA Official: Jenny Baer-Riedhart http://www.dfrc.nasa.gov/PAO/PAIS/HTML/FS-008-DFRC.html    
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