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Design for Runway Conditions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 July 2016

J. W. H. Thomas*
Affiliation:
Hawker Siddeley Aviation Ltd., de Havilland Division

Extract

The designer's task is always to choose the best compromise to meet the various conflicting requirements put upon him. This task is eased when these requirements and ways of meeting them are expressed precisely in numbers, which is so in most performance work, but rarely true of safety or reliability.

In these latter areas the feedback of operational information shows when a problem exists and how important it is. For existing aircraft a solution must often be sought by ad hoc tests before the results of fundamental research are available.

Type
Take-Off and Landing Problems
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society 1963

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References

1.Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) and National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Joint Technical Conference on Slush Drag and Braking Problems—A Compilation of Papers Presented. 19th-20th December 1961.Google Scholar
2. NASA TND-552. Studies of the Retardation Force Developed on an Aircraft Tyre Rolling in Slush or Water. Walter B. Horne. Upshur T. Joyner and Trafford J. W. Leland, 1960.Google Scholar
3. NACA TN 4406. Low Tire Friction and Cornering Forces on a Wet Surface. Eziaslav N. Harrin, 1958.Google Scholar