In-Flight Thrust Determination for Aircraft with Thrust Vectoring
AIR6007
The purpose of this document is to provide guidance on in-flight thrust determination of engines that are impacted by intentional or unintentional thrust vectoring. However, as indicated in the Foreword, the field of aircraft thrust vectoring is varied and complex. For simplicity and coherence of purpose, this document will be limited in scope to multi-axis thrust vectoring nozzles or vanes attached to the rear of the engine or airfame; single-axis thrust vectoring and unintentional thrust vectoring (fixed shelf or deck configuration) are special cases of this discussion. Specifically excluded from this scope are thrust vectoring created primarily by airframe components such as wing flaps, etc.; lift engines, propulsive fans and thrust augmenting ejectors; and powerplants that rotate or otherwise move with respect to the airframe. Note that thrust reversing, which is also a special case of thrust vectoring (vector angles greater than 90 degrees), is covered by a separate SAE Aerospace Information Report (AIR6064) and will not be covered herein.
Rationale:
Nozzle thrust vectoring has become a major contributor to military aircraft performance and control. This SAE Aerospace Information Report is intended to provide guidance on the impacts of thrust vectoring on in-flight thrust determination.
AIR6007 has been reaffirmed to comply with the SAE Five-Year Review policy.
Included in: Unmanned Vehicles Subscription Learn More
Related Topics:
Vertical take-off and landing (VTOL)
Unmanned aerial vehicles
Fixed-wing aircraft
Gas turbines
Aerodynamics
Pitch
Center of gravity (CG)
Also known as: SAE AIR 6007
SAE MOBILUS
Subscribers can view annotate, and download all of SAE's content.
Learn More »