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Featured researches published by William T. Yeager.


Journal of The American Helicopter Society | 2002

VIBRATORY LOADS REDUCTION TESTING OF THE NASA/ARMY/MIT ACTIVE TWIST ROTOR

Matthew L. Wilbur; Paul H. Mirick; William T. Yeager; Chester W. Langston; Carlos E. S. Cesnik; Sang Joon Shin

Recent studies have indicated that controlled strain-induced blade twisting can be attained using piezoelectric active fiber composite technology, and that such advancement may provide a mechanism for reduced rotorcraft vibrations and increased rotor performance. In order to validate these findings experimentally, a cooperative effort between the NASA Langley Research Center, the Army Research Laboratory, and the MIT Active Materials and Structures Laboratory has been developed. As a result of this collaboration a four-bladed, aeroelastically-scaled, active-twist model rotor has been designed and fabricated for testing in the heavy gas test medium of the NASA Langley Transonic Dynamics Tunnel. Initial wind tunnel testing has been conducted to assess the impact of active blade twist on both fixed- and rotating-system vibratory loads in forward flight. The active twist control was found to have a pronounced effect on all system loads and was shown to generally offer reductions in fixedsystem loads of 60% to 95%, depending upon flight condition, with 1.1o to 1.4o of dynamic blade twist observed. A summary of the systems developed and the vibratory loads reduction results obtained are presented in this paper.


Journal of The American Helicopter Society | 1993

Rotorcraft Aeroelastic Testing in the Langley Transonic Dynamics Tunnel

William T. Yeager; Paul H. Mirick; M-Nabil H. Hamouda; Matthew L. Wilbur; Jeffrey D. Singleton; W. Keats Wilkie

Wind-tunnel testing of a properly scaled aeroelastic model helicopter rotor is considered a necessary phase in the design and development of new rotor systems. For this reason, extensive testing of aeroelastically scaled model rotors is done in the Transonic Dynamics Tunnel (TDT) located at the Langley Research Center. A unique capability of this facility, which enables proper dynamic scaling, is the use of diflourodichloromethane, or Refrigerant-12 (R-12) as a test medium. The paper presents a description of the TDT and a discussion of the benefits of using R-12 as a test medium. A description of the system used to conduct model tests is provided and examples of recent rotor tests are cited to illustrate the types of aeroelastic model rotor tests conducted in the TDT.


Journal of The American Helicopter Society | 1990

Technical Notes: Reduction of Blade-Vortex Interaction Noise Through Higher Harmonic Pitch Control

Thomas F. Brooks; Earl R. Booth; J. Ralph Jolly; William T. Yeager; Matthew L. Wilbur

An acoustics test using an aeroelastically scaled rotor was conducted to examine the effectiveness of higher harmonic blade pitch control for the reduction of impulsive blade-vortex interaction (BVI) noise. A four-bladed, 110 in. diameter, articulated rotor model was tested in a heavy gas (Freon-12) medium in Langleys Transonic Dynamics Tunnel. Noise and vibration measurements were made for a range of matched flight conditions, where prescribed (open-loop) higher harmonic pitch was superimposed on the normal (baseline) collective and cyclic trim pitch. For the inflow-microphone noise measurements, advantage was taken of the reverberance in the hard walled tunnel by using a sound power determination approach. Initial findings from on-line data processing for three of the test microphones are reported for a 4/rev (4P) collective pitch control for a range of input amplitudes and phases. By comparing these results to corresponding baseline (no control) conditions, significant noise reductions (4 to 5 dB) were found for low-speed descent conditions, where helicopter BVI noise is most intense. For other rotor flight conditions, the overall noise was found to increase. All cases show increased vibration levels.


AHS International Forum 56 | 2000

HOVER TESTING OF THE NASA/ARMY/MIT ACTIVE TWIST ROTOR PROTOTYPE BLADE

Matthew L. Wilbur; William T. Yeager; W. Keats Wilkie; Carlos E. S. Cesnik; Sangloon Shin


AHS International Forum 58 | 2002

FURTHER EXAMINATION OF THE VIBRATORY LOADS REDUCTION RESULTS FROM THE NASA/ARMY/MIT ACTIVE TWIST ROTOR TEST

Matthew L. Wilbur; William T. Yeager; Martin K. Sekula


Journal of The American Helicopter Society | 1990

Reduction of blade-vortex interaction noise using higher harmonic pitch control

Thomas F. Brooks; Earl R. Booth; J. Ralph Jolly; William T. Yeager; Matthew L. Wilbur


Archive | 2003

Aerodynamic Design Study of an Advanced Active Twist Rotor

Martin K. Sekula; Matthew L. Wilbur; William T. Yeager


Archive | 1987

Wind-Tunnel Evaluation of an Advanced Main-Rotor Blade Design for a Utility-Class Helicopter.

William T. Yeager; Wayne R. Mantay; Matthew L. Wilbur; Robert G. Cramer; Jeffrey D. Singleton


20th AIAA Advanced Measurement and Ground Testing Technology Conference | 1998

Important scaling parameters for testing model-scale helicopter rotors

Jeffrey D. Singleton; William T. Yeager


Archive | 1987

An experimental investigation of the aeromechanical stability of a hingeless rotor in hover and forward flight

William T. Yeager; M-Nabil H. Hamouda; Wayne R. Mantay

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Matthew L. Wilbur

United States Army Research Laboratory

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W. Keats Wilkie

California Institute of Technology

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Sang Joon Shin

Seoul National University

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