Agard Ag 300 Vol 10
Agard Ag 300 Vol 10
Agard Ag 300 Vol 10
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ADVISORY GROUP FOR AEROSPACE RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT 7 RUE ANCELLE 92200 NEUILLY SUR SEINE FRANCE
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AGARDograph 300
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This AGARDograph has been sponsored by the Flight Mechanics Panel of AGARD.
RJ.Arnold and J.B. Knight Department of the Air Force Headquarters 3246th Test Wing (AFSC) Eglin Air Force Base Florida 32542-5000 United States
istance, as requested, to other NATO bodies and to member nations in connection with research and development problems in the aerospace field.
The highest authority within AGARD is the National Delegates Board consisting of officially appointed senior reprcscntatives from each member nation. The mission of AGARD is carried out through the Panels which are composed of experts appointed by the National Delegates, the Consultant and Exchange Programme and the Aerospace Applications Studies Programme. The results of AGARD work arc rcported to the member nations and the NATO Authoritics through the AGARD series of publications of which this is one. Participation in AGARD activities is by invitation only and is normally limited to citizens of the NATO nations
The content of this publication has been reproduced directly from material supplied by AGARD or the authors.
Published July 1992 Copyright 0 AGARD 1992 All Rights Reserved ISBN 92-835-0677-4
Printed by Speciulised Prinfing service.^ Limirerl 40 ChigweN Lune, Loughron, Essex IGIO 3TZ
Preface
Since its founding in 1952, the Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Development has published, through the Flight Mechanics Panel, a number of standard texts in the field of flight testing. Theoriginal Flight Test Manual was puhlished in the years 1954 to 1956. Thc Manual WdS divided into four volumes:
1
2 3 4
...
111
Preface
Depuis sa criation el 1952, le Panel de la Micdnique du vol, SOUS I'egide du Groupe Consulratif pour la Recherche et les Rialisations Aerospatiales a publie, un certain nomhre de textes qui font autorite dans le domaine des essais en vol. Lc Manuel des Essais en Vol a ele publie pour la premihe fois dans les annies 1954-1956. II comportail quatre volumes a savoir: 1 2 3 4 Performances Stahiliti et Contr6le Catalogue des appareils de mcsure, et Systemes de mesure.
Les novations dans le domaine des appareils de mesure pour les essais en vol, on1 conduit B recrier, en 1968, le groupe de travail sur les appareils de mesure pour les essais en vol pour permettre la remise B jour des volumes 3 el 4. Les travaux du groupe ont dihouchi. sur IUdition d h e sirie de publications sur
les appareils de mesure pour les essais en vol, I'AGARDographie 160. Les differents volumes de I'AGARDographie 160 publies jusqul ce jour couvrent les derniers diveloppements dans le domdine.
En 1978, le Panel d la Mecanique du vola signal6 I'inlkrCt de monogrdphies supplementaires sur certains aspects des volumes I et 2 du Manuel initial et notamment les essais en vol des systl-mes avioniques. Ainsi, au mois de mars 1981, le groupe de travail sur les techniques des essais en vol a ete recrie pour m e n u i bien cette tiche. Les monographies dans cette sirie (a I'exception de la AG 237 qui fait partie d'une skrie distincte) sont puhliies sous forme de volumes individuels de IAGARDographie 300.
A la fin de chacun des volumes de YAGARDographie 160 et de I'AGARDographie 300 figurent deux annexes gknerales. L'annexe 1 fournit la liste des volumes publih dans la sirie "Appareils d e mesure pour les essais en vol" et dans le sirie "Techniques des cssais en vol". L'anncxe 2 donne la liste des manuels disponibles sur les mCmes themes dam le domaine des essais en vol, qui ne sont pas forcement en rapport avec le contenu du volume en question. Ce volume 10 de I'AGARDographie 300 decrit 'I'Analyse du Largage d'Armes et les Essais en Val Balistique' et il traite de la modelisation/essais balistiques des armes exfernes du point vue global des systl-mes. Tous les aspects de la conception des essais balistiques, des techniques de collecte de donnies, de la reduction de donnies, des techniques d'analyse ct, enfin, des techniques dc modilisation du programme de vol operationnel y son1 abordes. La ridaction a i t i particulierement soignie, avec comme ohjectif d'editer un rapport qui serait B la fois clair CI comprihensible pour les gestionnaires commc pour les ingenieurs, tout en trairant de suffisamment de principes d'ingeniirie pour inliresser de vrais ballisticiens du point de vue applications.
Acknowledgements
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT TO WORKING GROUP 11 MEMBERS
In the preparation of the present volume the members of the Flight Test Techniques Group listed below took an active part.
AGARD has been most fortunate in finding these competent people willing to contribute their knowledge and time in the preparation of this and other volumes. La liste des membres du groupe de travail sur les techniques des essais en vol ont participe activement a la redaction de ce volume figure ci-dessous. UAGARD peut itre fier que ces personnes compitentes aient bien voulu accepter de panager leurs connaissances et aient consacre le temps necessaire a Yelaboration de ce et autres documents.
Appleford, J.K. Bever,G. Bogue,R.K. Bothe,H. Campos, L.M.B. Delle Chiaie, S. Nippress,K. Payze,T. Russell, R.A. van der Velde,R.L Zunde1.Y.
A&AEE/UK
NASA/US NASA/US DLFUGE ISTfPO DASRSAT A&AEE/UK MSB/TU NATC/US NLR/NE CEV/FR
R.R. HILDEBRAND, AFFTC Member, Flight Mechanics Panel Chairman, Flight Test Techniques Group
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT BY THE AUTHORS Special appreciation is due to Mr Walter Martin for his contribution regarding the present ballistics process, MI Michael Johnson for his contribution relative to Operation Flight Program expertise, and Ms Nancy Demonbrun for her contribution relating to the instrumentation portion of this report. Their review and input to this report has made a significant contribution to its tcchnical accuracy R.J.ARNOLD & J.B,KNIGH'I Eglin Air Force Base April 1992
Contents
Page Preface Preface Acknowledgements List of Figures List ofTables
1 .o
iii
iv
V
viii
IX
Introduction Historical Perspective Potential for Reducing Ballistic Errors Objectives of Ballistic Test Programs 4.1 Freestream Testing 4.2 Separation-Effects Testing 4.3 OFP Accuracy Testing 4.4 OFP Accuracy-Verification Process 4.5 Tradeoff Between Accuracy and Resource Expenditures General Description of Weapon Delivery System 5.1 Data Sources 5.2 Error Sources Development of a Weapon System Test Program 6.1 Test Matrix Development 6.1.1 Types of Weapons 6.1.2 Weapon Functioning Envelope 6.1.3 Number of Weapons Required for Store Freestream Testing 6.1.4 Number of Weapons Required for Separation-Effects Testing 6.1.5 Number of Weapons Required for OFP Accuracy Testing Flight Test Preparations 7.1 Instrumentation Calibration and Verification 7.1.1 Aircraft Boresighting 7.1.2 Aircraft Footprinting 7.1.3 Aircraft Systems Check 7.2 Pilot Procedures 7.3 Test Constraints/Tolerances Weapon System Test Program Data Requirements 8.1 Cinetheodolite Cameras 8.2 Ground Impact Scoring 8.3 Aircraft Instrumentation 8.4 HUD Recordings 8 4 1 I J _of HI IT) Video for Comouterized Deliveries _. _ -w 8.4.2 Use of HUD Video for Non-'Computerized Deliveries 8.5 Programmable Data Acquisition Systems (PDAS) Recordings 8.6 Aircraft Data 8.7 Store Data 8.8 Meteorological Data 8.9 Summary of Data Requirements for Ballistic Tests
~~ ~~~~
8 12 12 12 14 14
16
5.0
17
17 18
20 20 20 21 21 22 25 27
27
6.0
7.0
27 28 28 30 30 32 32 39 39 42 42 43 43 43 43 43 44
8.0
vi
Page 9.0 Data Analysis 9.1 Freestream Analysis Methodolpgy 9.2 Submunition Pattern Analysis 9.3 Separation-Effects Analysis 9.4 Accuracy Analysis 9.5 Actual Results of Freestream and Separation-Effects Analysis 9.6 Guided Weapons Analysis Application of Analysis/Test Results 10.1 Presentation of Results in Dash 25 and Dash 34 Series Technical Orders 10.2 Joint Munition Effectiveness Manuals (JMEMs) 10.3 Mission Support Systems (MSS) 10.3.1 Microcomputer Weapon Delivery Program 10.3.2 MSS Weapon Delivery Module (WDM) 10.4 Future MSS Examples of Test Plans and Analyses Results 11.I Freestream Drag and Separation-Effects Example 11.2 OFP Accuracy Test Example Final Remarks on Data Collection Conclusion References Bibliography Questions on Ballistic Analyses and Testing with Responses from Canada, France and Germany Ballistics Requirements Future Trends in Ballistic Testing and Analyses Ballistic Sensitivity Analyses Study for CBU-58 and MK 84 LDGP Stores Method ofTest Annex Test Directive 2671AL71 BLU-l07/B Parent Carriage on F-16MB Aircraft Method of Test Annex Test Directive 2671AL78 F-16/Z-1 Operational Flight Program (OFP) for Specified Weapons 44 44 47 48 49 53 53
57 57 58 62
62 .~
10.0
62
63
11.0
64 64 64 64
65 66
12.0 13.0
67
A- 1
B-1
c-1
D-1 E-1
F-1
Annex-1 Annex-2
vii
List of Figures
Page
Figure 1 Figut-e 2 Figure 3 Figure 4 Figure 5 Figure 6 Figure 7 Figure 8 Figure 9 Figure 10 Figure 1 1 Figure 12 Figure 13 Figure 14 Figure 15 Figure 16 Figure 17 Figure 18 Figure 19 Figure 20 Figure 21 Figure 22 Figure 23A Figure 23B Figure 24 Figure 25 Figure 26 Figure 27 Figure 28 Figure 29 Figure 30
F-4 Carrying 18 800-Pound-Class Cluster Bombs on Three Multiple Bomb Racks Aircrew Demonstrating Technique for Throwing a Small Bomb from an Aircraft Four 25-Pound Bombs Just After Release from DH-4 Aircraft Using Strap Carriage Racks Martin Bomber Scoring Direct Hit on Battleship Alabama with 25-Pound Phosphorus Bomb Bridge Destroyed Using Carpet Bombing Ripple Release of Six MK 82 LDGP 500-Pound Bombs from Mirage Aircraft in a Dive Separation Effects Defined Target Designation on Heads-Up-Display Ballistic Accuracy Verification Process Tradeoff Between Accuracy and Resource Expenditures HUD Boresigh1 HUD Parallax Errors F-l5E with Loadout of 12 MK & LDGP Bombs Effect of Airspeed and Configuration on Separation Effects Recommended Number of Weapons Systems Check -Pass 1 Systems Check - Pass 2 Systems Check Pass 3 Typical Land Range Cinetheodolite h i d e Astrodome Cinetheodolite Structure TSPI Raw Data Acquisition Cinetheodolite Photo Coverage of MK 82 Release Cinetheodolite Photo Coverage of Alpha Jet Type 29 Telereader System Contraves Semi-Automatic Film Reader Typical Impact Plot Delta Range Validation of Freestream Drag Aimpoint-Corrccted Impacts CEP Defined
~
3 4
6
7 8 13 14 15 16
19
20 23 24 27
29
30 31 33 34 35 36 37 37 38 38 41 46 46 50 51
Figure C-1 Figure C-2 Figure C-3 Figure C-4 Figure C-5 Figure C-6 Figure C-7 Figure C-8
KDEM K,, Estimates Versus Mach Number Wind Axes Force System Typical Yaw Angle and Drag Coefficient Time Typical Damped and Undamped Angle of Attack Time Histories and the Effect on Lift SEEM Initial Drag Coefficient Versus Angle of Attack SEEM Initial Side Force Coefficient Versus Angle of Attack SEEM Initial Lift Coefficient Versus Angle of Attack SEEM Force Coefficient Influence on Ballistic Accuracy
viii
List of Tables
Page
Predicted Miss Distances of MK 82 Low-Drag General-Purpose Bombs Due to Various Error Sources - Raw Data Predicted Miss Distances of MK 82 Low-Drag General-Purpose Bombs Due to Various Error Sources - Summary Probabilities Associated with Values as Small as Observed Values of X in the Binomial Test Sample TSPl Data Ballistic Accuracy without Separation-Effects Compensation Ballistic Accuracy with Freestream Store Data Ballistic Accuracy with Separation-EffectsCompensation Ballistic Tables for MK 82 AIR (Low Drag) Released from an Aircraft in Loft Mode Ballistic Tables for MK 82 AIR (Low Drag) Released from an Aircraft in Drive Mode Safe Escape Chart
10 11 26 40 52 54 55 59 60 61
ix
1.0 INTRODUCTION
For several decades, there has been an enormous increase in the emphasis and importance of carrying stores (both guided and unguided bombs, for example) externally on tactical fighter aircraft. In fact, many of todays aircraft carry so many stores and some stores have increased so much in size that pundits have remarked: Its the stores that are carrying the aircraft!. Figure 1 shows an F-4 carrying 18 800-pound-class cluster bombs. This is a heavy load, but there are heavier loads and much larger stores that can be carried in an almost endless array of configurations on most tactical fighter aircraft. Tremendous amounts of time and money have been spent by the United States Air Force (USAF) and the supporting defense industrial infrastructure to establish safe carriage and separation envelopes for each aircraft/store configuration. As one can easily appreciate, the mounting of either a large number
of small stores, or even a few large stores or any combination of these, can and usually does have significant ramifications on the aircraft in such areas as stability and control, structural toads, and flutter. On the other hand, the aircrafts environment can have serious detrimental effects on the stores themselves. For example, the store structure andlor internal functioning components may fail due to static and vibroacoustic loads imposed by the aircraft. Separation characteristics of stores are dependent on the aircrafts aerodynamic configuration, the stores physical and aerodynamic characteristics, and an array of other variables such as rack ejector forces. Nevertheless, analysis and test techniques for establishing safe aircraftlstore carriage and store separation have reached a high level of maturity and are well documented in the literature. However, successful completion of the preceding work only enables aircrews to carry and release stores safely in the vicinity of the target. Unless
Figure 1 F-4 carrying 18 800-Pound-Class Cluster Bombs on Three Multiple Bomb Racks .
