Boeing starts 777X wind tunnel tests

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BOEING STARTS

Boeing starts 777X wind tunnel tests

Boeing has started low-speed wind tunnel tests on the 777X, which was officially launched at the Dubai Air Show in November.

“This is the first major development milestone for the programme since we launched the program last month,” said Terry Beezhold, vice president and chief project engineer of the 777X program. “Wind tunnel testing will validate our performance models and generate a vast amount of data that our engineering teams will use to design the airplane in this phase of development.”

Testing started on December 5th at QinetiQ’s test facility in Farnborough, UK. Wind tunnel models allow experts to test many different configurations for the airplane. Low-speed tests measure airplane performance with a variety of high-lift surface settings to simulate takeoff and landing conditions.

The low-speed model currently being tested is a 0.05 percent scale model of the baseline 777X, measuring about 4.22 meters (166 inches) long with a wing span of 3.92 meters (154 inches). Hundreds of sensors are embedded in the model to measure pressure to determine the in-flight loads as well as provide valuable diagnostics of the aerodynamic performance of a given design.

Low-speed testing at the QinetiQ facility is expected to last approximately five months. Testing also will be conducted next year at the Boeing Transonic Wind Tunnel in Seattle to further validate 777X high-speed performance projections.

“We are on track to complete our top-level design in 2014 and reach firm configuration in 2015,” said Beezhold.

 

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