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The F-14 Tomcat

The document discusses the history and design of the Grumman F-14 Tomcat fighter jet. Some key points: - The F-14 was designed by Grumman Aerospace and first flew in 1970. 556 were made for the US Navy and 79 for Iran. - It had a variable-sweep wing design allowing it to optimize wing geometry for high-speed cruise or low-speed maneuvering. - Computational modeling showed benefits of the variable-sweep wings including reduced wave drag and higher lift at lower angles of attack compared to fixed wings. - The aircraft was capable of transonic cruise up to a maximum speed of 1.88 Mach. Its wings swept forward at high speeds to improve

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
146 views

The F-14 Tomcat

The document discusses the history and design of the Grumman F-14 Tomcat fighter jet. Some key points: - The F-14 was designed by Grumman Aerospace and first flew in 1970. 556 were made for the US Navy and 79 for Iran. - It had a variable-sweep wing design allowing it to optimize wing geometry for high-speed cruise or low-speed maneuvering. - Computational modeling showed benefits of the variable-sweep wings including reduced wave drag and higher lift at lower angles of attack compared to fixed wings. - The aircraft was capable of transonic cruise up to a maximum speed of 1.88 Mach. Its wings swept forward at high speeds to improve

Uploaded by

AerospaceAngel
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The F-14 Tomcat

Robert Kochanski Nicholas Carlson Saleh Kausar

History of the F-14 Tomcat


Designer First Flight
Grumman Aerospace Corporation December 21, 1970 556 F-14As for US NAVY 79 for the Imperial Iranian Air Force F-14A , F-14B , F-14D

Amount Made Variants

Geometry Whole

Geometry Wing

Geometry Tail/Fuselage
Why the tail configuration? Extra lifting surface? Fuselage

High Lift

High Lift (continued)

High Lift (continued)

High Lift (continued)

Why Variable Sweep?


Adjustable span for cruise

Pros

efficiency Reduced wave drag CLmax at lower AoA Trailing edge devices dont lose effectiveness Low approach speed Versatility in mission

Complexity Number of moving parts Weight of support structure Other options

Cons

VLMpc Code Results


A planform of the 20 and 68 swept
wings were run at the cruise Mach number of 0.72 Results
The CL, slope for the 20 case was 5.405 /rad and for 68 it was 2.366 /rad The Cm/Cl for the 20 case was -0.7718 and for 68 it was -0.7586

High Speed Flight


Transonic Cruise

Cruise at Mach = 0.72, max Mach at 1.88 Transonics affect aircrafts handling characteristics. In extreme cases, control operations reverse in functionality. Automatic wing sweep control, based off of Mach Controlled trim and helped reduce drag and dynamic instabilities

High Speed Flight cont.


At speeds above Mach 1.0, the glove vanes in
the leading edge of the fixed portion of the wing extend to move the aerodynamic center forward and Shift also reduces loads on the tail sections. effective wing area about 40% greater than actual wing area because of flat, airfoil-like, section between the engines. Results in lower wing loading, but more wetted area and poor area distribution

Drag
Profile Drag
- Pressure / Form Drag - Skin Friction Drag Induced Drag - Due to lift generation - Vorticity shed into wake Wave Drag - Drag due to lift - Drag due to volume

Wetted Area Calculation

4,131 ft2

Friction Input
F - 14 AIRCRAFT 739. 1. 6. 0.0 FUSELAGE 644.93 CANOPY 203.56 ENGINES 1142.86 WINGS 1478.23 HORIZ TAIL 310.08 VERTI TAIL 200.88 0.200 35.000 1.200 35.000 2.000 35.000 0.000 0.000 49.2 25.2 42.9 11.4 8.8 5.5 .10918 .07936 .11694 .05422 .04522 .04522 1.0 1.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0

Friction Output
F-14 TOTAL SWET = 3980.5400 FORM DRAG: CDFORM = 0.00171 REYNOLDS NO./FT =0.480E+06 Altitude = 35000.00 XME = 0.200 FRICTION DRAG: CDF = 0.01593 F-15 TOTAL SWET = 2700.0000 FORM DRAG: CDFORM = 0.00105 REYNOLDS NO./FT =0.480E+06 Altitude = 35000.00 XME = 0.200 FRICTION DRAG: CDF = 0.01301

QUESTIONS?

References

[1] [2] Waaland, I.T. Technology in the Lives of an Aircraft Designer. Aircraft Design and Operations Meeting, 23 Sept. 1991, AIAA. Hallissy, J, and P Phillips. Wind-Tunnel Investigation of Aerodynamic Characteristics Hallissy, and Wing Pressure Distributions of an Airplane with Variable-Sweep Wings Modified for Laminar Flow. NASA Technical Memorandum 4124 Mason, W.H. "Subsonic Aerodynamics of Airfoils and Wings." Virginia Tech. http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/aircraft/f-14-design.htm http://en.allexperts.com/e/f/f/f-14_tomcat.htm http://www.anft.net/f-14/f14-history-f14a.htm

[3] [4] [5] [6]

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