Log In   |  Register Free Newsletter Subscription
Skip navigation
Zibb
Subscribe to Design News
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Boeing’s New X-48B Plane Prototype Takes Test Flight

Blended wing body design completes low-speed tests

Sean Snyder, Associate Editor -- Design News, August 20, 2007

Boeing’s Phantom Works division, along with NASA and the U.S. Air Force, recently tested its new X-48B, a blended wing body (BWB) aircraft. The 500-lb prototype boasts a 21-ft wingspan and features three turbo jet engines, a high-strength, low-weight graphite composite skin. A forward facing camera relays visual information to a remote monitor and console, where a pilot uses conventional instruments to control the aircraft.

The prototype completed preliminary testing in the Lagley Full Scale Tunnel (LFST), operated by Old Dominion University under the supervision of NASA, but took its first test flight at the NASA Dryden Flight Research Center in California.

The remotely piloted prototype approached speeds of 120 knots at altitudes of 7,500 ft in its low-speed configuration. According to Tom Koehler, spokesperson for Boeing Phantom Works, the plane would have to be modified in order to test at higher speeds. “Because we were testing this for low speed, it doesn’t retract,” he says. “The landing gear is just on there always in the down position.”

According to Koehler, the objective of this prototype build and test was to determine the capabilities of the BWB design at low speeds. “The goal of the program is to get good flight test data that will align with the good data we already have of the wind tunnel, as well as the computational fluid dynamics studies that have been done on it over the years,” he says.

The 8.5-percent-scale prototype and the remote pilot console were built by Cranfield Aerospace Ltd. based out of Bedford, England. Cranfield built two separate prototypes for testing; the first was used in the wind tunnel and will be used as a back up in future tests, while the second prototype was built for the live testing.

“Right now we think it has a lot of potential for use as a military aircraft, in 15-20 years,” says Koeler, “and it’s not in our forecast at all as a commercial airplane.”

In place of a traditional cylindrical fuselage, the cabin and internal area of the plane blend into the wing span. According to Boeing, this design provides extra lift and less drag than a traditional fuselage and uses less fuel during cruise conditions. This design is similar to, but not quite the same as, a flying wing design.
 
Boeing and NASA have scheduled up to 25 similar low-speed flights to gather more data about the operation of the plane. “We’re going to be looking at more specifically the low-noise characteristics of the vehicle, and then higher speeds – how it flies at higher speeds.” The engines, each of which produce 50 lbs of thrust, are mounted high on the top back of the aircraft to cut down on noise.

The X-48B is being developed by Phantom Works a research and development division of Boeing. “It’s our mission to continuously study innovative technologies and concepts with the idea that maybe they can improve performance and cost of our current airplane systems of today as well as future systems,” says Koehler.

RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email
Talkback
Reed Business Information Resource Center

Featured Company


Most Recent Resources

Advertisement

Sponsored Content

Technology Marketplace

More Content
  • Blogs

John Dodge

Design engineering at large

John Dodge
September 29, 2008
Chevy Volt, Performance Capabilities Subject to Change
Did I hear that right? A Chevy Volt radio ad this morning concluded with a line...
More

John Dodge

Design engineering at large

John Dodge
September 26, 2008
Bill Gates on the Financial Crisis, Innovation
Want to feel better about the current financial crisis? Listen to Tom...
More

John Dodge

Design engineering at large

John Dodge
September 17, 2008
GM Throttles Back Chevy Volt's Design
The Chevy Volt’s official design has come in for some heavy criticism for...
More

VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS

MechatronicsZone Promo
Advertisement
Texas Instruments Video Exclusives
eNewsletters
Gadget Freak
Sherlock Ohms
Made by Monkeys
Design Tools
Electronics/Test
Sensors/LED
Mechatronics
Motion Control & Fluid Power
Materials & Fastening
Special Technology Reports
International Engineering



Please read our Privacy Policy

About Design News   |   Advertise with Design News   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   Subscription   |   Affiliate Links   |   RSS
© 2010 Reed Business Information , a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use |  Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites