4.1.5 McDonnell Douglas
Over the past 10 yr or so, the McDonnell Aircraft Company (MCAIR) has conducted studies of medium-speed V/STOL utility aircraft. Candidate concepts included gas and mechanically coupled lift-fan aircraft. A number of these concepts were wind-tunnel-tested. Parallel to this lift-fan activity, MCAIR conducted the AV-8B program and gained valuable experience in the design of vectored thrust concepts. This experience was recently (1980) applied to the design of another medium-speed concept featuring a "two-poster" propulsive lift system. All of these concepts are briefly described in the following paragraphs.
The first concept, proposed in 1973 for Navy consideration, was a gas-driven aircraft (Model 260) utilizing a three-fan, lift plus lift/cruise propulsion system. Figure 36 is an artist's rendering of the MCAIR gas-driven version of the 260 design. The propulsion and vertical-flight-control system are illustrated in Fig. 37. In this system, pitch and roll control are accomplished via energy transfer between the fan assemblies, and yaw control is achieved through differential thrust vectoring. Thrust vectoring of the lift/cruise engines is provided by means of a MCAIR-developed vented "D" nozzle (Ref. 21). Figure 38 illustrates the characteristics of this nozzle in both the cruise and VTOL modes. The nozzle consists of movable deflector hoods and a split yaw vane/closure door assembly attached to a single support beam centrally located on the bottom of the nozzle structure. In the cruise mode, the yaw vane doors are closed to form a flat bottom duct and a "D" shaped exit area (Fig. 38). For transition to vertical flight, the closure doors are each rotated 90° to form a single split-yaw vane. Longitudinal thrust vectoring is then accomplished by rotation of the deflector hood elements. Lateral vectoring is obtained by deflection of the split-yaw vane.
The "0" nozzle utilizes a concept referred to as "venting." This is accomplished by removing the inside wall of the elbow turn of a conventional deflector nozzle design, which has been shown to improve the 90° vectoring performance (Ref. 22). The performance characteristics of the "D" vented nozzle was demonstrated in a NASA Ames/MCAIR test program (1981) using a TF34 engine. The results are discussed in Refs. 22 and 23.
In 1977 MCAIR proposed a mechanically driven version of the Model 260 to the Navy. This concept is shown in Fig. 39. The baseline aircraft featured a low wing, three engines, and a mechanically driven three-fan arrangement. This propulsion and vertical-flight-control concept is illustrated in Fig. 40. The third engine, mounted forward of the vertical fin, is used only during V/STOL operation. All jet-borne aircraft control is provided by differential operation and deflection of the propulsion system, eliminating the need for a separate reaction-control system. All three fans and turboshaft engines are identical, minimizing development and maintenance costs. Lift/cruise thrust from each of the direct-drive, wing-mounted fan/engine assemblies is provided via the "D" vented nozzle.
In 1980 MCAIR initiated definition of a twin-engine vectored-thrust concept with a simpler propulsion system than the three-fan Model 260 concept. This concept is designated Model 276 and is depicted by the artist's rendering in Fig. 41 and discussed in Ref. 24. The Model 276 is a high wing design with two shoulder mounted high by-pass turbofan engines. As shown in Fig. 42, attitude control in powered-lift flight is provided by an engine-bleed reaction-control system in pitch, differential thrust modulation in roll, and differential thrust vectoring in yaw. Power transfer between engines by means of cross shafting permits a wide range of thrust modulation for roll control, including engine-out balance capability. A technology demonstrator of this concept using two "0" vented nozzles and TF34 engines has been defined. Mission performance characteristics of the Model 276 aircraft are discussed in Ref. 24.