stores can be released in such a manner as to put them on a trajectory so they will hit their intended targets, aircrews and aircraff will have been subjected to needless risk, and the mission and all of the work that was expended or it will have been to no avail. In more recent years, data have become available which confirm that some aircraft have not been able to deliver stores with the accuracy that was originally expected. Quite naturally, this inability has led to concern from the operational community that its members could not achieve the "one target kill per pass" that they envisioned. First and foremost, there had been little emphasis during development testing to estzblish system ballistic accuracy for individual aircraft/store configurations. The testing that was done usually concentrated on establishing the overall delivery accuracy of the aircraft using small practice bombs such as the BDU-33. During operational evaluations, aircrews usually validated ballistic accuracy with these same practice bombs. For example, consider the following scenario: a pilot flies to a test range, releases a live bomb (for example, a MK 82 low-drag general-purpose bomb) against a ground target, looks over his or her shoulder after the release, and notes that the bomb bit the ground at some point relative to the target. The pilot might try to rationalize the miss due to aiming errors, a malfunctioning weapon delivery system, atmospheric conditions, a "bad" bomb, and the like. What the pilot never knew was that had man and machine been in perfect operational condition and harmony, the bomb might still have missed the target because of inadequate analysis and testing. What really brought this situa.tion to the attention of engineers was data obtained from one operational evaluation wherein most of the necessary variables were quantified. Live bombs were released against point targets, many of which missed their targets by very large distances. Expressed in another way, a person would have been very safe standing at target center! Bombs were released from an aircraft equipped with a weapons-delivery computer and were released in the automatic mode. Bomb mass properties were established before loading and were validated to be within acceptable tolerance. Atmospheric conditions were carefully measured before and after boinb releases. In short, bombs were released under very controlled conditions so that any errors (although none were expected) could be analyzed. It was subsequently determined that the primary source of ballistic
error was due to the effect of the aircraft's flow field in disturbing the bomb's point mass trajectory, which had not been accounted for in the aircraft's weapon delivery system computer. This experience, and others like it, served to dramatize the need for comprehensive ballistics analysis and testing in a systematic manner. Unfortunately, while the literature abounds with information on ways to establish safe carriage and separation of stores, a vast void exists on such information to establish ballistic characteristics. Accordingly, a key purpose of this volurne is to open up the channels of communication by prompting others to expand and amplify on this initial effort. Within this context, this volume is intended for engineers and managers involved in ballistic analysis and test programs and for personnel, such as aircrews, in the operational community to foster a better understanding of what is involved in establishing ballistics accuracy. By way of a disclaimer, it must be stated that this volume was assembled from the Eglin Ail: Force Base, Florida, perspective and specifically, from the perspective of the way ballistics analysis and testing are conducted and orchestrated by the Office for Aircraft Compatibility (3246th Test WingiTY). However, this is not intended to imply that Eglin's way is the only way. This volume has been prepared at a general technical level. 'That is, technical details as to the inner workings of Eglin's various computer programs which are used to predict and analyze ballistics have been omitted in lieu of discussing approaches and procedures which may be evaluated and tailored for individual use by any test and evaluation organization. When this volume was originally planned, it was hoped that substantive information from. other nations could be interwoven throughout the volume. While some information was obtained from a fact-finding trip to the United Kingdom, France, and Germany and from other sources, it w s felt a that it would be best not to incorporate inputs as planned so as to avoid the risk of any misquotes due to partiallincomplete inforination. However, as mentioned earlier, valuable information was obtained and the efforts of the people who pirepared and provided it are much appreciated. To keep the size of this volume to a reasonable length, all of this information cannot be documented herein. However, this author believes it would be of value to share representative inputs from Canada, Germany, and France. Appendix A contains a list
of questions regarding how ballistic analysis and testing are performed in the host nation along with responses from Canada, Germany, and France. After reading this volume, it is suggested that these questions be reviewed from the standpoint of being able to understand how ballistic analysis and testing are performed in the reader's nation. If the reader is able to answer these questions, he or she will have the broad background necessary to perform detailed analyses. Finally, it is hoped that this volume will stimulate others to add to the published database in this technical area. There is still much data that needs to be written and documented. Further efforts should have, as a goal, the standardization of procedures to the maximum extent possible in an effort to minimize resource expenditures while still delivering to the operational user the quality of data that bas the accuracy necessary to meet combat requirements.
weapons could be dropped on an enemy. In early experiments, oranges and paper bags filled with flour were dropped overboard by hand from low altitudes, usually a few hundred feet, as the balloon drifted over a target outlined on the ground. However, it is wondered whether these early pioneers gave any thought to the fact that the enemy might be shooting back and the balloon would probably be shot down before reaching its target. In the early days of World War I, the offensive use of the airplane was enhanced by dropping small bombs and other objects, such as quantities of steel darts and incendiary grenades. Bombs were thrown overboard by the aircrew (see Figure 2) at the perceived right time (by seat of the pants or by using eyeball judgment) to hit the target. From low altitudes of several hundred feet and at low airspeeds of less than 100 miles per hour, the results were considered very good against undefended area targets such as a fuel dump. However, this methodology changed when enemy defensive fire forced aircraft to release bombs from higher altitudes (usually above 1500 feet) and/or at night to minimize the possibility of getting shot down.
Figure 2. Aircrew Demonstrating Technique for Throwing a Small Bomb from an Aircraft
Under these conditions, the probability of hitting area targets declined substantially and the probability of hitting point targets, such as a bridge, became almost an impossibility except when R rare lucky hit is excluded. The complex problem of hitting a target from a moving aircraft without even a bombsight to guide the aircrew was definitely underestimated at the beginning of World War I. As a result of combat experience during this war, the technical community slowly came to realize that there was only a single point in the vast airspace from which an aircraft could release its bombs and cause them to
hit the target. These community members learned that aircraft motion and atmospheric conditions such as wind speed and direction all induced errors in the fall of bombs. As a result, considerable work was undertaken and significant technical progress was made in the area of aerial bombardment by the end of the World War I. For example, substantial improvements were made in the bombs themselves. They were specifically designed for aircraft use and equipped with stabilizing fins. The bombs had increased in size, too, (weighing up to several thousand pounds) as the payload of aircraft also increased. Primitive racks were developed to carry and release the bombs. Figure 3 shows
Figure 3. Four 25-Pound Bombs Just After Release from DH-4 Aircraft Using Stra,p Carriage Racks
several 25-pound bombs just after release from some of these primitive racks. Some of these racks consisted of nothing more than straps which were uncoupled when a cable was pulled by the pilot. Equally primitive aiming devices were developed. But, by the end of World War I, aircraft were still very ineffective in the bombardment mode. Most post-war histories agree that aerial bombardment had no effect on the war's outcome inasmuch as only a small percentage of the bombs hit the targets (Reference 1). Between the world wars, the technical community focused on improving ballistic accuracy through the development and use of bombsights as well as efficient bomb release mechanisms. Bombsights were developed which used electric gyroscopes with stabilizing devices to maintain a true vertical reference line. The need for this true vertical reference line was one of the key lessons learned from the experience of World War I. Aircrews found that they could not maintain the vertical reference line needed for accurate bombing by relying on pendulum- or spirit-leveled instruments since these instruments only gave indications of an apparent vertical which varied with each turn, bump, pitch, or sideslip of the aircraft. In addition, aircrews could not even maintain a true and straight course. At best, they maintained a succession of curved paths in which errors were accumulated until they were observed and then corrected. The substantial impact of errors in the apparent vertical on ballistic accuracy was recognized in these early days. For example, one vintage test report from the 1920 era discusses the situation in which a bomb dropped from an aircraft traveling 100 miles per hour at 15,000 feet altitude would miss its target by 250 feet just from the effect of centrifugal force throwing off the apparent vertical by only one degree if the aircraft had been in a very slow turn of 360 degrees every half-hour (Reference 2). Integral to the development of a gyroscope-driven bombsight was the development of a sighting apparatus whose primary function was to indicate, at all times, the point on the ground where the bomb would hit if it were released at that instant. A complete bombsight was required to determine the speed and direction of the aircraft and of the wind, in relation to the ground, to arrive at an apparent direction to reach a given target. As one can surmise, these early pioneers were on the right track. But the result, then as today, was that even if the aircrew released the bomb at the precise
moment required by the bombsight, this was no guarantee of hitting the target. Engineers studied the trajectories of bombs from the moment of release to ground impact, and made significant progress in quantifying bomb drag characteristics and determining the best geometric shape to control terminal velocities through wind tunnel and flight testing (Reference 3). But they were at a loss as to how to account for the very observable and unpredictable pitching and yawing motions of bombs as they separated from the aircraft (Reference 4). These engineers knew that motions changed bomb drag and degraded ballistic accuracy. But, since they did not know how to account for these motions, they considered bombs as falling as a point mass using 3-degree-of-freedom (3DOF) equations of motion coupled with the most reliable freestream bomb drag they had. As will be shown, this procedure, for the most part, did not change for many years. During the 1920s and 1930s, aircrews developed bombing techniques to effectively use the new bombsights and racks. Basically, two techniques were refined: dive-bombing and level-bombing. Dive-bombing consisted of making a high-altitude approach followed by a steep dive (up to 60 degrees or more) toward the target. During the dive, in which airbrakes are sometimes used to control speed, deviations in course were made to correct for initial aiming errors or wind. The bomb was released as close to the target as dive recovery would allow. Dive-bombing used a sighting device but not a bombsight. Yet accuracies were considered to be quite good. In fact, accuracies of 150300 feet were regularly obtained by operational Army Air Corps squadrons (Reference 5). In hindsight, this should not have been surprising since bomb times of fall were very small, thus minimizing induced errors from all sources. During peacetime, this technique may appear very appealing, but during wartime, against defended targets, this technique loses its appeal, as was proven by all combatants during World War 11. For example, against undefended targets, the German Stuka was very effective. However, against defended targets and/or in the face of enemy fighters, the Stuka was easily shot down (Reference 5). Level-bombing using bombsights received considerable publicity during the 1920 era with General Mitchell and his aircrews' sinkings of battleships. While this accomplishment bad significant ramifications on the future strategy of airpower, the fact
was that General Mitchell and his aircrews practiced extensively by approaching and overflying ships at constant airspeeds and low altitudes (Figure 4). The ships were stationary, and they were big ships! Yet, even under such ideal conditions, ballistic accuracy was poor considering the fact that most bombs missed their targets (Reference 6 ) . During one series of tests where bombs were released at high altitudes, not a single bomb hit a ship (Reference 7). Eventually, ships were sunk from low altitudes by the small percentage of bombs that did hit their targets. Although bombsights, racks, and bombs had been considerably refined during the interlude from World War I to World War 11, minimal progress had been made in improving overall ballistics accuracy, particularly in the level-bombing technique. Just as had occurred during World War I, aircrews were forced to high altitudes to minimize aircraft losses from enemy defensive fire. And, just as in World War I, ballistic accuracy was substantially degraded. For example, in 1938, just before World War 11, a large-scale exercise was
conducted by the Army Air Corps during which bombs were released at high altitudes (around 20,000 feet) against aircraft-carrier-size targets. Results showed average miss distances of over 1,000 feet (Reference 6). Precision daylight bombing by the USAF was, in reality, carpet or saturation bombing. For a target like a bridge, many aircraft were used to drop tons of bombs to achieve a high probability of hitting the target. Figure 5 shows a knocked-out bridge. But notice all the surrounding bomb craters and the relatively a intact center span which w s taken down by blast effects from a near miss.
The period from World War I1 through the Korean War and the beginning of the Vietnam War can be showcased by the design of aircraft that were able to carry heavier bomb loads faster and higher than before. The use of manual bombsights and simple bomb racks was still dominant. Bombs were released from aircra.ft using ballistics tables that were based on freestream drag characteristics only. That is, the effect of the aircraft on inducing bomb oscillations during separation was still not accounted
Figure 4. Martin Bomber Scoring Direct Hit on Battleship Alabama with 25-Pound Phosphorus Bomb
for. As a result, ballistic accuracy was still such that, to ensure killing a target, many bombs had to be released against a target. A factor in this number of bombs was that, since World War 11, bombs had generally gotten smaller. Bomb weights predominately ranged from 250-750 pounds. It may be noted that, during World War 11, bombs weighing 4,000 pounds, 12,000 pounds (Tallboy), and even 22,000 pounds (Blockbuster) were used to compensate, in part, for the inability to reliably score direct hits (Reference 8). During the Vietnam War, extensive use was made of the fighter-bomber. Again, to make up for shortcomings in ballistics accuracy, multiple bomb racks, such as the triple ejector rack (TER), which could carry up to three bombs, and the multiple ejector rack (MER), which could carry up to six bombs, were developed. Also, fighter-bomber aircraft were equipped with hardpoints to carry several of these racks. For example, with its six wing hardpoints and six multiple ejector racks, the A-7D could carry 32 MK 82 LDGP 500-pound bombs. The A-7D was one of the first fighter-bomber aircraft to be equipped with an automated weapon delivery system. With this system, the pilot could designate the target on his cockpit display and the
bomb would be released automatically at the precise time needed to hit the target without the pilot having to physically push a release button. Whether bombs were released using level- or divebombing techniques, all of the bombs were usually dropped during one pass using a small time interval between bombs in an attempt to bracket the target because of the earlier mentioned use of freestream bomb drag characteristics. Figure 6 shows a typical release of bombs in the ripple mode. At best, a pilot could not expect to hit closer than 250-350 feet of a target on a regular basis with a single bomb (Reference 9). Reference 8 states that by the late 1960 period, no more than one-half the bombs released could be expected to hit within 300-500 feet of the target. Whichever figure is believable, both of them are too high in relation to the small size of most bombs used today. It is conjecture that from the 1950 period through the 1960 period, these errors did not concern the operational community inasmuch as nuclear weapons were available which did not need a high degree of accuracy. With the de-emphasis of nuclear weapons, the need for high accuracy is of renewed importance.
Figure 6 Ripple Release of Six MK 82 LDGP 500-Pound Bombs from Mirage Aircraft in a Dive .
Most aircraft are now equipped with automated weapon-delivery systems and sophisticated supporting instrumentatiodsensors such as laser rangefinders and altimeters and high-speed digital computers. This hardware, coupled with the technical knowledge and procedures to quantify and correct ballistic errors, offers the potential for significantly improving accuracy. In fact, for subsonic releases of bombs in the level and dive modes, bombing errors of under 50 feet and 20 feet, respectively, are suggested as an achievable goal. Using the right size stores, this would enable most targets to be killed with one bomb in one pass. This volume will now discuss some of the procedures utilized to make improved accuracy a reality.
