Abstract

Abstract Recent aerospace industry interest in developing subsonic commercial transport airplanes with at least 50% greater passenger capacity than the largest existing aircraft in this category (e.g. the Boeing 747-400 with approximately 400–450 seats) has generated a number of proposals based primarily on the configuration paradigm established 50 years ago with the Boeing B-47 bomber. While this classic configuration has come to dominate subsonic commercial airplane development since the advent of the Boeing 707/Douglas DC-8 in the mid-1950s, its extrapolation to the size required to carry more than 600–700 passengers raises a number of questions, including: 1. How large can an airplane of 707/747 configuration be built and still remain economically and operationally viable? 2. What configuration alternatives might allow circumvention of practical size limitations inherent in the basic 707/747 configuration? 3. What new and/or dormant technology elements might be brought together in synergistic ways to resolve or ameliorate very large subsonic airplane problems? To explore these and a number of related issues, a team of Boeing, university and NASA engineers was formed under the auspices of the NASA Advanced Concepts Program during 1994. The results of a Research Analysis contract (NAS1-20269) focused on a large, unconventional (C-wing) transport configuration for which Boeing and the authors were granted a design patent in 1995 is the subject of this paper which is based on information contained in McMasters et al. (NASA CR 198351, October 1996).

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call