Management


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Flight Test Automation Options


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Flight testing is often called the key component of test and evaluation. The cost of conventional flight testing is expected to escalate approaching the 21st century and beyond. Augustine noted several years ago that if this trend continues, a single advanced fighter aircraft would cost more than the entire DoD budget by the middle of next century. As the cost of flight testing continues to escalate in a predicted hostile fiscal environment, it is important to consider options to help minimize flight test cost. Suggestions range from completely eliminating developmental testing to employing a variety of flight test automation options. Flight test automation option concepts range from the fantasy of "push a button, the test is done," to the more practical use of a personal computer to help with some repetitive flight test tasks and to help store large amounts of related data. Options to help automate specific aspects of flight testing are starting to gain acceptance. Several test automation options exist that have the potential to enhance flight testing by permitting it to be done better, faster, cheaper, and safer. This paper briefly discusses a variety of flight test automation options including the OSD Automated Test Planning System (ATPS) work to automate the test and evaluation master plan (TEMP), the Army Test and Evaluation Planning and Reporting System (TEPRS), the G & C System work on Test-Plan, the Calspan/Air Force Test Planning, Analysis, and Evaluation System (PAES) program, the Boeing Planning and Reporting Organizer For Test Engineers (PROFITE) program, and the Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division Automated Flight Test Engineering System (AFTES) program and high performance computing program on flight test automation.







NASA SP-7500


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On Subscale Flight Testing


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Downscaled physical models, also referred to as subscale models, have played an essential role in the investigation of the complex physics of flight until the recent disruption of numerical simulation. Despite the fact that improvements in computational methods are slowly pushing experimental techniques towards a secondary role as verification or calibration tools, real-world testing of physical prototypes still provides an unmatched confidence. Physical models are very effective at revealing issues that are sometimes not correctly identified in the virtual domain, and hence can be a valuable complement to other design tools. But traditional wind-tunnel testing cannot always meet all of the requirements of modern aeronautical research and development. It is nowadays too expensive to use these scarce facilities to explore different design iterations during the initial stages of aircraft development, or to experiment with new and immature technologies. Testing of free-flight subscale models, referred to as Subscale Flight Testing (SFT), could offer an affordable and low-risk alternative for complementing conventional techniques with both qualitative and quantitative information. The miniaturisation of mechatronic systems, the advances in rapid-prototyping techniques and power storage, as well as new manufacturing methods, currently enable the development of sophisticated test objects at scales that were impractical some decades ago. Moreover, the recent boom in the commercial drone industry has driven a quick development of specialised electronics and sensors, which offer nowadays surprising capabilities at competitive prices. These recent technological disruptions have significantly altered the cost-benefit function of SFT and it is necessary to re-evaluate its potential in the contemporary aircraft development context. This thesis aims to increase the comprehension and knowledge of the SFT method in order to define a practical framework for its use in aircraft design; focusing on low-cost, short-time solutions that don’t require more than a small organization and few resources. This objective is approached from a theoretical point of view by means of an analysis of the physical and practical limitations of the scaling laws; and from an empirical point of view by means of field experiments aimed at identifying practical needs for equipment, methods, and tools. A low-cost data acquisition system is developed and tested; a novel method for semi-automated flight testing in small airspaces is proposed; a set of tools for analysis and visualisation of flight data is presented; and it is also demonstrated that it is possible to explore and demonstrate new technology using SFT with a very limited amount of economic and human resources. All these, together with a theoretical review and contextualisation, contribute to increasing the comprehension and knowledge of the SFT method in general, and its potential applications in aircraft conceptual design in particular.




National Remote Computational Flight Research Facility


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The extension of the NASA Ames-Dryden remotely augmented vehicle (RAV) facility to accommodate flight testing of a hypersonic aircraft utilizing the continental United States as a test range is investigated. The development and demonstration of an automated flight test management system (ATMS) that uses expert system technology for flight test planning, scheduling, and execution is documented. Rediess, Herman A. Unspecified Center...