(1) Errors associated with aircraft release conditions (50-foot altitude error, 10-knot airspeed error, 0.1-degree pitch attitude error, and 0.2-degree yaw error) (2)Errors associated with bomb physical and geometric properties (20-pound bomb weight error, 0.5-inch bomb diameter error, 4-slug-ft2 bomb inertia error, and 5-percent error in bomb freestream drag coefficient) (3) Errors due to non-standard atmospheric conditions (5-percent error in density) (4) Errors due to bomb-separation effects during release from the aircraft (5degree error in bomb pitch attitude, 5-degree error in bomb yaw attitude, 50-degree/second error in bomb pitching motion, and 2-foot/second error in the end of stroke velocity imparted by the bomb by the aircraft's ejector rack). Table I presents the raw data from the analyses for MK 82 LDGP 500-pound bombs at delivery conditions of 450 and 860 knots in level and 45-degree dives. Table II presents a concise summary of data grouped by each of the four error sources. Referring to Table 11, at 450 knots for a level release, 57 percent of the total miss distance is due to aircraft release condition errors (287 feet out of 501 feet). Separation effects are the next biggest contributors to miss distance with 31 percent (150 feet), followed by bomb errors with 10 percent (53 feet), and atmospheric errors with 2 percent (11 feet). As may be noted, these percentages are representative of those for the 860-knot, levelrelease condition and the dive condition at both airspeeds with one exception. Note that the miss distance due to bomb errors increases rather substantially from 10 percent at 450 knots to 30 percent at 860 knots in the level-release mode, primarily due to increased bomb time of fall. Presently, fighter-bomber aircraft are equipped with automatic weapon delivery systems. These highly sophisticated systems are capable of releasing bombs at the precise point required to put them on a trajectory to hit the target. In effect, there is no reason that the 57-percent error in miss distance due to aircraft release conditions cannot be reduced by an order of magnitude or more when bombs are released in the automatic mode. A reduction from 287 feet to less than 25 feet is postulated with proper attention to this error source. Miss distance due to separation effects is clearly very significant. In an earlier AGARDoGraph (Reference l l ) , a statement was made to the effect
that these errors were not correctable to any great extent. However, with modern weapon delivery systems, this statement is no longer true. If sufficient testing is performed, separation effects can be measured and modeled in the form of algorithms and stored in the weapon delivery system's highspeed digital computer. With accurate modeling, the computer signals the weapons release system to release bombs at adjusted conditions to account for separation effects. As explained in detail in later sections of this volume, the separation effects vary with aircraft release conditions, and are unique to each aircraft/store configuration. Thus, if separation effects were precisely measured, a very large computer would be required to store and process ie all of the necessary data. At this t m , while modern aircraft have a substantial amount of computer storage capacity, they do not have enough capacity to store separation effects for all flight conditions and for all configurations, of which there are usually hundreds for each aircraft. Only land-based mainframe computers have this However, aircraft kind of storage capacity. computers do have the capacity to store separation effects data for a limited number of configurations at limited flight conditions. Thus, and most importantly, if the operational user defines primary go-to-war configurations along with combat delivery conditions", separation effects data can be modeled in the weapons delivery computer and be almost entirely accountable. A reduction from 150 feet to less than 10 feet is postulated with proper attention to this error source. Miss distance due to errors in bomb physical and geometric properties (53 feet) cannot be ignored. Such a miss distance would reduce probability of kill by a significant amount. Until recently, massproduced stores like the MK 82 formed a predominant portion of the USAF operational inventory. Manufacturing tolerances were rather loose to minimize cost. This accounted for large variations in weight, inertia, and even bombs being cast out of round. Low-cost stores will always be available, but a trend exists toward developing stores which, by their very nature, are manufactured with tighter tolerances. The new BLU-109 2000-poundclass warhead is a good example. The manufacturing tolerances for the forged version of this warhead are substantially less than tolerances for the MK 84 LDGP. Tighter tolerances also apply to other new stores like the CBU-87 and CBU-89 cluster bombs. The point is that if the operational user wants to kill a point target in one pass, a new class of bombs can be used that is manufactured
Table I. Predicted Miss Distances of MK 82 Low-Drag General-Purpose Bombs Due to Various Error Sources - Raw Data
LEVEL REIE4SWMoo FT
450 KTAS
76 117
125 130
41 127
45
7 67
20
170
14 14
12
11
36 83
9 19
61 68
44
68
860 KTAS
80
90
90
33 21
25
5 3
29 35
2 3
3 5
4 2
3 2
2
4
18 26
1
1
25 19
24
17
860 KTAS
75
Table I. Predicted Miss Distances of MK 82 Low-Drag Geneml-Purpose Bombs Due to Various Error Sources Summary I
MISS DISTANCE UN FEETl BY ERROR SOURCE DELIVERY CONDITION LEvELRELEASE/5OOo Fr 450 KTAS
860 KTAS
TOTALMISS
DISTANCE AIRCm
BOMB
53 (10%) 341 (30%)
SEPARATION
ATMOSPHERE
EFFECTS
501 1123
11 (2%)
150 (31%)
238 (22%)
90 ( 8 % )
12 (7%) 12 (5%)
2 (1%)
68 (39%)
4 (2%)
63 (39%)
12
with much tighter tolerances than in the past and that minimizes errors in miss distance. Further, using modern instrumentation to track bombs during their fall, systematic test procedures, and advanced data reduction techniques, bomb freestream drag coefficients can be established with a high degree of precision. An overall reduction from 53 feet to less than 5 feet is postulated with proper attention to this error source. Finally, a miss-distance error of 11 feet was calculated due to an atmospheric density of 5 percent. One cannot control the atmosphere, so this error is accepted as a given fact. The point of this discussion is that, with modern weapon delivery hardware and software and with proper testing and analyses, considerable reason exists for optimism that unguided stores can be released with near-pinpoint accuracy. If multiple stores are released against a point target, target kill will almost be a certainty.
accomplished during the Development Test and Evaluation W & E ) phase of a store program. During such testing, the contractor's drag and event times are verified. Because all drag prediction codes and wind tunnel test techniques have some limitations, no substitute exists for flight testing to validate drag and event times using actual hardware. The process of verifying or deriving freestream flight characteristics will be discussed in a subsequent section of this volume.
It is noteworthy that all store configurations need not be compensated for separation effects. For example, the stores released as shown in Figure 6 pcobably do not have measurable separation effects inasmuch as they separate with minimal angular perturbations, and hence, minimum variation in store freestream drag characteristics. When conducting a test program, it is prudent to make a few carefully selected drops at the user's prioritized combat delivery conditions to measure the accuracy of the aircraft using only store freestream
13
CHANGES IN THE TRAJECTORY OF A WCAPON DUE TO THE FLOW FIELD AROUND THE AIRCRAFT
I
I
1
I
1 \
\
\
\
'.
'\ ,
,
\
.-. - - - - _ _ _ _
----
drag data in the OFP. This method has, in fact, been used for several aircraft in recent years. Test results have shown that, for some release conditions and for some store loadings, accuracy was sufficient without separation-effects compensation. Such testing can obviate the need for extensive test and analyses. However, sound engineering judgment must be used. It would be incorrect to assume that because a given store loadout displays negligible separation effects under one set of delivery conditions, there will not he large separation effects at different delivery conditions (for example, different airspeed, altitude, normal acceleration, and dive angle). Separation effects are modeled in an aircraft OFP in various ways. In the F-16, these effects are modeled by adjusting the velocity vectors in the along-track and vertical directions (assumed time
t = 0 at release) before they are fed to the air-toground integration routine contained in the OFP. Adjusted velocity vectors are then used to calculate the store trajectory. These velocity adjustments, or deltas, are derived from test drops and are curvefitted to a function of Mach number and normal acceleration. The aircraft onboard computer uses these functions to compensate for separation effects for given store loadouts and delivery conditions. Obviously, the compensation is only as good as the separation-effects data. Because of computer storage limitations, modeling of data is not always precise. This is particularly true when there is a need to model several store loadouts over a broad band of delivery conditions. It cannot be overstated that the reason user prioritization of loadouts is so important is to ensure that the most important loadouts are modeled as perfectly as possible.
14
ACCURACY ANALYSIS
ACCEPT
E&CT
If the user is not satisfied with Phase I results. and l6 after it has been validated that no aircraft avionics problems exist with the non-ballistic portion of the OFP, Phase I1 is conducted. In this phase, testing is performed to gather additional separation-effects data to refine modeling of coefficients in the OFP. Once the data have been analyzed and modeled, a new patch OFP tape is generated.
1, Phase 1 1 essentially a repeat of Phase I, is then performed. Stores are dropped to gather CEP and bias data. Data are reviewed by the operational user for acceptability. If results are acceptable, the OFP is considered to have been verified. If not, the cycle is repeated, usually at continuing and frequently substantial expenditure of resources.
craft. The additional cost of adding TSPI and aircraft instrumentation readings to a mission is very small compared to other mission costs. Having these data available to the OFP analyst affords insight that would otherwise be lost as to the probable causes of biases and dispersions. The tradeoff between increased accuracy and resource expenditures is visibly illustrated by the following red-world example. In the mid-l980's, an operational evaluation of the F-16 with CBU-58 stores showed that the stores hit short of the target by a large and unacceptable distance. The freestream ballistics of the CBU-58 had been well established previously, and the aircraft weapon delivery system had passed all checks. After further analysis, it was determined that errors were primarily due to the separation effects not being modeled in the OFP. As a result, extensive testing was performed to gather separation-effects data. Data were analyzed and modeled, and a new OFP was prepared. Subsequent testing showed that errors were reduced by a very substantial 80 percent (see Figure 10). At this time, the operation user, satisfied with the large error reduction, asked
WM INITIAL I
SEPARAllON EFFECTS MODELING
17
that testing continue to further reduce errors. Consequently, another cycle of testing and analysis was performed, leading to a further reduction in error. However, on hindsight, it is questionable whether this additional cycle of testing and analysis was required considering the fact that the CBU-58 is a cluster weapon. The resources necessary to complete the three cycles required the expenditure of 200 stores in 50 flight test missions, took well over a year to complete, and cost over one million dollars. A lesson learned is that accuracy and resource expenditure tradeoffs should be considered before testing begins. This consideration would constrain a seemingly natural tendency on the part of the operational user (and this is not a criterion) to keep demanding more accuracy, irrespective of the resources required to achieve it.
ranging data to the target. These pods will use laser technology and are expected to significantly enhance the accuracy of ranging information. Aircraft velocities are provided to the FCC by the CADC. The CADC takes pitot pressures and derives the aircraft velocities through the air mass. The CADC provides calibrated airspeed, ground speed, and true airspeed and then reports these velocities to the FCC. The FCC uses this data, along with INS data, to calculate wind speed and direction. Wind data is used in the FCC's trajectory calculations, but since wind data is only available at altitude, the FCC generally uses a linearly decaying function to calculate winds from the aircraft to the target altitude. The F-16 wind model assumes that the direction of the wind does not change and that the wind speed at an altitude of 4000 feet below the target altitude is zero. The FCC linearly models the wind from release altitude to target altitude and uses the average value in its trajectory calculations. The F-15E model, on the other hand, assumes a constant wind from release altitude to the target altitude. An interesting comparison would be the effect of each wind model on the overall weapon delivery system accuracy. Accelerometers contained in the INS provide the data necessary to compute aircraft accelerations, velocities, altitudes, positions, and heading data. INS position data is used by the FCC's trajectory integration whenever accurate radar data (for example, slant range) is not available. For this reason, the INS becomes very important to aircraft bombing accuracy. Some drift is associated with any INS, and this drift is tolerated when it falls within specified limits. The rate of drift is measurable by visually observing movements of HUD symbols and by comparing position errors on return to a known point such as a hot pad or hanger. Drift errors can be removed from the INS in flight by using one of several INS update procedures. The most accurate procedure involves visually acquiring a known steerpoint on the HUD and manually changing the location of the steerpoint symbol to coincide with that steerpoint. These changes are fed back to the INS, and the aircraft position is updated accordingly. The last system of interest is the RSU. This is the data source that provides the FCC with normal acceleration values (g's) for use in separation effect calculations. It has been shown that g's have a definite effect on the flowfield influences of a weapon at release. One reason is that different g's
The FCR provides essential radar ranging data to the FCC. In all visual delivery modes, the FCC slaves the radar to the desired aim point. The radar, in turn, provides the slant range to the aim point and the radar look-down angle. These inputs enable the FCC to solve the "bombing triangle", that is, to calculate both the aircraft height above and the distance along-track to the aim point. It may be noted that Low Altitude Target Navigation (LANTIRN) pods are planned to be used on later models of the F-16 and F-15E to provide primary
18
affect the time the store remains in the aircraft flowfield. Another reason is that gs change the aircraft angle of attack which, in turn, affects the flowfield.
and unpredictable unless specific cases are investigated. The worst case of all radar problems is when the look-down angle is off and radar iranging is bad. On the F-16, if the FCC detects three questionable radar slant range values in a row (for example, large jumps in value or no range data at all), it will use the last valid range value and revert to using INS position data and system altitude (a weighted average of INS and CADC altitudes as a function of vertical velocity) for its calculations. Errors in the CADC affect velocity inputs to the FCC and introduce false wind data into the system. In many instances, CADC errors are a result of foreign objects getting into the pitot tubes and ports on the surface of the aircraft. Here the pilot and ground crew play major roles in preventing bad data from entering the air-to-ground calculations. Since velocity and acceleration are important parts of the weapon delivery calculations, errors associated with the ES can also have a significant impact on bombing accuracy. INS errors are not as specific as radar errors, and many are caused by erroneous pilot inputs rather than hardware problems. If the system is not initialized properly, it will be inaccurate for the duration of the flight. As with the INS, the RSU provides data relating the dynamics of flight to the FCC. Errors from the RSU are limited to the normal acceleration of the aircraft. This limitation directly affects the accuracy of any separation effect compensation computations since these computations are a function of normal acceleration. Another error source, which is not due to external input hut which does have a direct effect on bombing accuracy, is the alignment of the HUD Pilot Display Unit (PDU). The steering and aiming symbols are projected on this surface. If this plate is not aligned at the proper angles, the HUD symbology will be improperly located and aiming errors will occur. For instance, if the plate is set too low, the pipper appears lower in the HUD field of view. This appearance causes the aircraft to be flown closer to the target before weapon release, resulting in an impact long of the aim point (see Figure 11). Along the same lines, a plate set too high will cause an impact short of the intended aim point.. Errors due i o improper alignment are compounded by the fact that any symhology that has been corrected for canopy distortion is now being projected on a different area of the canopy and would require a different correction.
19
SHORT IMPACT
LONG IMPACT
PIPPER DISPLAYS/RESULTS
Separation-effects compensation has a significant bearing on the accuracy of any weapon-delivery system. Any errors which may have occurred during separation-effects testing or analysis and gone undetected will cause errors in bombing. Also, inadequate separation-effects testing can be an error source itself because under- or overcompensation of separation effects may result. Many difficult lessons have been learned in the past about the artificial savings of inadequate testing. As the saying goes, "There is never enough time (or money) to do the job right the first time, but there is always enough to do it again!" There is no substitute for careful, experienced engineering judgment in separation-effects analyses. As a part of this discussion of error sources, two more factors need to be considered: design eye and HUD parallax errors. Design eye is defined as the
position above the water line of the aircraft where the pilot's head must be to properly view the HUD. However, at any given position, only a portion of the HUD is visible. At no time can the pilot see the entire field of view of the HUD. Therefore, the position of the pilot's head must change in order to view the desired portion of the HUD. If the HUD PDU has been properly aligned, the pilot is then, by definition, at design eye. HUD parallax errors are not directly related with air-to-ground weapon delivery accuracy as they do not relate to the HUD but to the accuracy of the HUD video recorder. The pilot usually has the option of recording on video tape the view through the HUD at any given moment, and often this recording is used to determine where the pilot was aiming in relation to a target after the flight. Paral-
20
lax errors are a result of optical distortions encountered in looking through the canopy of the aircraft. The canopy has a known and correctable optical distortion. This distortion is corrected by using a mathematical function in the FCC to place the symbols properly on the HUD to compensate for distortion errors. The problem arises when a recording is made. The position of the video camera may be lower than the pilot's head. Consequently, symbology which has been corrected for the pilot's viewpoint may not necessarily be in the correct location for the camera's viewpoint (see Figure 12). It may be noted that parallax errors have only recently been acknowledged by the test community. Efforts are being made, however, such as by the F-16 community, to correct these errors on the ground so that when a video tape is viewed, the actual pilot input or view is seen rather than a misleading representation of what occurred. Parallax errors have also been uncovered on other aircraft types, and similar efforts are underway to solve the problem.
6.0 DEVELOPMENT OF A, WEAPON SYSTEM TEST PROGRAM 6.1 Test Matrix Development
Factors to be considered when developing the matrix include the type of weapon, the weapon functioning envelope, and the number of weapons needed to satisfy test objectives.
HUD VIDEO CAMERA DISPLAYED PIPPER IS CORRECTED FOR OPllCAL DISTORTION AT POINT A CAMERA VlEWS PIPPER THROUGH CANOPY AT POINT
21
stages after a period of time. This two-stage deployment affects the store trajectory and must be accounted for in ballistic calculations. Functioning weapons add even more complexity because submunitions form a pattern that must be modeled in order to predict pattern size. This pattern size is a function of release conditions and time of dispenser functioning which combine to form an almost unlimited combination of conditions that could be tested.
For freestream testing of non-functioning weapons, a minimum of 36 stores is required to fully characterize ballistic performance. This figure is obtained as follows: one store should be released in level flight, a loft, and a dive. If the store is not designed to be released in one of these modes, testing is reduced proportionally. One store should also be released at the lowest operational speed, at medium speed, and at the highest operational speed. This release plan requires nine stores. However, to establish a reasonable level of confidence as to the results, a minimum of four releases at each test condition is recommended, bringing the minimum total number of stores required to 36. For freestream testing of functioning weapons, a minimum of 216 stores is required to freely characterize ballistic performance. This figure is obtained by using the test points for nonfunctioning stores with these additions: three timer values for dispenser functioning (36x3 = 108) and three altitudes for dispenser functioning (36x3= 108) should be tested at each condition. This additional testing is essential to validate that the store fuze functions as designed in the time and altitude (proximity) modes. If the fuze only has one or the other modes, testing time will be shortened. This testing is important because of the ramifications of timing/altitude errors on submunition pattern size. One might wonder why this testing cannot be conducted in the laboratory. The experience of analysts at Eglin indicates that there is no substitute for an end-to-end validation of the all-up store. It cannot be overemphasized that the number of releases at each condition can either be determined by statistics or by analyst experience. The number determined by the analyst will usually be less than the number determined statistically. For example, if one wanted to establish ballistics (that is, freestream drag coefficient) to the 85 percent accuracy level with a confidence of 95 percent, 19 stores would be required. From a purely statistical standpoint, the confidence level drops to 50 percent with only four stores. However, the experience of analysts at Eglin has been that data from four stores yields fully adequate data. One way this has been validated is by the addition of data from subsequent releases to the original databases. Subsequent data was, and presently is, obtained from instrumented operational evaluations and from other DT&E tests wherein stores are released for other purposes and ballistics data are obtained on a piggyback @on-interference) basis.
As mentioned earlier, the weapon functioning envelope is determined during store DT&E to validate design requirements. For example, a new cluster weapon recently placed in production was designed to function from 200 feet to 40,000 feet over an airspeed range of 200 knots to 700 knots. Here was a case where testing had to be performed using several different aircraft types because one aircraft could not cover the entire envelope. The point is that, when designing a test matrix, both store functioning envelopes and aircraft operating envelopes must be properly considered.
22
To achieve the 95-percent accuracy level with a confidence of 95 percent, 60 stores would have to be dropped. To achieve 100-percent accuracy and confidence, all stores in the inventory would have to be released, and none would be left for combat. The point is that there is no substitute for experience and judgment when determining the number of stores to be released to establish reasonable confidence in the data. Establishing databases from a purely statistical standpoint must, therefore, be kept in perspective to minimize the expenditure of resources. This expenditure is doubly important because as stores get more complex, they are produced in more limited numbers and unit costs rise substantially. In fact, many stores have become so expensive that their costs dwarf the actual test costs. One final note is necessary on the desired altitude for performing releases to gather freestream data. At Eglin, stores are generally released in the level and dive modes at altitudes ranging between 8,000 and 12,000 feet. For large stores, the altitude is adjusted higher, and for small stores, the altitude is adjusted lower. Ideally, stores are released at altitudes as high as possible, consistent with the ability to track them, so that data are obtained from release Mach to terminal Mach. For the loft mode, stores are usually released at altitudes lower than 500 feet. In this mode, data are obtained from release Mach to a minimum Mach as the store decelerates in its upward trajectory, and then increasing Mach, usually less than terminal velocity, before the store impacts the ground. In this way, with three delivery conditions and three speeds, the full Mach range is comprehensively covered.
mum of three airspeeds and at load factors that cover the g range sufficiently 10 permit modeling between data points. Since MK 82's are en~ployed in the level-release mode (1 g), dive mode (as low as 0.5 glcosine of 60-degree dive angle), dive toss mode (nominal 2.5 g), and loft mode (nominal 4.0 g), data must be obtained for each mode. Finally, at least four data points are required for each carriage station at each release condition. Since the loadout is symmetrical, two data points are automatically obtained for each station when all 12 bombs are released. Therefore, for each mode, stores required would be as follows:
To ensure obtaining adequate trajectory information for coefficient modeling for functioning stores, separation-effects testing should either be conducted with inert stores or with delayed fuzing to prevent dispenser functioning until at least 8-10 seconds after release. This arrangement is important because some dispensers function in less than 2 seconds.
Although testing at three airspeeds (low, medium, and high) is recommended, one must be aware that a risk is involved in modeling data for intermediate airspeeds and airspeeds beyond the tested envelope. This risk would be relatively high if the test designer did not have an historical databaw for guidance. This risk is illustrated in Figure 14. Assume that separation-effects data were obtained for configuration A at three airspeeds as shown. Because the magnitude of separation effects is relatively insensitive to airspeed, mathematical fit techniques would model a curve quite accurately. However, consider configuration B. The magnitude of separation effects is ahout the same at low
24
AIRSPEED
I
< AI N R TO
-A
b ,
CONFIGURATION E ACTUAL TRAJECTORY CURVE FIT TRAJECTORY
and medium airspeeds but is orders of magnitude larger at the highest airspeed. A mathematical fit of the three data points might yield the curve shown, which could be considerably different from actual results. This situation actually occurred. The aircraft OFP was modeled using three data points. Subsequent accuracy testing performed by operational users revealed substantial range errors in the airspeed regime covered by the medium and high airspeeds. Errors were subsequently traced to Range inaccurate separation-effects modeling. errors were eliminated by gathering additional data at intermediate speeds (shown by rectangles). Obviously, there is no substitute for experience in designing the test matrix, a verification that the workbook approach will not always work. With experience, the analyst has a good knowledge of the shapeltrend of separation-effects data for various stores and loadouts. This information is used
as a guide to select better test points for new stores and loadouts. With experience, and for configuration B, the analyst would undoubtedly shift the low speed data point to an intermediate speed (between the original medium and high speed points).
The need to obtain adequate test data to model g effects is equally important. Separation effects are affected by aircraft release g and can be substantial for some conditions and loadouts. As one may imagine, at low g (for example, 0.5), stores remain in the influence of the aircraft flowfield for a longer time than if stores are released at high g (for n example, 6.0). If g effects are to be modeled in a accurate manner, at least three data points are required at each condition to be able to form a curve. The same precautions that were discussed relative to airspeed must also be observed for g.
25
Regarding the altitude for separation-effects testing, 3000-5000 feet is generally used at Eglin for level and divddive-toss modes if recovery altitude permits. This altitude range provides optimum film coverage for the Eglin arrangement of aircraft approach tracks and ground camera positions. At these altitudes, the cameras are able to record the initial stores trajectory in a manner that facilitates data analyses. Altitudes of less than 500 feet are usually used for loft modes. Finally, one may wonder why stores have to be released for each carriage station. The answer is that separation effects are different for each station, and for that reason, each station must be characterized. What happens with data from each station? As unsophisticated as the procedure seems, data for all stations are averaged to arrive at one separationeffects modeling for a given loadout. In the future, software and hardware may allow each station to be modeled in the aircraft OFP, but at the present time, this is not being done on any USAF aircraft familiar to the authors.
At Eglin, a range bias is presumed not to exist for probabilities greater than 90 percent, using a onetailed cumulative binominal test. This 90-percent value was arrived at based on the experience of engineers from several test agencies. Table I11 indicates that if 5 of 15 stores impact the ground long of the target, and the balance impact short of the target, then a probability of bias is assumed not to exist. If o d y 4 of 15 stores bit long or short, then a probability of bias is assumed to exist. Probabilities for other combinations of the number of stores dropped and those that hit long or short can he similarly derived from this figure. Clearly, the more evenly balanced the short versus long numbers are, the less likely there is for a bias to exist. Ideally, it would be desirable to assess CEP without a range bias. However, this is not a prerequisite. CEP can be assessed with a range bias. However, one would want to investigate the source of the range bias before rendering an overall assessment of system accuracy. A final note is appropriate regarding the use of 12 stores to assess CEP. Figure 15 shows the number of stores required to estimate CEP as a function of confidence level and acceptable percentage error in CEP. This figure was formulated on the basis that range and deflection errors are independent. This approach is substantiated based on the work contained in References 12-14 and is quite important in that, if this were not the case, the number of stores required would be doubled. Note that 12 stores equate to a confidence level of 80 percent that the sample CEP is within 30-percent error of the true CEP. Again, why accept 80-percent confidence with 30-percent error of the true CEP? The answer lies in the experience and general acceptance of results by operational users over the years. Another approach to determine the number of stores required has been developed by the USAF SEEK EAGLE Office. This approach is documented in Reference 15 and is based on the number of stores required to improve CEP by at least one percent for each additional store released. This approach can be compared to the law of diminishing returns in business or economics. Using this approach for the same confidence level of 80 percent in the earlier example, 16 stores with a CEP that would be within 25 percent of the true CEP would be required (see Figure 15). This approach has merit, but it requires more stores and a higher degree of CEP accuracy at comparable confidence levels than the analytical approach mentioned earlier. The reader must determine
Table III. Probabilities Associated with Values as Small as Observed Values of X in the Binomial Test Onetailed probabilities under H, for the binomial test when P = Q 5 %.
10
11
12
13
14
15
.344 .656 .891 .984 .227 SO0 .773 .938 .145 .363 .637 .855 .254 SO0 .746 A72 .377 .623
***
.992 *** .965 .996 *** .910 .980 .998 *** .828 .945 .989 .999 .967 .994 .613 .SO6 .927 .981 367 .954 ,788 .910 ,304 SO0 ,696 .849 .227 .402 .598 .773 .315 SO0 .685 .240 .407 393 .324 so0 .252 .412 .192 .332 .026 A43 .262 .017 ...... .... ..-. ........: .202 .lo5 a , .... ", ,.......:. ., : .011 .032 ....*...... .. .154 ...,... .007 ,022 s;W$ .I15
~ ~
***
***
.997 .989 ,971 .941 .895
*** ***
.OOl
.
.006 .021 .004 .013 .002 ,008 .001 .005 .001 ,003
.002
.998 .994 .982 ,962 .834 .928 .760 .881 .676 a20 .588 ,748 SO0 .668 .416 .584 .339 s o 0 .271 .419
.212
245
*.
***
***
*** ***
***
.999
.994 .985 .968 .942 308 .905 .738 .857 .661 .798 .581 .729
SO0
.wa
.994 ,987 .974 .95? .924
.655
.$e
* Adapted from Table W,B, of Walker, Helen, and Lev, J. 1953.Statistical inference. New York Holt, p. 458
27
NUMBER OF WEAPONS M A T MELD AT LEAST A 1-PERCENT IMPROMMENT IN ACCEPTABLE ERROR IN CEP CONFIDENCE LEMLS
0.80
30
0.85
0.90
0.95
25
x
. I LL
Y
v)
9
0
m I
3
20
15
15
20
25
30
28
The actual boresighting procedure is straightforward. The radar antenna, HUD PDU, INS, and RSU are removed from the aircraft. An optical fixture is hung on the front of the aircraft in place of the antenna. The aircraft reference line, or water line, is then determined by using optical fixtures mounted on the nose and main landing gear. This reference line is determined by sighting from the main gear fixtures forward to the nose fixture. Once this reference line is established, the antenna, HUD PDU, INS, and RSU mounts are all aligned to it. Once these alignments are made, the fixtures are removed and the systems reconnected. Since the antenna mounts are usually held in place with an epoxy resin compound which must be allowed to cure, the total boresighting procedure requires several days to complete. In many cases, however, a boresight confidence check can be made in much less time. The confidence check measures the boresight but does not correct errors. If unacceptable errors are detected, a full boresight must be performed.
approximate 33-foot-long range bias when releasing BDU-33's. This bias, coupled with a nominal 4- to 5-mil ballistic dispersion for the BDU-33, led to the following guidelines: a. If the mean point of impact (MPI) is the point which has, as its range/deflection coordinates the arithmetic mean of the range and deflection coordinates of the impact points, is less than 50 feet from the target center, and there is random clustering about the target, the aircraft is accepted as having no system problems. b. With a 50- to 60-foot MPI bias, the aircraft is accepted with skepticism, and in. most cases retesting is required. c. If the MPI is greater than 60 feet, reaccomplishment of footprinting is required following an investigation into aircraft hardware/software problems. Once footprinting has been successfully accomplished, then the aircraft is considered to be truly representative of typical aircraft.
The check usually consists of a set of three diving passes made over the target. In the first pass, the aircraft is flown towards the target in a medium dive (usually 30 degrees). When approaching the target, the pilot designates the target visually on the HUD and confirms that the radar is ranging smoothly to the ground by watching the radar range indicator displayed on the HUD. At this point, gross radar-ranging errors become evident (Figure 16). As the aircraft nears the target, the pilot is instructed to pulse the stick to cause dynamic acceleration changes. If the Target Designator (TD) box displayed on the HUD jumps erratically, accelerometer errors are evident. At this point, the
29
m
5wo
TO BOX ON TARGET
RADAR RANGE
0 0
IF RANGING I S
LONG. INS WlLL THINK TARGET I HERE S
pilot is instructed to pull off the target, leaving the target designated. The INS, if it is functioning properly, will keep track of the target location and display the TD box on the HUD when the target is again in its field of view. On the second pass, the aircraft is again flown in the same dive toward the target and along the same track used in the first pass. When approaching the target, the pilot is instructed to note the position of the TD box relative to the target. If the TD box has drifted off the target, it is slewed or manually moved through pilot input in the direction opposite the drift (approximately two-thirds of the amount of drift off the target), as shown in Figure 17. Again, the pilot pulls off the target. At this point, any large INS drift errors become apparent. Drift
errors of one to two feet per second are usually within INS design specifications. Upon target designation in the first pass, radar range to the target was determined. If there had been errors in the slant range reported to the FCC, the INS will have been given false target location data. Once these errors and drift errors from the second pass have been corrected and additional inputs are made to compensate for anticipated drift, a third pass is performed. The third pass is a run at the target at 90 degrees to the original attack heading, again in the same dive; however, the TD box is not slewed. Errors in radar slant range will be represented by an offset of the TD box from the target. If the TD box is displayed uprange of the target on the original run-in line, the radar is re-
30
5wo
RADAR RANGE
NOTE TD BOX LOCATION AND DRIFT SLEW TD BOX 2/3 DISTANCE OPPOSITE TARGET
porting short slant range values. Conversely, if the TD box is displayed downrange of the target, the radar is reporting long slant range values (see Figure 18).
The pilot is further responsible for validating that all stores are properly loaded on the aircraft including lanyards, fuzes, timer settings, and the like. A
walk around the aircraft prior to takeoff will usually reveal any loading errors to the thoroughly alert pilot. Once in the cockpit, the pilot ensures that all avionics equipment is properly functioning and that the correct weapon information has been loaded into the system. It is imperative that the pilot have a good understanding of both the aircraft and weapon systems being used.
31
SYSTEMS
INDICATES SHORT RANGING
CHECK PASS 3
L-2
r2R
,(
5wo
RADAR RANGE
TD TD
,
\
'\
PASS ,
\
3 RUN-IN LINE
or tolerances should be placed on several different parameters. For example, there should be constraints covering airspeed, altitude, dive angle, normal acceleration, and weather conditions. These constraints must be designed to limit data errors and yet be practical for the pilot.
