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Hello all,
Just a quick question - do any aircraft have slats installed on the leading edge of the horizontal tailplane? Rather like slats would be used on the main wing section but - instead of providing helpful lift - they're just to counter a very large pitching moment on approach when wing-mounted high lift devices are deployed. Thank you in advance! Jim D |
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On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 21:16:48 -0000, "Jim Doyle"
wrote: Hello all, Just a quick question - do any aircraft have slats installed on the leading edge of the horizontal tailplane? Rather like slats would be used on the main wing section but - instead of providing helpful lift - they're just to counter a very large pitching moment on approach when wing-mounted high lift devices are deployed. Can't comment on slats, which implys to me moveable. But, the F-4E at slots on the horizontal tailplane--fixed sections about two inches extended from the leading edge of the tailplane sections and running the entire length. The slotted slab was one of the mods necessary to compensate for the longer nose and forward weight addition of the gun. A #7 fuel cell was added in the tail cone to increase extreme aft weight and the fixed slots were added to the tail plane to provide increased aerodynamic downforce to counter the nose gun. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
#3
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![]() Can't comment on slats, which implys to me moveable. But, the F-4E at slots on the horizontal tailplane--fixed sections about two inches extended from the leading edge of the tailplane sections and running the entire length. The slotted slab was one of the mods necessary to compensate for the longer nose and forward weight addition of the gun. A #7 fuel cell was added in the tail cone to increase extreme aft weight and the fixed slots were added to the tail plane to provide increased aerodynamic downforce to counter the nose gun. Ed Rasimus One of my friends who flew slatted/non slatted wing F-4s and also F-15As at Holloman, told me at medium altitudes, he thought a non slatted F-4 was actually a little bit faster than an F-15A. Ron Tanker 65, C-54E (DC-4) |
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#5
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![]() "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message ... On 12 Feb 2004 22:04:13 GMT, 362436 (Ron) wrote: One of my friends who flew slatted/non slatted wing F-4s and also F-15As at Holloman, told me at medium altitudes, he thought a non slatted F-4 was actually a little bit faster than an F-15A. Ron Tanker 65, C-54E (DC-4) That would be a hard call, but I doubt it. Certainly top speed for an LES version of the F-4E would be lower than a non-slat (and range would be lower because of the foamed tanks after LES conversion.) But, I'd bet that with the cleaner airframe overall, the Eagle would have the edge as well as the bigger engines. Certainly sustainability of airspeed during manuever would be no-contest in favor of the F-15. Might be a question of what he meant by "faster"--higher cruise speed? higher top end? sub-sonic or super? clean or typical load? missiles or not? etc. etc. Now, an RF-4.... Weasel, super sonic 100 feet off the ground. |
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Ed Rasimus wrote:
On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 21:16:48 -0000, "Jim Doyle" wrote: Hello all, Just a quick question - do any aircraft have slats installed on the leading edge of the horizontal tailplane? Rather like slats would be used on the main wing section but - instead of providing helpful lift - they're just to counter a very large pitching moment on approach when wing-mounted high lift devices are deployed. Can't comment on slats, which implys to me moveable. But, the F-4E at slots on the horizontal tailplane--fixed sections about two inches extended from the leading edge of the tailplane sections and running the entire length. The slotted slab was one of the mods necessary to compensate for the longer nose and forward weight addition of the gun. A #7 fuel cell was added in the tail cone to increase extreme aft weight and the fixed slots were added to the tail plane to provide increased aerodynamic downforce to counter the nose gun. Ed, I tend to doubt the extra forward weight was responsible for the fixed inverted slot (not slat) on the tail, as the navy's F-4J, with the short nose and No.7 tank, also had it from the beginning, indeed before the F-4E entered service. The F-4J also removed the inboard section of the LEFs and had drooped ailerons, so that may have had something to do with it, but I'm cross-posting this to r.a.m.n. to see if anyone over there knows why. Guy |
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The slotted stabs were only on the slatted (post -556) birds. Most Es, all
Fs,Gs and subsequent models. Hard wing F-4s didn't have slotted stabs. -- Les F-4C(WW),D,E,G(WW)/AC-130A/MC-130E EWO (ret) "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message ... On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 21:16:48 -0000, "Jim Doyle" wrote: Hello all, Just a quick question - do any aircraft have slats installed on the leading edge of the horizontal tailplane? Rather like slats would be used on the main wing section but - instead of providing helpful lift - they're just to counter a very large pitching moment on approach when wing-mounted high lift devices are deployed. Can't comment on slats, which implys to me moveable. But, the F-4E at slots on the horizontal tailplane--fixed sections about two inches extended from the leading edge of the tailplane sections and running the entire length. The slotted slab was one of the mods necessary to compensate for the longer nose and forward weight addition of the gun. A #7 fuel cell was added in the tail cone to increase extreme aft weight and the fixed slots were added to the tail plane to provide increased aerodynamic downforce to counter the nose gun. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
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On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 14:22:53 -0800, "Tarver Engineering"
wrote: "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message That would be a hard call, but I doubt it. Certainly top speed for an LES version of the F-4E would be lower than a non-slat (and range would be lower because of the foamed tanks after LES conversion.) But, I'd bet that with the cleaner airframe overall, the Eagle would have the edge as well as the bigger engines. Certainly sustainability of airspeed during manuever would be no-contest in favor of the F-15. Might be a question of what he meant by "faster"--higher cruise speed? higher top end? sub-sonic or super? clean or typical load? missiles or not? etc. etc. Now, an RF-4.... Weasel, super sonic 100 feet off the ground. Would you mean F-100F Weasel, F-105F Weasel, F-105G Weasel, F-4C Weasel or F-4G Weasel??? I've flown next to four of those five (in combat) and will testify that none of them have any particular advantage for going fast. In fact, the Weasel conversions for all five aircraft add bumps and blisters for antennae that increase drag. Yes, an F-105 is fast and I will testify that the airplane is capable of supersonic flight at extreme low altitude, but I'd opt for single-seat D model to really go fast and not a wart-encrusted two-seater. The F-4G Weasel, of course was LES. Ed, Society of Wild Weasels #2488 Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
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On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 16:56:53 -0600, "Les Matheson"
wrote: The slotted stabs were only on the slatted (post -556) birds. Most Es, all Fs,Gs and subsequent models. Hard wing F-4s didn't have slotted stabs. Better go out and dig up the old dash-1s, Les. First, TCTO -556 was the change of the conventional weapons control panel and the incorporation of the pinkie switch for A/A weapons selection and the forward push button on the throttle to let the front-seater quickly take control of the radar to five mile boresight and auto-acq. The LES mod was TCTO -566. I never got to fly a LES airplane, since the Korat E's didn't get converted and when I went to Spain, I watched the last of the 401st hard-wing E's depart and only flew the F-4C during my tenure there. Let me assure you that the hard-wing E model had a slotted slab. The C and D model didn't have a slotted slab (and, of course, they were all hard wings.) Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
#10
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Cessna's 177/RG Cardinal series had slots installed in the stab to keep
the tail from stalling before the wing. The first batch didn't have them & were installed after the fact which led to later production 177s having them installed. |
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