Air data boom

An air data boom provides air pressure, temperature, and airflow direction data to data acquisition and air data computers for the computation of aircraft orientation, airspeed, altitude, and related information. Depending on the nature of the activity, air data booms can be used as primary flight instruments or as a "measurement standard" of which primary flight instruments are compared to.

Purpose and Overview

An air data boom is used to collect source data during the flight testing of aircraft. The air data boom is mounted on the aircraft in a location that allows for relatively undisturbed air to be measured. To attain such undisturbed air, mounting is usually done on the nose, wing, or upper horizontal stabilizer of the aircraft.

Typical Components

Air data booms may contain one, some, or all of these measuring capabilities:

Specialized air data booms may also contain mission-specific sensors such as humidity sensors, ice detectors, accelerometers, strain gages, and the like.

Synonyms

Air data booms are referred to by a variety names to include:

Supply Sources

Most air data booms are procured from niche manufacturers or designed and built in-house by aircraft manufacturers and flight test organizations.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, October 08, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.