In general, flight condition tolerances should be set to correspond to the ability of test personnel. The author's experience has been that most pilots are abIe to control airspeed within & 20 KTAS, altitude within 500 feet (except in loft deliveries in which case the limits are tighter on the positive side), and dive angle within 5 degrees. Naturally, some pilots are able to achieve a much higher degree of precision in their deliveries. Limits on weather enhance the analyst's confidence in results of post-flight data analyses. Typically,
weather conditions such as wind speed and direction, temperature, air pressure, and air density cannot be measured real-time during a mission. Data are gathered either prior to, or just after, the mission. Unfortunately, this can introduce errors into the data by virtue of the fact that weather conditions change, sometimes quickly, from the time they are measured to the time the mission is flown. Of all the weather parameters, wind speed has the greatest effect on the accuracy of trajectory data. In most cases, wind speed is measured by launching a balloon with an instrumentation package either before or after a flight. Even if the average wind speed and direction do not change over the entire mission, the variable that cannot be held constant or accurately modeled is wind gusts. For these reasons, analysts at Eglin place restrictions
32
on allowable wind speed and gusts measured at ground level. This approach is taken because experience has shown that as average wind speed increases, the frequency and magnitude of wind gusts also increase. Again, wind limits must be designed to be practical while, at the same time, providing a reasonable level of confidence in the data. At Eglin, surface wind speeds up to 20 knots with gusts not to exceed 10 knots are typically allowed. These are typical values and are frequently changed as mission reqyirements vary. For example, the effect of wind speed on a MK 82 LDGP bomb is much less than on a MK 82 Snakeye (high drag) because time of fall is less. So, a higher wind speed might be allowed for a MK 82 LDGP than for a MK 82 Snalceye. Similarly, wind affects lighter-weight stores more than heavier stores; cluster weapons, for example, are particularly sensitive to wind because of their submunitions. Therefore, lighter-weight stores may require lower wind limits. Thus, a thorough understanding of the weapons being tested is required to make effective decisions regarding wind tolerances. As can be seen, wind must always be considered as a goho-go mission criteria. Finally, a mission obviously cannot be flown in weather that does not allow ground camera coverage. Therefore, the planned trajectory and flight path of the aircraft will dictate the allowable cloud cover and amount of precipitation. 8.0 WEAPON SYSTEM TEST PROGRAM DATA REQUIREMENTS
8.1 Cinetheodolite Cameras
TSPI must be collected to help determine the store freestream drag and, when necessary, separation effects. These data can be obtained through the use of cinetheodolites equipped with low-, medium-, and high-speed film cameras (16mm, 3 5 m , 7 0 m , and 140mm) which generally operate at frame rates from less than 10 to 40,000 frames per second. Cameras must be capable of recording Inter-Range Instrumentation Group (IRIG) time code on film for subsequent analysis. IRIG time uses very high frequency (VHF), radio frequency (RF) transmissions in the 140-MHz range and is usable anywhere within the receiving range of the transmitter. Even though most major test sites are equipped with self-contained time code generators, IRIG time is still widely used to support airborne and land range missions. Eglin has five land test ranges and the Gulf of Mexico water ranges. An aerial view of a typical land range is shown in
Figure 19. Approximately 120 land receivers are serviced by IRIG-transmitted time. Three Loran C synchronized time-code generators, which drive the transmitter, have identical accumulators and division circuits for reliability. At Eglin, cinetheodolite cameras record encoded azimuth (angle measured clockwise from north to the tracked object) and elevation (vertical angle measured between the cinetheodolite and the tracked object) with the encoded frame number on each frame of film at 5 , 10, 20, or 30 franies per second. Thirty-five-millimeter cameras are most frequently used to gather TSPI and to record such aspects as store-event times, fin opening, chute deployment, chute separation, weapon functioning, and impact. Most cinetheodolites consist of four mechanically independent sections. The optical section contains a tracking telescope, digital measuring system for determining azimuth and elevation angles, a camera (usually 35mm), azimuth and elevation electronics, and sighting telescopes for azimuth and elevation measurements. The tracking drive control section contains all the equipment for driving and controlling the cinetheodolites in azimuth and elevation as well as the camera control system. The support section consists of a rotatable column with operator seats and a leveling device on which the cinetheodolites are mounted. The power and distribution unit contains a power transformer and audio equipment for communicating with the master control station. Some cinetheodolite cameras require two people to operate (one for azimuth tracking and one for elevation tracking) while others require only one person who does both the azimuth and elevation tracking. At the other end to the spectrum, Eglin has cinetheodolites which can be operated remotely during drops of live weapons. Cinetheodolites are generally installed on isolated pedestals in concrete towers covered by astrodomes to protect the instruments and facilitate maintenance during inclement weather. A typical cinetheodolite installation is shown in Figure 20. An overall view of the cinetheodolite Struchire is shown in Figure 21. The exact position o f each site is determined by a first-order geodetic survey. The cameras are located and oriented in a topocentric rectangular coordinate system. Precise camera orientation is accomplished and checked by on-site leveling procedures and calculations utilizing fixed boresight targets. Multiple station solutions for individual space position points are obtained. All
33
UI
36
of Eglin's cinetheodolites are digitized models which, when combined with compatible Contraves semi-automatic film readers, reduce data reduction time.
At least three cameras should be used to avoid problems in geometry and to insure an accurate solution. A combination of six cinetheodolites has been shown to determine target position to kl.5 feet, velocity to 1.5 feet per second, and acceleration to 2.5 feet per second squared in tests of specific aircraft. The majority of Eglin's ballistic tests use a minimum of four cameras. This arrangement allows for triangulation (see Figure 22), even in the event that one camera malfunctions or loses sight of the weapon during the tracking phase. As a rule of thumb, accuracies of at least 5 feet can be expected when using three to six cameras. Clearly, with good weather, complete camera coverage, and accurate film reading, cinetheodolites provide a very accurate means of tracking an object.
Using several different types of equipment at Eglin, TSPI is obtained from film and automatically transferred to a digitally-formatted computer tape through a PDP 11/34 microcomputer system. Figures 23(A) and 23@) show typical frames from film that are reduced to obtain TSPI. It inay be noted that without an event time, it is very difficult to discern first store movement due to the small image of the store. Two Type 29 Telereader Systems (Figure 24) are used for reading all types of film with a sensitivity of 0.0003 to 0.00006 inch per count (depending on the magnification). One of these readers is also equipped with an anglereading device which permits angles ranging from 0 to 360 degrees to be measured with an accuracy of 0.1 degree. Two Contraves semi-automatic film readers (Figure 25) are utilized to read film from the digital Contraves cinetheodolites. Since the cinetheodolite camera operators cannot track an object in
CINE-T CAMERA
4 -
\/
CINE-T CAMERA
39
such a manner that the center of the optical axis of the camera lies directly on the nose of the object, it is necessary to determine the displacement between the optical axis and the nose or any other specified reference point on the object being tracked. This displacement is called the tracking error. Approximately 100 frames per second can be read with a resolution of 0.0025 degree in azimuth and elevaon the tracking correction. tion and 0.2" At Eglin, cinetheodolite data are smoothed by using a least-squares curve fit. The trajectory of the aircraft or weapon helps determine the degree of the polynomial and the number of points that need to be used to smooth the cinetheodolite data.
A maximum of 39 points and up to a third-degree polynomial can be used. Typically, a 31-point quadratic equation is used to fit most standard weapon trajectories. When a weapon has a rocket motor firing or any other events that make it difficult to track, a cubic equation is used to obtain the smoothed data. The smoothed cinetheodolite data is reduced to generate TSPI. Smoothed data is usually reduced with the line of flight being the aircraft track at release and the origin of the coordinate system being the target. The smoothed TSPI is normally printed at 0.2-second intervals and contains parameters such as positions, velocities, accelerations, Mach numbers, dynamic pressures, and flight path angles correlated with time. A sample pass of TSPI is presented in Table IV.
During ballistic tests, the aircraft is tracked from a minimum of 3 seconds prior to release and for as long after release as the aircraft appears on the film of the cinetheodolites tracking the weapon. The weapon is usually tracked from release to cluster opening, fuze function, or impact. To record the time of weapon release as well as other event times, a medium-speed tracking camera, which operates at a nominal 96 frames per second with IRIG time and 3 " 5 film, is also used at Eglin. Black and white film is typically used, except in those instances where color contrast is an important factor in determining the occurrence of events (for example, functioning fins). Impact times, velocities, and angles for weapons and submunitions too small to track with cinetheodolite or medium-speed tracking cameras are determined by fixed Milliken or similar cameras along a grid impact area. Bowen ribbon-frame cameras, which operate at rates of 60, 90, 180, and 360 frames per second, may be synchronized to
s
NO
300
349 394
67 20 I 250
76
91
61
20
1003.0
998.4 996.7
PRESS MB
TEMP DEG C
120 '06
W D DEG
KTS
WV
$?
5;
21 21
KYZ
667
E2
G M z !
NE
DEW PT DEG C
V PR
RH
293 0
!:%.a
8
$
270 0
0 0
0 0
F85
0.0
0.0
p% 0 0 0
8
12.595 12.251 11.907 11.562 11.218
10.838
1 I 1 !
* * *
21 21 21 21 21
21
TIHE H M S
1-FREZ SEC
FEET
8293.628 8216.054
8138,130
Y CEET
FEET
vx
791.517 793.644 795.771 797.898 800.025 602. i52
F/S
FY:
7:
HT FEET
:
2 2 2 2
T- FREZ SEC
. I
. * . .
FY:
FY2 1053.928
596.213 181.561
v'!
130.850
124.366 119.414
FYS
FY:
FY:
HT FEET
G S
3 3
3
**
.
1-FREZ SEC
O.Oo0
0.198
3 3 3
G S
AN G
An
- m ; 7 -45.583 -42.675 -26.886 -34.349 -33.961
KO
CD
na
0.840
0.835
GR OEG
DA A I R DEG
FEET
nT
Page 4: Acceleration, Horizontal Flight Path, & Dynamic f i e s u r e Gala VARIABLE A AD ALTITUDE AN G AX AY AZ CD DA AIR DA GR DEWFT HT HVA KD
~ ~~
4
4 4 4
*f
. . .
1-FREZ SEC
c . m
0.198
4
4
0.396
F/$ZS
10.003
145.255 105.259 1.535
1.539
HV DEG 63.865
HVA
61.048
60.426
DFG
LB~FIZ
HT FEET
FEET
SR
MEASUREMENT Acceleration Acceleration Due to Drag Altitude Normal Acccleration X Acceleration Y Acceleration Z Acceleration Drag Coefficient Dive Angle Dive Anglc NatUsed Height Above Sea Level Heading from North Drag Coefficient (Ballistics)
~~~ ~~
UNITS
G F/S/S Feet or Meters GS F/S/S F/S/S
FISIS
~ ~~
MEASUREMENT Mach Number Not Used Not Used Atmospheric Pressure Dynamic Pressure Not Used Air Density Slant Range Tsmperature Time of Day Time from Freeze Not Used Total Velocity in Air Mass Speed of Sound
UNITS
VARIABLE
VT VWX VWZ
MEASUREMENT Total Velocity X Velocity to Air Mass Z Vclacity to Air Mass x Velociiy Y Velocity Z Velocity Wind Direction Wind Velocity Wind Velocity-X Component Wind Velocity-2 Component X Coordinate Y Coordinate
UNITS
F/S
XF/S
%/S
Millibars Lb/FtZ gmsicubic meter Feet Deggiccs Celsim Hrs/Mins/Secs Seconds F/S Knots
Degrees
vx VY vz WD wv wx wz
X Y
vs
41
42
Unlike other types of instrumentation, HUD recordings are available as standard equipment on most aircraft. They can, in mo'st cases, provide the analyst with data on airspeed, altitude, dive angle, g's, Mach number, and of primary importance in accuracy testing, the aim point. As the need for instrumentation increases, some innovations are being utilized by the flight test community. For example, an interesting one is the use of small video cameras to record aircraft aft Multi-Purpose Displays (MPD's). At Eglin, this is being done in F-15E aircraft. Another example is the development of an OFP that will display data relating to weapon release on the MPD's for recording by these video cameras. This display amounts to a relatively inexpensive MUX recording. These same small cameras are also being used to record the pilot's view through the NUD, which will provide not only a color through-the-HUD image (HUD video today is black and white only) but also a delay-free image for accuracy analysis as well.
the design of the recording system is known, they also provide a fairly accurate idea of weapon-release parameters. The analyst gets a pilot's-eye view of the weapon delivery system and an idea of its abilities and limitations. Delays are evident in HUD recordings, since what is viewed on the video tape at a particular instant in time is not necessarily what happened at that time. The importance of these delays cannot be overemphasized. Analysts reviewing the tape of a mission have often accused pilots of making aiming errors, only to learn later that video recording delays had caused the appearance of pilot error. These delays are caused by several different factors, but timing is a major one. For example, in most aircraft, video recordings are made at about 30 frames per second. HUD symbology is displayed at about 60 frames per second, but the software that updates the symbology is usually at 25 frames per second. Further, in the case of the F-l5E, recordings are only made of every other symbology update cycle, which is 12.5 times per second. Thus, there is potential for large time lags in the recorded data on a HUD video recording. These time lags account for the innovative development of the camera modification to F-15E aircraft that was mentioned previously in this volume. As is true with any data source, once the limitations of that source are known, it is then possible to make the most use of the data provided by the source. Once the limits and delays in a HUD video recording system are known, the analyst can put the recording to best use.
It is doubtful that aircraft manufacturers ever intended for HUD recordings to be used in the exacting manner that analysts presently are attempting to use them. They were, first and foremost, designed to be used as recording devices for air-toair combat, as training tools for pilots and weapon system operators, and perhaps for settling aircrew arguments as to "who shot down whom first." HUD recordings provide the analyst with an inside look at the intricacies of weapon delivery, and if
43
the proper ejection velocities and angles when modeling the drop. The release sequence must also be known in order to correlate TSPI for individual stores on a pass-by-pass basis. Finally, aircraft data must include the type and model and the latest software updates, if any, incorporated in the aircraft's OFP.
As with the HUD recordings, the analyst must realize that a delay exists between the time the word appears on the bus and the time it is recorded. Instances of delays of up to 200 msec in PDAS data have been noted. PDAS should be used in conjunction with another data source so that timing differences can be resolved. Efforts are being made to correct time lags. One innovative solution was implemented on a system similar to PDAS at Edwards AFB, California. Data are simply stored in a buffer cell with its time tag in the next cell. This arrangement requires the buffer to be recorded twice as often since the buffer must now hold data and time tags for every word, but accurate time tags are now provided with the data.
An effort to use video tape to record the equivalent of MUX data in aircraft is underway at Nellis AFB, Nevada. The premise is a good one and will provide useful data to analysts, but it will have the same limitations as HUD video (that is, data will only be recorded at 30 frames per second).
44
equipment measure or derive data for pressure, temperature, relative humidity, wind direction and velocity, height, and density. Typically, routine soundings are made twice daily, and special soundings can be performed as required to support the testing environment. At Eglin, temperature, which can be recorded in degrees Centigrade, Fahrenheit, or Rankin, is measured with An ML-7 general-purpose, nonregistering, mercury-in-glass thermometer. Dew point and relative humidity are measured with an ML-24 psychrometer. Pressure is measured by three types of instruments: the ML-102, a portable aneroid barometer that is individually calibrated for scale and temperature errors; an ML-512, which is a Fortin-type mercurial barometer with adjustable cistern; and an ML-563, which is a precision barograph that provides a continuous record for a 4day period. Density is recorded as grams per cubic meter, pounds per cubic foot, or slugs per cubic foot. Wind direction and velocity data are obtained by tracking a Pilot Balloon (pibal) at the test site with cinetheodolite cameras. Wind measurements can be made in clear weather or in any portion of the atmosphere below cloud cover. Wind velocity is typically measured either in knots or feet per second. The wind direction and velocity pibal data are usually recorded at altitudes from the earth's surface to 3000 feet in 500-foot increments and from 3000 feet above the eartb's surface to 1000 feet above release altitude in 1000-foot increments. Pibal recordings typically are taken in the vicinity of the release area within 30 minutes of the munition release time. The pibal can be tracked either by theodolites or, if released from suitable locations, by range cinetheodolites operating at 10 frames per second recording data with I N G time in bursts of approximately 5 seconds each at one-half minute intervals. In the final product, the cinetheodolite pibal data is integrated into the reduced ballistics data printouts. At Eglin, the ML-474 theodolite is used. This portable measuring device can be used singly or in pairs to make wind measurements from concrete pads with a known orientation. Measurements are made from the earth's surface through 10 kilometers by tracking a pibal. The theodolite used for this purpose is a right-angle telescope surveying instrument that records azimuth and elevation angles of the rising balloon at fixed time intervals. A typical ascent to 3 kilometers takes 10 minutes.
Single-theodolite Pibal wind measurements made at a requested location assume that the balloon has a known ascent rate. The estimated error of such measurements is usually 3 meters per second plus six percent of the wind vector. When the balloon passes through a temperature inversion or through other turbulent conditions, single-theodolite readings are unreliable. For the greater precision required for most ballistic tests, pibals are typically tracked by a minimum of three cinetheodolites. Assuming five samples per second and smoothing to a 101-point linear equation, winds derived from this type of tracking have an estimated vector error of 0.5 meter per second and can be determined for vertical intervals as small as 75 meters.
