Aerion Supersonic wrapped up low- and high-speed wind tunnel
testing for its redesigned Mach 1.4 AS2 business jet, accumulating the
equivalent of 78,000 nm flown and hundreds of simulated flight hours at
facilities in Europe and North America. The testing, along with digital
modeling, enabled Aerion engineers to assess more than 200,000 data points to
validate the aerodynamic shape of the aircraft and keep the program on target
for component manufacturing to begin in 2022 and AS2 assembly in 2023.
The
tests involved an evaluation of the full operational envelope of the AS2,
including takeoff and landing, subsonic cruise, “boomless” supersonic cruise,
and dive speed. Additionally, the AS2 design was tested for operational
conditions, including the landing gear deployment and wing icing, along with
handling qualities.
Aerion
worked with the French Office of National Aerospace Research in Modane,
France, on high-speed testing, assessing stability and
control at transonic and supersonic speeds. “The conclusion of this phase
of the development program is a major milestone for Aerion and the AS2,” said
Aerion chairman, president, and CEO Tom Vice. “In 2023, when we start manufacturing
at Aerion Park [in Melbourne, Florida], the first AS2 we build will be a
production-specification aircraft. This key phase of testing validates our
aerodynamic assumptions.”
First
flight is planned in the mid-2020s, with certification to come later in the
decade.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.