NASA recently tested a full-sized tail from a 757 commercial aircraft
that was modified and equipped with tiny jets called "sweeping jet
actuators" to blow air across the rudder surfaces.
The test vertical tail is an actual 757 tail that came out of an
aircraft bone yard in Arizona and was refurbished into a wind tunnel
model.
The tunnel hosted the 26-foot 757 tail for a series of tests of an
innovative Active Flow Control system that one day might allow airplane
builders to design smaller tails, which would reduce weight and drag,
and help improve fuel efficiency. The “flow control” comes from the
actuators, which are devices that essentially blow air in a sweeping
motion along the span of the tail and manipulate that flow of air.
The image was taken inside the National Full-Scale Aerodynamic
Complex, a massive wind tunnel located at NASA’s Ames Research Center in
Moffett, Ca. In the image, an engineer braces himself against the
strong winds in the tunnel as he holds a wand emitting a stream of smoke
that’s used to visualize “in flight” air flow across the tail.
Actuator technology will be installed for flight tests on the tail of
Boeing’s ecoDemonstrator program 757 flight test aircraft in early 2015
as part of an agreement with NASA.
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