Wing tip

boyboy

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"Wingtip" redirects here. For the shoe, see brogues.
Wing tip The winglet and red navigation light on the wing tip of a South African Airways Boeing 747-400

Many aircraft types, such as the Lockheed Super Constellation shown here, have fuel tanks mounted on the wing tips, commonly called tip tanks



The wing tip of a Quad City Challenger II, formed with an aluminum bow



The wing tip of a Grumman American AA-1, showing its Hoerner style design



A Piper PA-28 Cherokee with winglets


A wing tip is the part of the wing that is most distant from the fuselage of a fixed-wing aircraft.
Because the wing tip shape influences the size and drag of the wingtip vortices, tip design has produced a diversity of shapes, including:​
  • Squared-off​
  • Aluminium tube bow​
  • Rounded​
  • Hoerner style​
  • Drooped tips​
  • Raked wingtips​
  • Tip tanks​
  • Sails​
  • Fences​
  • End plates​
Winglets have become popular additions to high speed aircraft wanting to increase fuel efficiency by reducing drag from wingtip vortices. In lower speed aircraft, the effect of the wingtip shape is less apparent, with only a marginal performance difference between round, square, and Hoerner style tips.[1] The slowest speed aircraft, STOL aircraft, may use wingtips to shape airflow for controlability at low airspeeds.
Wing tips are also an expression of aircraft design style, so their shape may be influenced by marketing considerations as well as by aerodynamic requirements.
Wing tips are often used by aircraft designers to mount navigation lights, anti-collision strobe lights, landing lights, handholds, and identification markings.
Wing tip tanks can act as a winglet, store fuel at the center of gravity, and distribute weight more evenly across the wing spar.
On fighter aircraft, they may also be fitted with hardpoints, for mounting drop tanks and weapons systems, such as missiles and electronic countermeasures. Wingtip mounted hose/drogue systems allow Aerial refueling of multiple aircraft with separation.
Aerobatic aircraft use wingtip mounted crosses for visual attitude reference. Wingtip mounted smoke systems and fireworks highlight rolling aerobatic maneuvers. Some airshow acts feature the pilot touching or dragging the wingtip along the ground.
Aircraft with a single main landing gear or very high aspect ratio wings such as gliders, may place small landing gear in the wingtips. Some uncommon designs,like the Rutan Quickie, and Convair XFY placed the main landing gear in the wingtips. Some early WWI aircraft used wooded skids on the wingtips to minimize damage on ground looping incidents.
Several amphibious aircraft such as the Consolidated PBY Catalina, use retractable wingtips as floats.
Moveable wingtips can affect the controlability of a wing. Wing warping the ends of the wing, produced roll control on the earliest of aircraft such as the Wright Flyer. The North American XB-70 Valkyrie wingtips were raised and lowered its wingtips in flight to adjust its stability in supersonic and subsonic flight.
Wingtips can also house the power plant or thrust of an aircraft. The EWR VJ 101 used tip mounted jets, the V-22 uses tilting wingtip mounted engines, and the Harrier uses wingtip thrust for stability while hovering.
Rotary wing aircraft wingtips may be swept or curved to reduce noise and vibration. Some rotary wing aircraft place their propulsion in wingtip tip jets.​
 

boyboy

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Pre-Flight History - Level 1


Icarus in flight
Greek Gods and Icarus (Greece)

The magical ability to fly was often attributed to the Gods in Greek Mythology and legends. Oriental and Western folklore also abound with stories of magic carpets, witches on broomsticks, and other forms of movement through the air.
The best known Greek legend on the subject of flight is that of Daedalus, the engineer who built the labyrinth on the island of Crete in which the Minotaur lived. With his son, Icarus, he was imprisioned by King Minos, but the captives escaped by making themselves wings of wax and feathers. With these Daedalus flew successfully all the way to Naples, but Icarus, excited by the thrill of the new experience of flying, let his youthful exuberance deafen him to his father's warning and flew too near to the sun, which melted the wax and sent the boy crashing to his death in the sea below.
Man in the Moon
Domingo Gonzales - Man in the Moon (England)

A tale was written in 1638 entitled The Man in the Moon. The hero supposedly trained a flock of geese to fly him to the moon. Birds and later on fish, inspired man to explore the principles of flight and movements through the air. This is an example of how flight was explored in early literature.
Leonardi Da VinciDa Vinci's design for a wing, c. 1488Da Vinci helicopter prototype
Ornithopter - Leonardo Da Vinci (Italy)

One early attempt to construct a flying machine was made by Leonardo da Vinci. It was a flapping wing aircraft, powered by the human body. It was called an ornithopter. The term ornithopter derives its name from the idea of the flapping wings of a bird and was designed around 1500.
Francesco de Lana-Terzi's lighter-than-air-craft
Lighter - Than - Air - Craft (Italy)

The first serious project for a lighter-than-air aircraft was proposed by Francesco de Lana-Terzi in 1670. It was intended that this aircraft be lifted by four thin copper spheres from which all the air had been extracted.
 

boyboy

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You are possibly reading this material because you have had the same dreams of flight as did your ancestors thousands of years ago. Ancient writings record flight mythologies of the Greek, Roman, Egyptian, Assyrian, and Oriental cultures. Early scientists such as the English monk Roger Bacon, the genius Leonardo da Vinci, and other visionaries laid the foundation for today's unmanned voyages through the solar system. Because of your desire to learn more about the aerospace environment, you are helping to make dreams come true; and who knows, maybe your visions will be instrumental in helping mankind colonize other worlds in our universe.​
Balloons and Airships


Rocketry


Wings


Heroes, People, and Organizations in Aeronautics
 

boyboy

عضو جدید
Balloons and Airships

INTRODUCTION


At the end of this block of study, you should be able to:
5.1 State what the first serious thoughts about flight were directed toward.
5.2 Explain why the printing press was important to flight.
5.3 Know who is credited with inventing the hot­air balloon.


The first serious thoughts about flight were directed toward lighter­than-air flight. One of the most important inventions that led to flight was the printing press. This invention brought the price of books down and made possible the wide distribution of knowledge. For the first time, scientists throughout Europe could benefit from the work done by others, and scientific knowledge began to accumulate. For example, the man credited with inventing the hot-air balloon, Father Laurenco de Gusmao, made some small models and demonstrated one of them for the King of Portugal in 1709. However, the main contribution to flight was that the records of this demonstration were recorded and widely read throughout Europe.
 
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