
Wind tunnel test measurements, flight test measurements, and analytical prediction play a key role in the development of new rotor systems. Tests are typically performed using a range of rotor system sizes and wind tunnel test facilities. To assure the accuracy of wind tunnel testing methodology, a validation study is in progress using test results from model- and full-scale tests in comparison with flight test data under the Rotor Data Correlation Task of the U.S. Army/German Memorandum of Understanding on Cooperative Research in the Field of Helicopter Aeromechanics. This comparison will allow for a determination of the ability to accurately predict helicopter flight behavior from wind tunnel experiments and the influence of the test facility on these results. Experimental data from a series of wind tunnel tests, including both model- and full-scale experiments, will be studied to determine the extent to which wind tunnel test results can be used to predict flight behavior.
A series of flight tests was conducted at the Deutsche Forschungsanstalt für Luft- und Raumfahrt e.V. (DLR) in the spring and autumn of 1992 using a BO-105 helicopter in Braunschweig, Germany. These flights were conducted at various altitudes and speeds for steady level flight. Upon completion of the flight test program, the data was reduced and evaluated to identify a series of test conditions for the full-scale NASA 40- by 80-Foot Wind Tunnel test program, which was conducted during the winter of 1993 and a 40 percent scale-model test in the German-Dutch Wind Tunnel (DNW) that was conducted in February 1995.
The BO-105 aircraft used in the flight test program is one of two BO-105 helicopters at the DLR Institute of Flight Mechanics in Braunschweig, Germany. The BO-105 is 5000 lb gross weight aircraft with a maximum sea level speed of 145 knots. Included on the aircraft was an onboard data acquisition system with a sampling rate of 200 Hz. Data was digitized and stored on a removable hard disk during the flight. The removable hard disk was later used to transfer data to another computer system for post-processing.
The BO-105 flight tests were performed for level flight only at three different flight (altitude) levels. To get a wide data base for application to the wind tunnel rotor tests, the flight tests were performed for the following conditions; 1) horizontal speed range from hover (OGE) to maximum speed with a stepsize of 10 knots, 2) three different altitudes, 3) two center-of-gravity (c/g) positions (baseline position, and 121 lb mass at the tail), and 4) three different main rotor RPM's in hover (95 percent, 100 percent, and 102 percent).
The test hardware for the full-scale testing included the NASA Ames Rotor Test Apparatus (RTA) and a BO-105 rotor system in the 40- by 80-Foot Wind Tunnel. The BO-105 helicopter rotor system is a four-bladed, soft inplane hingeless rotor with constant chord (0.886 ft), -8 deg linear twist, and a NACA 23012 cambered airfoil. The rotor radius is 16.11 ft; rotor solidity is 0.07. The rotor hub has 2.5 deg of built-in coning and zero droop or sweep of the blade outboard of the pitch bearing.
The test hardware for the model-scale testing included the DLR rotor test stand with a 40 percent scale-model of a BO-105 rotor system and a scaled BO-105 fuselage on its own balance. The types of measurements that were made in this test program include rotor forces and moments, fuselage forces and moments, blade bending and torsional moments, fuselage pressures (static), and tunnel wall pressures (static).
Figure 1. Comparison of measured wind tunnel and flight test rotor flap bending with analytical results at an advance ratio of 0.197 and 1-g thrust.
Peterson, R. L., Maier, T., Langer, H. J., and Tränapp, N., "Correlation of Wind Tunnel and Flight Test Results of a Full-Scale Hingeless Rotor," Proceedings of the American Helicopter Society Aeromechanics Specialist Conference, San Francisco, CA, January 1994. Paper No. 2.2. Abstract
Peterson, R. L., "Full-Scale Hingeless Rotor Performance and Loads," NASA TM 110356, June 1995. Abstract
Langer, H. -J., Peterson, R. L. and Maier T., "An Experimental Evaluation Of Wind Tunnel Wall Correction Methods For Helicopter Performance," Proceedings of the 52nd Annual Forum of the American Helicopter Society, June 1996. Abstract
Peterson, R. L. and Nguyen, K., "Aeroelastic Stability of a Full-Scale Hingeless Rotor," NASA TM 110417, August 1996. Abstract
Randall Peterson
NASA Ames Research Center
Moffett Field CA 94035-1000
NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field CA 94035-1000, (650) 604-5000
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