To predict the freestream performance of a weapon, analysts at Eglin compute theoretical trajectories using the computer program called Unguided Weapon Ballistic Analysis Program. This program has been used and refined for several years, but unfortunately, the program is documented for internal use only. The program is adaptable to any type of computer having the required memory and system routines. The program computes point mass threedegree-of-freedom (3DOF) trajectories using a modified Euler integration method with the following information:
45
Positions and velocities of the weapon at release (time zero) as determined from the reduced cinetheodolite TSPI for the aircraft Oncidentally, since cinetheodolite film position measurements at Eglin are made using the nose of the aircraft, a position correction factor is applied to obtain the true position of the weapon on the aircraft.) Ejection velocity (that is, the velocity at which the weapon is ejected from the aircraft susoension rack) 3. Measured weapon weight and diameter 4 Drag coefficient as a function of Mach . number, as furnished by the weapon contractor or as estimated based on a similar weapon 5. Meteorological data (such as air temperature, density, and wind direction and velocity) 6. Event times or altitudes that affect the weapon's drag 7. Measured range, cross range, and time of flight at weapon functioning and/or impact 8. The particle equations of motion (The particle equations of motion assume that the only forces acting on the weapon are the drag force, which acts in a direction opposite to that of the air velocity vector of the weapon, and gravity.) The drag force (F) is expressed as follows:
F = MA = R(KD)(J12)(V2)
The positions and velocities of the computed trajectories are compared with the positions and velocities of the observed trajectories from TSPI for each weapon. This comparison is usually performed at 1.0-second intervals along the trajectory until impact or termination. If the delta range (which is the difference between the actual and computed ranges) and time-of-flight deviations for the individual trajectories are large and biased in one direction (see Figure 27), it must be determined whether the deviations are due to drag or separation effects. In order to make the distinction between drag and separation effects, additional trajectories are computed using the measured positions and velocities of the weapon at some time T(1). Time T(l) is usually 3 seconds after release but should be far enough along the measured weapon trajectory for the weapon to stabilize to steady-state flight. If the comparison of these trajectories with the measured trajectories produces large and biased deviations starting at T(1), the drag used to compute these trajectories must be adjusted or derived. If the comparison of these trajectories produces small deviations with an equal number of positive and negative values, then the drag that was used is considered to have been verified and is acceptable (see Figure 28).
Analysts at Eglin use two methods for adjusting or deriving store drag. The tried-and-true method is by manually adjusting the drag coefficient. This adjustment is accomplished by comparing the horizontal and vertical velocity components, usually at 1.0-second intervals, of each computed trajectory with those of the TSPI. This method can be used either with or without TSPI. If TSPI is not available, the comparison is made at impact using only bomb range and total time-of-fall (collected for ground instrumentation). When making the comparison, if the velocity differences are larger than 3 or 4 feet per second, the drag coefficient should be changed. In order to change the drag, the time or Mach number where the velocity comparisons begin to deviate from each other must be determined. Starting at this time or Mach number on the drag curve, the drag must be increased or decreased so that the computed velocities will better match those of the TSPI. A drag change in the portion of the trajectory where the horizontal velocity is large and the vertical velocity is small will affect down-range travel more than time of flight. A drag change in the portion of the trajectory where the vertical velocity is large and the horizontal velocity is smaIl will affect the time of flight more than down-range travel. Additional
where
F = drag force (lb-ft/sec2) M = mass of bomb (lb) A = acceleration of bomb due to drag (ft/sec2) R = air density (lb/ft3) KD= drag coefficient (dimensionless) D = weapon diameter (ft) V = air velocity of weapon (ft/sec)
CD, used by many aerodynamicists, is related to KD by the formula:
KD= (PI/B)(CD)
and drag force F may he expressed as:
F = 1/2@)(CD)(S)(v2)
where
S = ((PI)P2))/4 = cross-sectional area.
46
MEASURED TRAJECTORY
COMPUTED TRAJECTORY
,
RANGE
RELEASE
47
trajectories may be computed using the adjusted drag and the computed trajectories, and the TSPI can then be recompared. If these ttajectory comparisons are not favorable, another drag change should be made in the same manner as before, and more trajectories should be computed for comparison. This process should be repeated until the analyst determines that the drag is acceptable for the weapon. In summary, this method is adequate, but it is labor- and experience-intensive. Another newer method involves the use of a drag extraction program called Drag Coefficient Extraction Methodology (KDEM). This program computes a drag value for each time interval from TSPI. It then sorts time intervals by Mach number and computes a weighted average drag for each Mach number. This drag is then the best available for the weapon being tested. The program was developed and validated at Eglin after years of research and testing. In the opinion of Eglin analysts, the program represents state-of-the-art dragprediction methodology. The program is fully documented in Reference 16, and a summary of it forms part of Appendix C. Because the program is very user-friendly, it is not labor-intensive. Also, since the program is automated, it does not require analysts with extensive experience. After adjusting or deriving the drag by using either (Jf these methods, trajectories starting at time T(0) with the new drag are computed. If the comparison of these trajectories with the measured trajectories produces small deviations, the freestream drag analysis is complete, and it will not be necessary to do a separation-effects analysis. If the comparison of these trajectories with the measured trajectories produces large deviations, a separation-effects analysis must be accomplished. The methods for performing a separation-effects analysis will be discussed in a later section of this volume. During the freestream drag analysis, weapon events such as drag chute deployment and fin opening must be modeled. An event may be modeled as a constant (straight line, polynomial, or some other equation). A review of test data provides the analyst with a guide as to the methodology to use to model events. After the freestream ballistic analysis is complete, weapon ballistic dispersion should be computed. This is usually performed in the form of CEP. CEP is the radius of a circle which contains 50 percent of the weapons dropped at a given set of
delivery conditions. The CEP is normally reported in milliradians in the normal plane.
48
tabulated data should include statistical information such as the sum of the range and cross-range impact coordinates, the MPI, and the number of submunitions considered in the MPI. The MPI may differ from the geometric center of impact (GCI) or pattern centroid due to the density of the submunitions within the pattern. If applicable, the data should also include the number of live and dud submunitions within the pattern to determine the submunition reliability. The analyst may request other data such as a circle, ellipse, or some other geometric shape that contains 80 and/or 90 percent of the submunitions. Figure 26 shows a typical impact plot. After reviewing the observed pattern data and the method of submunition dispersion, the analyst will have a working knowledge of the pattern shape. The pattern size will be determined by computing theoretical trajectories from function to impact using the appropriate dispersion method and the submunition drag. To define the pattern, four trajectories should be computed. These trajectories should simulate the short, long, right, and left submunitions that define the pattern boundaries and should then be compared with the observed points. The pattern analysis is complete if the trajectory comparisons are favorable. If the comparisons are not favorable, adjustments to the dispersion method values, such as velocity and angle, must be made and additional trajectories computed. These trajectories are compared with the measured trajectories, and the process is repeated until the comparison of the trajectories is favorable. At this point, the analysis is complete. The analyst may want to take the pattern analysis one step further and determine the coefficients for an equation by using a regression program. The equation may be as follows: Pattern Size = A
(1)Determining whether there is a need for separation-effects compensation for a given weapon loadout, and if compensation is required, the magnitude of the compensation (2) Determining and implementing a methodology for separation-effects compensation. The first part of a separation-effects analysis, determining the need, is straightforward. Using data provided from flight testing (for example, TSPI, release sequences, and event times), each individual weapon is modeled from at least two sets of initial conditions using earlier described freestream-modeling methods. The first set of initial conditions is taken at the time of weapon release from the aircraft. The results of this modeling are compared with the actual termination conditions of the dropped weapon. If separation effects exist and the freestream model of the weapon is a good one, the difference between the model and actual data will be significant. On the other hand, if few or no separation effects are present, the differences will be small. These differences or deltas are a good indication of the amount of compensation required. This first part of a separation-effects analysis is important because it provides insight into the magnitude of errors caused by separation effects. This insight helps in making decisions as to the cost-effectiveness of implementation of compensations. In many instances, improving a trajectory by a small amount does not measurably increase weapon effectiveness and, therefore, is not costeffective. The second set of initial conditions is taken from the actual trajectory some time after release. The ideal time is when all perturbations to the weapon during separation have stabilized. As previously mentioned, this condition normally occurs about 3 seconds after weapon separation. These initial conditions are used to model the weapon's trajectory again and art: compared with the actual trajectory data of the weapon. Ideally, the difference between the model and the actual trajectory should, in this case, be zero. Again, if the freestreammodeling ability is good and no anomalies exist with the weapon, the difference will be very small. This second comparison of the weapon trajectory is valuable to the analyst because it tests the freestream model and allows bombs with anomalies to be identified and studied individually and possibly be removed from the sample set.
where A, B, C, and D are the coefficients from the stepwise regression program and FA, FV, and FH are the weapon functioning angle, velocity, and altitude, respectively. The equation may be used to compute the diameter of a circle, the major and minor axes of an ellipse, or the length and width of a rectangle.
The second part of the separation-effects analysis is more complex than the first. Before any compen-
49
sation for separation effects can be made, the decision must be made as to what methodology will be used onboard the aircraft. Without getting into the specifics of the many different methodologies, the methods in use today can all be labeled as "fudge factors". These fudge factors do not model the actual trajectory but make changes to the inputs of OFP trajectory calculations in order to, in effect, cheat the system into calculating the correct weapon freestream trajectory. The basic analysis in compensation involves the same steps used in determining a need for compensation, that is, measuring the errors by comparing modeled trajectories to actual trajectories. These deltas are then used to determine the fudge factors needed, which are, in turn, curve fit to produce coefficients for equations contained in the aircraft OFP. Several different types of equations are presently used in aircraft OFP's. As previously stated, the equations contained in the F-16 and the F-15E discussion are functions of Mach number and g. The F-111 equation is a function of Mach number, g, and dynamic pressure. Considerable effort has been devoted to quantifying separation effects by using wind-tunnelderived data instead of flight-test data. The thrust of this effort stems from the belief that an analytical method will enable separation effects to be established with more accuracy than is currently possible. But, in an austere budget environment, the biggest payoffs are projected to come in the form of less stores, less missions, and overall less cost and time needed to validate separation-effects models. A program has been developed at Eglin called Separation-Effects Estimation Method (SEEM). This program uses a modified 3DOF ballistics model to emulate a 6DOF safe separation model. The 6DOF model uses wind-tunnelderived store force and moment coefficients during separation trajectories. Ideally, if the 6DOF model adequately predicts store separation effects, then OFP algorithms could be precisely modeled throughout the desired flight envelope for an endless array of loadouts. Parametric analyses could then be performed to identify worse-case flight conditions and loadouts and, subsequently, only limited flight testing would be necessary to validate predictions. The SEEM program is fully documented in Reference 17, and a summary of the program forms part of Appendix C.
It may be candidly noted that analyses performed using SEEM have not resulted in as accurate a comparison as expected between 6DOF windtunnebderived data and TSPI. For example, drag force coefficients from TSPI were up to three times larger than those obtained from wind-tunnel-derived data. However, this difference may be explained in part by the wind tunnel test apparatus, which placed more emphasis on measuring storenormal forces and moments than drag forces. In addition, the small scale of the store models necessitated altering the store's geometry to facilitate mounting on support strings. This scale not only altered the store's aerodynamic characteristics but also altered its base drag. Nevertheless, a wellfounded cause for optimism exists that SEEM is on the right track and will fulfill its expectations if given enhanced wind-tunnel-derived data (for example, by using larger store models). The reader may also be interested in knowing that the use of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is being investigated for deriving separation effects. If SEEM represents the state-of-the-art, CFD represents the future. Considerable research has been performed by industry and government, and the results offer significant promise for using CFD to derive separation effects. For example, Arnold Engineering Development Center (AEDC) is performing work in this area that is on the cutting edge of technology. Analysts at AEDC have performed CFD analyses that have matched TSPI quite closely for certain flight conditions. It is hoped that a successive volume on ballistics will document a validated CFD program that can be readily used by test organizations world-wide.
I
I
50
ties, even though it may be proven later to have a higher degree of weapondelivery accuracy. The only essential data required to perform an accuracy analysis are the same aircraft release parameters used for CEP calculations (that is, altitude and slant range) and the location of the impacts of the weapons. Since impacts are measured to a common reference point on the ground such as a target, it must also be known where the pilot was aiming in reference to that point at the time of release (see Figure 29). The reported impact locations must be corrected for aiming errors. For instance, assume an impact is measured 200 feet short of the intended target. If the analyst makes the assumption that there was no aiming error, a bias in the weapon delivery system would be indicated. But if it were known that the pilot aimed 175 feet short, the aim-point-corrected impact would be 25 feet short, probably well within the acceptable accuracy of the weapon. The results of an accuracy analysis is reported in CEP or REP and DEP. REP and DEP are range error probable and deflection error probable, respectively. REP and DEP form a square which, as with CEP, contains 50 percent of the bomb impacts. REP and DEP can be reported in mils or feet but are usually reported in feet in the ground plane. For weapons released at low altitudes, REP
and DEP are reported (in feel) as opposed to a o CEP, because the angles used t calculate CEP decreases to the point where CEP becomes meaningless. REP and DEP are also reported for loft deliveries for the same reasons. In accuracy analyses, CEP is reported from two different references: around the aim point and around the MPI. In this instance, MPI is the mean of all intact munition impacts and the mean of the pattern centroids for functioning weapons (see Figure 30). If a bias in the system exists as a specified percentage of bombs falling either long or short of the target, the CEP around the MPI will be smaller than the CEP around the target. If no bias exists, the CEP around the MPr and target will be the same.
