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Wed, Oct 11, 2006

Engineers Go Back To Wright Bros. Drawing Board

'Morphing' Wings Could Improve Efficiency

The Wright brothers first came up with the idea, after watching how birds flew through the air by changing the shape of their wings to alter direction. Their wing-warping technique was soon abandoned, though, in favor of stiff ailerons hinged on the wings pioneered by Glenn Curtiss.

This design has pretty much stayed the same for 100 years... but now, scientists are going back to the Wright brothers to change not only the shape of the wings, but of the entire aircraft.

Instead of calling it warping, they're now calling it "morphing" -- that sounds more high-tech -- but the idea of flexing, twisting, or changing a wing's shape is as old as Orville and Wilbur. What's more, it may help make airplanes more maneuverable, and safer.

The idea, of course, isn't completely foreign to recent airplane designs -- with the F-111 Aardvark, the recently-retired F-14 Tomcat, and today's B-1 bomber (below) employing some of these concepts in their variable-sweep wing designs. On all three aircraft, pivots on the wings' leading edges allow the wings to be extended forward for slow flight, and swept back into a modified delta shape for high-speed operations.

The Associated Press reports the University of Dayton in Ohio has received a grant to study modern techniques to morph airplane wings. NASA and the Air Force are also working on the technique -- and, in fact, are even testing a flexing wing on an F/A-18 Hornet.

The goal is eventually to harness the movement of the wings to not only make the aircraft more efficient... but like the birds, to help supply a little forward thrust as well.

Who else just had the image of an F/A-18 flapping its wings go through their heads? Just us?

FMI: www.udri.udayton.edu

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