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An Experimental and Analytical Investigation of Isolated Rotor Flap‐Lag Stability in Forward Flight
Author(s) -
G. H. Gaonkar,
Michael J. Mcnulty,
J. Nagabhushanam
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
journal of the american helicopter society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.442
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 2161-6027
pISSN - 0002-8711
DOI - 10.4050/jahs.35.25
Subject(s) - lag , floquet theory , helicopter rotor , aerodynamics , rotor (electric) , stability (learning theory) , eigenvalues and eigenvectors , control theory (sociology) , coupling (piping) , time lag , structural engineering , physics , mechanics , computer science , engineering , mechanical engineering , nonlinear system , computer network , control (management) , quantum mechanics , machine learning , artificial intelligence
For flap lag stability of isolated rotors, experimental and analytical investigations were conducted in hover and forward flight on the adequacy of a linear quasisteady aerodynamics theory with dynamic flow. Forward flight effects on lag regressing mode were emphasized. A soft inplane hingeless rotor with three blades was tested at advance ratios as high as 0.55 and at shaft angles as high as 20 deg. The 1.62 m model rotor was untrimmed with an essentially unrestricted tilt of the tip path plane. In combination with lag natural frequencies, collective pitch settings and flap lag coupling parameters, the data base comprises nearly 1200 test points (damping and frequency) in forward flight and 200 test points in hover. By computerized symbolic manipulation, a linear model was developed in substall to predict stability margins with mode identification. To help explain the correlation between theory and data it also predicted substall and stall regions of the rotor disk from equilibrium values. The correlation showed both the strengths and weaknesses of the theory in substall ((angle of attack) equal to or less than 12 deg).

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