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2.8 Military Market

39

10.The stall speed must be 60 knots or less.

11.The service ceiling is 15,000 ft.

12.Takeoff performance: 20,000-ft field length (rough field) with 50-ft obstacles.

13.Hopper capacity: 400 U.S. gallons/3,200 lbs.

It is suggested that the design be approached through use of FAR Parts 137, 135, and 123. Readers may review current designs from Jane’s All the World’s Aircraft. Key considerations include choice of materials, configuration and structural layout, and systems design. In every other respect, the design should follow the standard approach described herein.

B. Airport Adaptive Regional Transport with Secondary Role to Support U.S. Home-

land Security (Abridged from [7])

Payload:

49 passengers + flight and cabin crew

Range:

1,500 miles with reserve

Takeoff and Landing

2,500 ft

Field Length:

 

Maximum Speed:

400 knots

Mission Profile:

Multiple takeoffs and landings without refueling

For the airport adaptive role, the aircraft can simultaneously approach a major airport in noninterfering adverse weather and takeoff and land from shorter, largely unused runways, subrunways, and taxiways. The aircraft will be evaluated for an automatic spiral-descending, decelerating approach in instrument meteorological conditions (IMC) (Category 3C) conditions and be able to continue with one engine inoperative. The aircraft also has the following secondary roles:

Serve the civil reserve fleet and be available during a homeland-security crisis

Serve as an ambulance

Serve as transport firefighters to remote wilderness areas

Serve as an emergency response vehicle for urban terrorism or a natural disaster by changing passenger-accommodation fitment

The aircraft will have half of the payload and a 750-mile range into makeshift landing zones of at least 1,000 ft.

More information is required for the specifications, but the level of technology is not within the scope of this book.

Other than drag estimation and certification regulations (e.g., noise), the SST design is similar to subsonic transport, aircraft design methodology. Supersonic drag estimation is addressed in Chapter 9.

2.8 Military Market

This extended section of the book can be found on the Web at www.cambridge

.org/Kundu and describes the typical military aircraft aviation market, starting with compliance with national defense requirements (MoD).

2.8.1 Aircraft Specifications/Requirements for Military Aircraft Case Studies

This extended section of the book can be found on the Web at www.cambridge

.org/Kundu and outlines specifications for introductory classroom work on military aircraft design (e.g., the Advanced Jet Trainer).

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