Advanced Search   |   Tips
NBAA 2005: AIRCRAFT
    
MORE NEWS
TOP STORIES
AIRCRAFT
AVIONICS
ENGINES
INTELLIGENCE
NEWSMAKERS

Aerion Wraps Up Phase I Basic Design

A year after its dramatic unveiling at last year's convention in Las Vegas, Aerion Corp.'s supersonic business jet (SBJ) project has vaulted its first hurdle with the completion in September of Phase 1 basic design. As vice chairman, Brian Barents explained at an eve-of-show press conference, "We have made substantial progress since last year, [and] technical viability has been confirmed by wind tunnel and computer analysis. We are now ready to present the design to potential partners."

The machine in current artists' impressions differs in several details from that shown last year. The T-tail has been replaced by one of cruciform design; fuselage cross-section has been refined; wing planform is modified with raked tips and reduced in area;  wingroot strakes have been shrunk and modified for better low-speed stalling characteristics; and flap design has changed.

In these two last-mentioned areas, the Aerion SBJ has unique features. As explained by chief technology officer Richard Tracy, the thin wing precludes slotted flaps to reduce landing speed, so it has been fitted with plain flaps that have a half-chord split flap in their lower surface and additionally function as flaperons. Airflow at the wing leading edge/fuselage interface has been improved by a curved notch at the intersection.

Interestingly, the SBJ has fly-by-wire controls, but it is naturally stable, so a failure of the stability augmentation system will not be critical providing the actuators continue to function. Natural stability means a "bigger tail and the C of G range farther forward," says Tracy. "There is some [performance] penalty, but it is not large."

This, indeed, encapsulates the Aerion approach. The aircraft does not rely for its viability upon large forward strides in technology—P&W JT8D-219 turbofans do the Mach 1.6 business without variable geometry intakes or nozzles—or contentious legislation being passed to allow overland super-sonic flight. The Aerion SBJ is "achievable at low technical risk," according to chairman Robert Bass.

And the risk-sharing partners who are needed to take Aerion to its next stage? "We can't announce them yet," Bass says.

Maybe we'll have to come back to Orlando next October to ask again.                     

—Paul Jackson

back to ShowNews home

 

[Conferences]  [Virtual Trade Show]  [Jobs]
[Store]  [Media Kits]  [Subscriptions]  [Aircraft Buyer]  [Next Century of Flight]
Copyright ©2003 Aviation Week, a divistion of The McGraw-Hill Companies     All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy