Book Description
Summary: A flight investigation was made of boundary-layer and profile-drag characteristics of smooth wing sections of a P-47D airplane. Measurements were made at three stations on the wing: boundary-layer measurements were made on the upper surface of the left wing in the slip-stream at 25 percent semispan; pressure-distribution measurements were made on the upper surface of the left wing at 63 percent semispan; and wake surveys were made at 63 percent semispan of the right wing. The tests were made in straight flight and in turns over a range of conditions in which airplane lift coefficients from 0.15 to 0.68, Reynolds numbers from 7.7 x 106 to 19.7 x 106, and Mach numbers from 0.25 to 0.69 were obtained. The results of the investigation indicated a minimum profile-drag coefficient of 0.0062 for the smooth section at 63 percent semispan. At the highest Mach number attained in the tests, the critical Mach number was exceeded by at least 0.04 with no evidence of compressibility shock losses appearing in the form of increased width of the wake or increased profile-drag coefficient. For flight conditions approaching the critical Mach number, variations in Mach number of as much as 0.17 appeared to have no effect on the profile-drag coefficient. In the slipstream, transition occurred at least as far back as 20 percent chord on the upper surface at low lift coefficients.