A detailed discussion of the equations for CEP, REP, and DEP can be found in other documents. However, for the convenience of the reader, the following paragraphs provide a further explanation of these terms. A CEP value is equal to the radius of a circle with its center at the desired mean point of impact, containing one-half OF the impact points of independently aimed bombs or one-half of the MF'I's resulting from independent aiming operations. CEP is associated with a circular normal distribution having a standard deviation (sigma). It is a meaningful measure of accuracy if the impact
AIMPOINT
RESULTING IMPACT
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TARGET
L-
DATE
MSN NO
PASS
A/C
RACK POS
BOMB W T
LBS
8 9 9 9 12 12 12 12 14 14 MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY JUN JUN 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 4713 5008 5008 5008 1013 1013 1013 3707 3707 4014 4014 4014 4014 5015 4042 4042 4042 4042 5008 5008 5008 2009 2009 487 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 2 3 4 1 2 3 5 F -X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F-x F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X 3 7 4 6 7 4 6 3 7 3 7 4 6 4 7 4
3 6 3 3
REL MACH
NO
TRAJ ARC LENGTH FT 12028. 9007. 9435. 8956. 8039. 8030. 8320. 8227. 10778. 10111. 6131. 6604. 7203. 6410. 8801. 6853. 6690. 7046. 6998. 6967. 6527. 6988. 8522. 8585. 7026. 6427. 6215. 6435. 7456. 7525. 6522. 6632. 9717. 6387. 7027. 6007. 6865. 6186. 6155. 6471. 6432. 6032. 6612. 6522. 7452.4
NORMAL PLANE DELTA DELTA RANGE DEFL MILS -4.4 - 6.2 - 8.4 MILS 2.5
SEC - 0.14 - 0.24 -0.30 - 0.35 -0.19 -0.18 - 0.13 - 0.28 - 1.10 - 0.74 - 0.07 - 0.12 - 0.17 -0.13 - 0.03 -0.09 - 0.20 - 0.08 - 0.10 - 0.14 - 0.13 - 0.30 - 0.24 - 0.03 - 0.14 0.04 - 0.23 - 0.58 - 0.54 - 0.13 -0.06 - 0.10 - 0.07 - 0.20 - 0.18 - 0.20 - 0.15 0.38
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0
1013
15 15 15 16 22 22 22 22 23 23 23 27 27 26 26 26 26 9 9
15
0 0
22 22 22 22 24 24
10 JUN
JUL JUL JUL JUL AUG AUG SEP SEP SEP SEP
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487 1610 1610 1611 1611 1511 1611 5817 5817 5817 5817 47 47 1866 1866 2447 2447
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$ 8
812. 813. 810. 812. 815. 809. 809. 815. 812. 811. 817. 814. 813. 817. 813. 814. 813. 814. 813. 813. 809. 807. 812. 811. 815. 815. 815. 815. 762. 790. 815. 815. 8i5. 815. 809. 773. 786. 771. 771. 798. 789. 768. 770. 766. AVERAGE ( N = PE ( F T j
0.1 0.2 0.1 0.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.3 -0.1 - 0.1 - 14.9 - 19.1 - 18.7 - 23.3 0.4 - 23.4 - 23.4 - 20.5 - 22.1 - 26.7 - 22.6 - 26.2 - 0.1 - 17.6 - 19.6 - 13.1
0.3
- 11.1 - 1 .o - 1.3 - 15.5 - 18.5 -i6.5 - 19.7 - 25.0 - 22.9 - 20.5 - 23.6 - 19.9 - 20.6 - 23.3 -18.0 - 23.3 - 20.7
44)
35.61 -90. 23.69 - 139. 24.82 - 189. 23.64 - 247. 25.31 -109. 24.99 - 116. 26.18 - 84. 24.75 - 174. 2 4 . 9 0 -1080. 23.01 -647. 30.50 - 53. 35.01 - 92. 35.02 - 104. 38.08 - 82. 26.64 -69. 37.47 -7. 37.30 - 51. 35.05 - 126. 36.10 -31, 38.42 - 55. 33.87 - 113. 37.43 - 86. 24.89 - 227. 26.01 - 192. 33.08 0. 33.62 -91. 27.79 62. 26.06 - 177. 17.99 - 490. 18.44 - 450. 31.45 - 81. 33.56 - 14. 38.68 -72. 34.84 - 30. 39.28 - 168. 37.09 - 143. 35.87 - 136. 37.07 - 102. 33.56 96. 34.20 - 88. 36.94 - 72. 33.11 - 129. 38.24 - 24. 35.79 - 94. - 144.7 131.7 134.3
0.
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- 11.0 - 5.8 - 6.1 - 4.5 - 8.8 - 42.2 - 25.0 - 4.4 - 8.0 - 8.3 - 7.9 - 3.5 -0.6 - 4.6 - 10.3 - 2.6 - 4.9 - 9.6 - 7.4 - 11.2 - 9.8 0.0 - 7.8 4.6 - 12.1 - 20.3 - 18.9 - 6.5 - 1.1 - 4.6 - 2.7 - 15.2 - 14.4 - 11.6 - 9.9 8.6 - 7.7 - 6.7 - 11.6 - 2.3 - 8.5
- 8.3 5.3 7.2
2.3 2.5 - 6.3 1.2 - 3.3 - 2.5 5.2 3.2 - 5.2 - 7.7 2.0 - 6.9
- 1.9
0.0
- 7.6
-6.6 6.7 - 5.0 0.5 - 5.1 - 3.7 0.1 - 0.7 - 4.8 2.0 - 6.1 - 6.8 -5.6 - 0.3 0.9 - 7.7 - 2.3 - 1.6 - 3.4 - 2.1
- 1.1 2.9
3: ILL,
53
urements provide the insight necessary to plan effective missions, further insight can be gained into the causes of biases and dispersions by examining other data sources. PDAS data provides a look at what the aircraft is "thinking" at the time of weapon release. Factors such as airspeed, altitudes, system altitude and CADC altitude, dive angles, g loadings, and release times can be examined. If TSPI is available, these PDAS parameters can be compared with their equivalent TSPI parameters. TSPI gathered at the time of OFP testing can also be used in subsequent separationeffects analysis. Considerable time and money can be saved by wisely planning initial OFP testing to provide data for other analyses as well. In the beginning of this volume, the potential for reducing ballistic errors was discussed. This discussion was based on the results of a theoretical sensitivity analysis using a 3DOF mathematical model. Additional sensitivity analyses have been performed using a state-of-the-art 6DOF mathematical model (Reference 18). The results indicate that the CEP for CBU-58 and MK 84 LDGP stores should be less than 6.9 and 2.3, respectively, when proper attention is given to compensating for (modeling) such factors as separation effects and ejector free. Appendix D provides a brief summary of these analyses for easy reference.
Table VI1 presents a summary of predicted ballistic accuracy with separation-effects modeling using the procedures previously described. In this case, separation effects were modeled into an equation for input to the aircraft OFP. Using this model, coupled with store freestream trajectory data, the pilot could expect a bomb to hit 4.2 feet long of the target with a CEP of 67.2 feet. The delta range is different, and the CEP is larger than the ideal values because the model optimized separation effects across a range of flight conditions.
tn
P
DATE
MSN NO
PASS
A/C
RACK PDS
BOMB W T LBS
REL ALT MSL FT 3780. 3832. 3833. 3828. 3710. 3717. 3703. 3706. 3898. 3929. 4387. 4381. 4129. 4261. 3885. 4228. 3980. 4198. 4048. 4057. 4068. 4112. 3732. 3641. 4054. 3934. 4104. 4095. 1924. 2005. 4553. 4329. 4348. 4726. 4980. 5030. 4171. 4263. 4855. 4598. 4440. 4912. 3956. 4323.
REL MACH NO
IMP ANG DEG 35.54 23.55 24.69 23.55 25.22 24.92 26.12 24.66 25.11 22.97 30.59 35.22 35.20 38.35 26.54 37.50 37.46 35.32 36.19 38.63 34.13 37.67 24.83 25.96 33.06 33.81 27.62 26.22 18.02 18.47 31.53 33.57 38.78 34.83 39.65 37.36 36.18 37.41 33.21 34.48 37.14 33.31 38.23 35.93
GROUND PLANE DELTA DELTA DELTA RANGE DEFL TIME FT FT 21. 6. 5. 16. - 32. 15. - 1 5 .. -2 SEC 0.03 -0.01 - 0.02
NORMAL PLANE DELTA DELTA RANGE DEFL MILS MILS 2.0 0.9 0.7 2.2 - 5.0 2.4
9 9 12 12 12 12 14 14 15
16 22 22 22 22 23 23 23 27 27 26 26 26 26 9 9 10 10
S MAY 86
8 MAY 86 MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY MAY JUN JUN JUN JUN JUN JUN JUL JUL JUL JUL AUG AUG SEP SEP SEP SEP 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 86 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87 87
15 15
15
10 10 22 22 22 22 24 24 10 10 18 18
4713 5008 5008 5008 1013 1013 1013 1013 3707 3707 4014 4014 4014 4014 5015 4042 4042 4042 4042 5008 5008 5008 2009 2009 487 487 487 487 1610 1610 1611 1611 1611 1611 5817 5817 5817 5817 47 47 1866 1866 2447 2447
1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3
1 2 4 1 2 12 13 14 16 15 16 7 3 4
5 6
$ 5
6 7 5
6 1
4 4
F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X F- X
F-x
0.71 0.78 0.78 0.71 0.71 0.71 0.70 0.72 0.84 0.86 0.75 0.76 0.79 0.76 0.72 0.81 0.81 0.82 0.83 0.87 0.88 0.90 0.71 0.70 0.80 0.79 0.79 0.80 0.87 0.86 0.77 0.79 0.78 0.76 0.80 0.74 0.78 0.78 0.75 0.76 0.80 0.75 0.78 0.76
- 5.7 - 19.7 - 24.0 - 23.5 - 28.1 - 5.0 - 27.5 - 27.8 - 25.2 - 26.3 - 30.6 - 26.6 - 30.1 - 5.1 - 5.7 - 19.9 - 22.3 - 15.2 - 13.9 - 4.5 - 4.7 - 18.3 - 21.0 - 19.2 - 22.1 - 27.9 - 25.8 - 23.6 - 26.5 - 21.4 - 23.1 - 25.8 - 20.9 - 25.8 - 23.4 44)
-6.5
- 4. 3. 43.
1. - 36 . 5.
- 26. - 7. - 30. - 33. 6. 11. 0. 1. 43. 17. -21. 30. 3. 11. - 2. - 9. - 7. 1. - 32. - 13. - 40. - 40. - 25. - 9. - 2. -15. 31. - 22. - 8. - 26.
- 5.
- 1.
6.
6.
6.
- 8.
0.
- 1.4 - 3.1 - 0.9 - 0.1 1.9 - 0.4 1.8 - 0.3 - 1.9 - 0.4 0.4 2.7 0.7 0.9 0.0 2.3 2.7 - 2.9 0.5 - 0.6 3.1 0.6 - 0.1 - 1.3 - 3.5 0.4 -0.8 1.6 0.7 - 1.5 - 4.6 - 6.8 - 0.6 0.9 - 4.4 - 2.7 -0.8 - 5.4 - 0.7 - 2.9
- 0.3
- 2.3 - 0.2 1.3 - 7.2 - 4.9 - 1.6 - 4.3 - 6.5 1.1 2.2 0.0 1.4 - 1.1 2.6 6.4
0.2
0.1
- 3.5
0.0
-6.
-6.
-6.6
AVERAGE ( N =
5942.2
- 5 . 1 -0.01 13.2
- 0.6
3.3
1 .5
-1.0
2.3
56
ic performance is evaluated against requirements for the weapon as specified in the developmental contract. The concern is wi& questions such as: (1)Is the seeker head responding to the specified designator sensitivity requirements? (2)Is the guidance and control unit responding in a manner appropriate to give maximum required design limits? (3) Are actuator control points receiving sufficient energy? (4) Is enough force available for control unit deflection movement throughout the flight profile? During Development Test and Evaluation, care should be taken that a source for target designation is available. In this case, the designator or target illuminator should be a ground-based system. In addition to the target illuminator, the target area should be adequately covered with a detector to locate the centroid of reflective energy or target contrast. In all cases, guided weapons are designed to guide or maneuver to the center of contrast or of reflected energy. Without real-time measurement during the mission, questions will alwdys be raised about designation operations position. Concerns always exist when a target miss occurs about whether the problem is within the weapon system or the energy source to which it is guiding. Since the designator's energy travels in a straight-line path, during testing it is better to have the orientation of the designator and the detector along the expected flight path or impact angle of the weapon. This orientation will assure that the centroid of reflective energy is equivalent to that seen by the weapon. With DT&E testing, the target will generally be elevated normal to the intended flight path angle; therefore, only a minimum detector area must be covered. However, during an operdtional test and evaluation, the entire weapon system is being evaluated, including the target illuminator source. Therefore, a wide-area target detector must be employed to ensure the centroid of reflective energy is recorded. Specifically, for a longrange designation for a laser designator, if even 5 percent of the energy source should spill over the intended target, a high probability exists that the centroid of the energy would be that area which is eliminated with a grass or other media surface. During operational evaluations, additional care must be taken to assure that the total possible illuminated surface can be identified and the center of reflectivity monitored. For example, with a monochromatic energy source, a small evaluation in the impact area surface can have a significant
effect on the reflected energy. Specifically, in lasing a concrete runway, a 1- to 2-inch crack that gives a vertical development in the target would definitely reflect more laser energy than the general flat surface. Because the energy tends to reflect along an angle equal to the incidence angle, the energy reflects downrange from the energy source. Within the weapon, the position of any moving part, the input/output of any transputer, and the exact orientation and location of any vector should be measured accurately. These measurements will generally require a telemetry package designed to ensure that the moments, center-of-gravity, and weight of the inert dummy bomb casing remains within design limits of the parent warhead. For most guided weapons, these measurements are broken into three distinct component areas: the seeker, the computer, and the canard or fin guidance control surfaces. In the case of the seeker, its exact position relative to the bomb-body axis in roll, pitch, and yaw must be measured. This measurement allows for evaluation of the target detecting system to ensure that adequate guidance commands are processed for the guidance and control transputers. In addition to the attitude or orientation of the seeker, the centroid of reflected energy as seen by the weapon must be identified and recorded. This action will allow for evaluation of the control signal inputs into the computational portion of the guidance and control system. For example, if, based upon the telemetry data from the seeker, the target appeared in the lower half of the detector assembly for some period of time and the canards deflected to give a pitch-up command, then major problems exist between the seeker detector data processing and the canard deflection computer outputs. In this case, the real or correct weapon maneuver would be a pitchdown maneuver, which would center the reflected energy to the center of the detector screen. This action would have identified a problem, and, by evaluation of the computational computer within the system, one should be able to isolate more exactly the cause of a miss. The second general area is the bomb-body axis orientation. Accurate measuremdevaluation of these vector space variables must be identified. This main axis system has all the aerodynamic coefficients and induced aerodynamic coefficients which are applied to simulate the aerodynamic characteristics of the weapon itself. An extreme example would be if a bomb body or a weapon
57
body flew with a 15-degree angle of attack in a free steady-state flight. Then the induced drag due to angle of attack would be equal to; or greater than, the freestream aerodynamic drag for the clean body flying with zero-degree angle of attack. This type of aerodynamic characteristics will have drastic impact on such parameters as maximum range, weapon effectiveness, and impact velocity. These last two parameters are major concerns when evaluating total system design. For example, if the weapon is to be employed against a non-vertically developed target and the critical angle of ricochet is 15 degrees, then the 15-degree angle of attack requires that the airfoil group be given a dive direction prior to weapon impact. Otherwise, the weapon will ricochet, creating either minor damage or no damage. If the kinetic energy of the warhead is degraded significantly, the warhead becomes of minimum value against hardened targets. For instance, if the intended target array were covered by 4 feet of reinforced concrete but the weapon only retained sufficient energy to penetrate 2 feet of concrete, then the weapon would be without utility in this particular scenario. The third general area is the airfoil or airfoil actuation measurement requirements. The internal kinetic energy within the guided system should be measured along with the actual control surface movement. In evaluating guided weapons, one should not assume that control surface movement will occur because direction to deflect to maneuver has been generated by the computer system itself. For example, a full pitchdown command may be given by the computer processing; however, if the pressure available for canard deflection is such that aerodynamic loading will not allow for deflection, then the canard will deflect so that the internal pressure is equal to the aerodynamic pressure on the canard. Additionally, the actual control surface deflection must be measured to evaluate the accuracy of the wind-tunnel-collected aerodynamic data. Aerodynamic influence of control surface deflection is usually measured in given increments by deflecting the control surfaces a predetermined angular amount and evaluating the induced roll, pitch, yaw, and drag faces due to canard deflections. The control surfaces would then be set at a different angle and the process repeated. By measuring the exact angular orientation during tests, non-linear trends between wind tunnel data points might be identified and corrected. In summary, attempting to relate point mass ballistic analysis and simulation to guided simulation
analysis is a major injustice to system evaluation. In ballistic analysis, primary concern is with the basic principles of physics relating to F=ma. However, in the case of 6DOF or guided weapons simulations, the concern is with a multitude of complex mathematical and engineering disciplines. To understand the total system concept, a full awareness is required of: (1)the detector system principles relating to the electronics engineering discipline (2) the computational capabilities of computer systems (3) the aeromechanic, aerodynamic, and aeroengineering principles related to aeroelastic and freestream body mechanics. In the development of a test plan to evaluate guided weapons, careful attention must be given to test measurements. Without accurate, precise, and time-correlated measurements of all possible parameters, major problems can be anticipated in trying to identify system performance, especially in trying to extrapolate and interpolate performance characteristics to conditions that will be a primary concern to the operational commands.
