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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2010
Throughout the history of aircraft design, a trend that has remained quite constant up to the present time is the steady increase of wing loading with successive types. This feature with its consequent raising of stalling speed, and therefore landing and take-off distances, has resulted in techniques rather more scientific than those used in the early days of civil flying. With take-off distances of anything up to 6000 feet, the pilot in deciding whether a particular airfield is adequate for a given aircraft is no longer the sole arbiter; the rule of thumb must give way to the slide rule.
The pilot is, of course, still responsible for the safety of a particular operation, and to help him in this respect, performance information for his particular type of aircraft is supplied in graphic form with the safety factor already built in. It is the purpose of this paper to explain why and how this is done.