The paper describes the aeroelastic analysis for the
design, the ground verification tests and the flight
test programme, for the Ranger 2000 training
aircraft, developed jointly by Dasa and Rockwell
International between 1991 and 1994, as a competitor
for the next generation US Air Force and Navy Joint
Primary Advanced Training System (JPats). Special
efforts with respect to the aeroelastic stability
were required for the T-tail configuration, for the
design of the manual flight control system, and for
the establishment of sufficient mass balance for the
control surfaces. Several ground vibration tests
were performed for the complete aircraft and for
individual components for all major design
improvements during the flight test evaluation. To
minimise the required time for these tests, highly
modular test equipment was required. For an
efficient flutter flight test programme a reliable
excitation system was chosen. This system consists
of slotted rotating cylinders, mounted on small
vanes, which can be attached to any aerodynamic
surface. This equipment creates defined unsteady
aerodynamic forces to excite the eigenmodes of the
structure.
Quasi-on-line frequency and damping data evaluation
between consecutive flight test points was made
possible by installing the required hardware and
software directly at the flight test quick-look
control room, for the direct use of telemetry data.
With this approach only a small number of dedicated
flutter flights was required.