Diamond has frozen the aerodynamic configuration of
the D-Jet single-engined personal jet, which now includes new upswept
wing-tips the company claims have "a positive effect on stall speed and
roll control".
The company previously tested the Williams
FJ33-5A-powered single with straight wing-tips followed by conventional
winglets before selecting the final iteration.
©JOHN CROFT/FLIGHTGLOBAL
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D-Jet number three came to AirVenture with new wing-tips
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Peter Maurer, president and chief executive of
Diamond’s Canadian operations, says the new modified wing-tips improve
"the overall aesthetics" of the aircraft and customers "liked the
optics" of winglets. However, the conventional winglets the company
flight tested did not provide maximum benefits in the D-Jet’s speed
range, he says.
The new winglets, which initially underwent
wind-tunnel testing, increase wing area and wing dihedral, improving
roll stability and decreasing stall speed, says Maurer.
Diamond is displaying prototype aircraft number three
with the new wing-tips as part of a "jet day" on 26 July at the
Experimental Aircraft Association’s AirVenture show in Oshkosh,
Wisconsin.
Maurer says the two flight test aircraft have almost
accumulated 700h of development flight test time, including 200h on
aircraft three, and the company is "very pleased" with the results. He
says recent flights have focused on verifying compliance with the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Part 23 requirements in
preparation for formal certification tests later.
DIAMOND AIRCRAFT
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Conventional winglets did not provide maximum performance for the D-Jet
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Included are handling, stability and control
throughout the weight and balance envelope, tests of stall speeds and
stall characteristics at various weight and balance points and with
different system configurations, basic system testing, expansion of the
speed envelope to a maximum operating speed of 346kt (640kph), or Mach
0.56, and "much detailed development work, such as fine tuning the
control forces and determination of the stick pusher activation point".
In parallel, the company has successfully completed
limit load pressure tests on a ground test aircraft and more than 30,000
maximum cabin pressure cycles on a full scale test article fuselage.
Other ground testing includes validation of the engine bleed air and
cabin pressurisation systems, structural testing, landing gear tests and
composite material qualification testing.
"We are now focusing on the production of tooling for
MSN004 [the first production conforming aircraft]," says Maurer. "Once
004 is flying, it will take approximately another year to achieve type
certification with initial deliveries scheduled in Q3 2014."
©JOHN CROFT/FLIGHTGLOBAL
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Maurer says Diamond will revisit the price of the
aircraft, listed at $1.89 million in 2008, but would like to keep it
below $2 million in today’s dollars when it enters service.
Diamond had suspended work on the jet in March 2011
due to funding issues, but later gained new investors and restarted
testing in September last year. The aircraft was originally scheduled to
enter service in 2006.
source: flightglobal.com
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