Abstract:
Tests have been made with distributed suction applied to a short-span sleeve fitted to the upper surface of the wing of a single-seat Vampire aircraft. Full-chord laminar flow was maintained up to Reynolds numbers in the region of 29 million and Mach numbers up to 0.70, which was very nearly the critical Mach number of the sleeve section. The suction quantities required were sufficiently small to result in overall reductions in profile drag of between 70 and 80 per cent, account being taken of the power required for suction. Difficulties were experienced due to surface roughness, and although these are believed to have resulted largely from the particular type of porous covering used in the tests, the problem of maintaining a sufficiently smooth and clean surface is evidently of crucial importance to full-scale application.