58
Aviation Organization (ICAO) standard day conditions. Variations from the standard day are considered to have negligible effects on trajectory accuracy due to the usually short time of flight of weapons when released in level and dive modes at low/medium altitudes. However, since lofted weapons generally have longer times of flight, consideration of target density altitude is important for calculating accurate ballistic trajectory data. Table VI11 is a typical presentation of ballistic tables as published in - 34 To's for the MK 84 Air Inflatable Retarder (low drag mode) released in the loft mode. Table IX presents ballistic tables for the same store released in the dive mode.
To effectively plan a mission to deliver weapons, consideration must also be given to safe escape, safe separation, vertical drop required for fuze arming, and the altitude lost during dive recovery. The lowest release altitude that provides the delivery aircraft with acceptable protection from weapon fragmentation is known as the safe escape value. This value is determined through computer analyses of weapon fragmentation envelopes when related to specified delivery profiles and specific escape maneuvers of the delivery aircraft. These values are based on normal functioning of weapons with detonation at ground impact (except for CBU's). In the case of CBU's, safe escape values are based on failure of the canister to open and detonation of the intact cluster at ground impact. The values presented in s a k escape charts are based on various probabilities of hit. In the USAF, a probability of hit of less th'an, or equal to, 0.001 per pass is frequently used.
Safe separation values correspond to the minimum detonation times after release that provide the delivery aircraft with acceptable protection from early weapon detonation (airbursts). These values differ from safe escape values that deal with ground bursts. Safe separation requirements must be met when delivering proximity-fuzed, generalpurpose bombs and CBU's with specific function times. Safe separation need not be considered for impact-fuzed, general-purpose bombs because of the small likelihood of early detonation at fuze arming. Safe separation requirements are met by using minimum fuze arming times that provide sufficient aircraft-to-weapon separation prior to the fuze arming. Safe escapekafe separation charts provide safe escapelsafe separation and vertical drop data required for fuze arming for various weapons and
fuze combinations, delivery parameters, and escape maneuvers. These charts include time of fall, minimum release altitudes for safe escape, and vertical drop values required for fuze arming values. Time-of-fall values are the minimum times for release at which a weapon can detonate and satisfy the safe separation criteria. Minimum release altitude values represent the minimum altitude for release of a particular munition to ensure criteria for safe escape are satisfied. Vertical drop required for fuze arming values is based on all delays that affect fuze arming (wiring, retardationdevice opening times, inherent fuze delays, and the positive tolerances on arming times). Table X shows a typical safe-escape chart as presented in Dash 34 Series TO'S. Dash 34 Series l a ' s can be quite voluminous for aircraft that are authorized to carry a wide variety of stores. The length of ballistic tables alone can be several hundred pages. In addition, the need for supporting information such as a description of the aircraft weapon delivery system, a description of the stores themselves, and safe escape data makes the size of Dash 34 To's for each aircraft quite large. In an effort to streamline and simplify the presentation of data for aircrews, a Dash 34 Standard Volume (SV) has recently be developed (Reference 19). 'fie SV contains all of the generic, non-aircraft-specific information that aircrews need to plan their missions. For example, the SV contains needed information for all stores. Thus, the information for each store need not be repeated in each aircraft-specific Dash 34 TO. With the introduction of the SV, the Dash 34 TO for each aircraft need only contain the information that is unique for each aircraft.
(JMEEvl'S)
JMEM are joint service authenticated weaponing manuals which present evaluations of the effectiveness of conventional weapons against selected targets. Also discussed are weapon characteristics, target vulnerability, delivery accuracy, methodology, reliability, and air-combat maneuvering with emphasis on weapons currently in inventory. Data is also included on some weapons which are programmed for future use. Use o f these manuals is essential to ensure proper mission planning. JMEM's are divided into three categories of weapon applications. The major categories are: Air-to-Surface (61A1 Series), Anti-War (61B1 Series), and Surface-to-Surface (61S1 Series).
Table VIII. Ballistic Tables for MK 82 AIR (Low Drag) Released from an Aircraft in Loft Mode
200
500
io
15 20 25 30 35 40 45
328 464 650 878 1145 1442 1763 2101 350 513 733 1005 1320 1671 2049 2448 372 56 1 815 1 126 1486 1886 2317 2768 392 601 881 1221 1614 2048 2515 3004
2.5 3.3 4.0 4.7 5.5 6.1 6.8 7.5 2.7 3.5 4.3 5.1 5.9 6.6 7.3 8.0 2.8 3.7 4.6 5.4 6.2 7.0 7.8 8.6 2.9 3.9 4.8 5.7 6.5 7.3 8.2 8.9
14.8 19.9 25.0 30.2 35.4 40.6 45.9 51.2 13.9 19.0 24.1 29.3 34.5 39.7 45.0 50.2
9712 13004 15860 18188 19961 21172 21832 21966 11291 15116 18385 2 1028 23030 24396 25141 25296
15 21 27 34 40 46 51 56 14
21
9.85 14.02 18.14 22.07 25.76 29.16 32.25 35.01 10.62 15.19 19.64 23.88 27.83 31.48 34.79 11.33 16.22 20.95 25.41 29.58 33.42 36.91 40.03
7588 10265 12533 14308 15568 16313 16554 16319 8826 11916 14186 16473 17969 18683 19935 10016 13451 16253 18392 19882 20742 20994 20667
21 29 37 45 53 60 66 72 22 32 40 49 57 64 71 24 34 43 52 60 68 75 82 25 35 45 54 63 71 78 85 20 28 35 42 49 55 61 66 22 30 38 46 53 60 66 72
2 3 4
6
6 7 7
1
550
io
15 20 25 30 35 40 45
18 34 41 47
52
3 4
6
7 8 9 2 3 5 7 8 9
600
10
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 650
1 0 15 20 25 30 35 40 45
13.0 12823 17110 18. 1 23.3 20718 28.5 23610 33.7 25792 39.0 2728 1 44.3 28094 49.6 28260
14 21 28 35 41 47 53 58 15 21 29 36 42 48 53 58
16 22 28 34 40 45 51 56
16
io io
2 4 5 7 9
12.8 14089 17.8 18674 22.9 22483 28.0 25522 33.2 27808 38.5 29361 43.7 30210 49.1 30379
11.88 10968 16.98 14607 21.87 17529 26.48 19745 30.77 21276 34.71 22146 38.30 22387 41.52 22022 9.61 13.24 16.90 20.43 23.75 26.83 29.63 32.12 10.36 14.42 18.46 22.34 25.99 29.37 -~ 32.44 35.19
~
io
11
11
1
300
450
1 0 15 20 25 30 35
40
45 500
407 2.4 519 3.1 .~ 671 3.7 858 4.4 1076 5.0 1320 5.7 1584 6.3 . . 1861 6.8 428 564 749 978 1245 1542 1863 2201 2.5 3.3 4.0 4.7 5.5 6.1 6.8 7.5
16.0 8561 21.1 11208 26.3 13558 31.4 15497 36.7 16975 41.9 17980 47.2 18515 52.6 18596
14.8 19.9 25.1 30.2 35.4 40.6 45.9 51.2 10082 13267 16056 18342 20085 21274 21918 22038
6758 8901 10770 12256 13314 13935 14128 13906 7958 10527 12729 14462 15693 16416 16640 16391
2 3 4 4 5 5 5
1
1 0 15 20 25 30 35 40 45
22 28 34 40
46
52 56
2 3 5 6 6 7 7
Table PX. Ballistic Tables for MK 82 AIR (ILow Drag) Released from an Aircraft in Dive Mode
D I V E RELEASE ANG ALT TAS ABOVE TGT FT DEG KTS BOMB RANGE FT 2622 2808 2980 3137 3281 2978 3197 3400 3588 3760 3308 3559 3792 4008 4208 3617 3897 4159 4404 4629 3908 4217 4507 4777 5028 4185 4521 4837 5132 5407 2784 2935 3069 3187 3291 TIME OF FALL SEC 3.57 3.44 3.33 3.22 3.12 4.07 3.94 3.81 3.70 3.59 4.53 4.40 4.27 4.15 4.04 4.97 4.83 4.70 4.58 4.46 5.39 5.25 5.11 4.99 4.87 5.78 5.64 5.51 5.37 5.26 3.85 3.66 3.48 3.32 3.17 4.22 4.02 3.83 3.66 3.51 4.58 4.37 4.17 3.99 3.83 4.92 4.71 4.51 4.32 4.15 5.26 5.04 4.83 4.63 4.46 SLANT IMPACT RANGE ANGLE FT 2670 2853 302 1 3177 3319 3038 3253 3453 3638 3808 338 1 3627 3856 4069 4266 3704 3979 4236 4476 4698 401 1 4312 4596 4861 5108 4303 4630 4939 5228 5498 2896 3042 3171 3286 3387 3175 334 1 3488 3619 3735 3443 3628 3794 3942 4073 3702 3906 4090 4254 4401 3953 4176 4377 4558 4719 DEG 15 14 13 12 11 16 15 14 13 12 17 16 15 14 13 18 17 16 15 14 19 18 16 15 14 SDFP DEP/AOJ MILS 104/1.7 91/1.6 81/1.5 73/1.4 66/1.3 114/1.7 100/1.6 89/1.5 80/1.4 73/1.3 123/1.6 109/1.5 97/1.4 87/1.3 79/1.2 132/1.6 1 1 7 / i .5 104/1.4 94/1.3 85/1.2 141/1 . 6 125/1.4 111/1,4 100/1.3 91/1.2 14w1.5 132/1.4 11w1.3 107/1.2 97/1.1 108/1.8 94/1.7 83/1.6 73/1.5 66/1.4 115/1.8 100/1.7 88/1.6 79/1.5 71/1.4 122/1.7 107/1.6 94/1.5 84/1.5 75/1.3 129/1.7 113/,l.6 99/.1.5 89/'1.4 80/'1.3 136/.1.7 1i Q / ' l . 6 WIND CORRECTION FACTORS H/T CROSS DRIFT M I L S / K l ' FT/KT .4 .4 .3 .3
6
500
6
6
650
5
5
5 7 7
.2
.5
.4 .3 .3 .3
600
450 500
550 600
6
6
650
5
700 450 500 550 600 650 450 500 550 600 650 450
6 8
7 7 7 7 8 8 8
.5
.4 .3 .3 .3
800
.5
.4 .4 .3 .3 .5 .4 .4
8
8
900
500
550 600 650
9
9
9
8
.3
.3
8
10
1000
600
650 10
20 19 17 16 15
21 19 18 1 '7
16
.5
.4 .4 .3 .3
io
9 9
9
6 6 6 6 5
800
.6 .5
.5
.4 .4
.6 .6
io
900
3045 450 3217 500 550 3370 ~~. 3506 600 3625 650 450
21 20 19 18 17
.5
.4 .4 .7 .6
7 7 6
6
6 8 7 7 7 6 8
10
1000
500 550
600
650 10
3295 3488 3660 3813 3949 3535 3748 3939 4110 4261 3767 4000 4209 4397 4564
22
21 19 18 17 23 21 20 19 18 24 22 21 19 19
.5
.4
.4
1100
450
.7
.6 .5 .4 .4
500
550
8
8 7 7
600 650
io
1200
450
500
550
.7 .6
9
9 8
8
105/'1.5
93/l.4 84/1.3
.5
.5 .4
600
650
E SINGLE
PAS
hFE ESCAPE/SAIE
~
SEPARATION
DONBS
- UIP
ux
- 12 __ 5 E I . I
10 75
UIN nEL ALT IUPACT PACINQ FEET HIN REL ALT PEET FEET
E
SET INTV
YOTS
- - - - -EET SEC
- - __ __ 520 480 420 390 380 770 750 710 690 700 5.13 4.90 4.55 4.38 4.33 4.77 4.55 4.25 4.05 4.00 4.74 4.56 4.23 4.09 4.01 4.77 4.50 4.29 4.13 4.08 4.78 4.51 4.32 4.10 4.11 590 540 480 440 410 23 25 28 30 32 17 18 19 20 20 720 640 570 510 490
REL ALT
!IHE OF ALL
USEC
450 500 550 600 650 450 500 550 600 650 450 500
197 178 162 148 141 251 235 222 213 206 304 290 279 276 212 351 342 336 334 318 397 395 392 396 398
a sa
840 790 770 770 1180 1190 1160 1150 1170 1500 1530 1510 1510 1580 1820 1870 1900 1910 1970
10
550
600
1070 1080 1040 1050 1070 1380 1410 1390 1410 1460 1680 1720 1730 1770 1830
11 14 14 14 15
11 11 11 11 12
9 9 9 9 9
1590 1580 1500 1490 1130 1180 2200 1140 1100 2660 2740 1800 2810 2740
141
188 183 180 179 178
11810 2730 2760 2800 2700 2590 1410 3*80 3570 3570 3520
20
(50
500 550 600 650
-- -
62
of the weapon delivery portion of mission planning, analysts initiated the development of the first MWDP. This program, in essence, adapted mainframe weapon delivery algorithm used in the generation of data in Dash 34 To's to a microcomputer platform. The program was written in the BASIC programming language and was released to the field in the summer of 1083. The program allows aircrews to select an aircraft maneuver and weapon for release from a menu of available databases. The program then allows for computation of the appropriate maneuver entry points (location, altimde, and time) for successful ballistics employment and informs the aircrew of any modifications necessary to the planned flight profile to ensure safe escape. The general goal of reducing the amount of time and individual references a pilot needs to accomplish weaponsdelivery planning exceeded expectations. The MWDP enables the aircrew to select maneuvers based on empirical aircraft performance information and to quickly utilize pre-computed ballistic and safe escape tables. This information is taken from data sources produced in support of Dash 34 To's. One MWDP limitation that was quickly identified was the burden imposed upon the significantly less powerful hardware platform (8-bit and 16-bit microprocessors) by the computation of store trajectories. However, this limitation was satisfactorily overcome by development of a variable step-size integration algorithm. Other limitations imposed by target hardware platforms impacted the relative ease in which databases could be modified and updated. The program has been enhanced and improved for several years and is now standardized by the USAF on Zenith 248 microcomputers.
0
Work is currently underway for the development of a new MWDP rhat will offer even further enhancements. In 1986, analysts at Eglin were requested by the Tactical Air Command PAC) to develop a weapon delivery capability for a new automated tactical mission planning system, MSS. This system is best described as the first organized, dedicated initiative on the part of TAC to develop a standard mission planning capability for all USAF combat aircraft. The MSS Weapon Delivery Module (WDM) effort was subsequently initiated as a separate and distinct software development program from the MWDP discussed earlier. The hardware platform was a CrornemcoiUNIX syStem, which is a minicomputer platform offering
63
considerably higher performance and capacities than the previous microcomputer platforms. This system was a dramatic departure from the platforms that the MWDP had executed on previously. The system configuration roughly corresponded to the MWDP. Initially, the program was converted from BASIC to PASCAL programming language, which is a more sophisticated and higher-level language. This translation was necessary to meet requirements regarding common USAF programming standards, While this conversion was taking place, modifications to the program logic were being made to accommodate a parallel flight planning capability development effort underway by TAC. This work was performed over a period of several years, with considerable improvement in the capabilities of the program being accomplished simultaneously. The capabilities of the current WDM include: the ability to perform ballistic calculations for single bomb or ripple releases based upon level, dive, loft/toss, and pop-up delivery profiles; the ability to calculate safe escape data for level and dive deliveries; and the ability to calculate CBU patterns. In addition to supplying improved functionality over the original microcomputer version in these areas, the WDM also incorporates the latest ripple safe escape data and store separation coefficient information, fuze timing capabilities, and an easy-to-use, text-based madmachine interface. The reader may be interested in Reference 20, which contains a complete description of the computerized weapon planning software.
The madmachine interface of this system will probably follow current engineering workstation platforms in supplying a single, high-resolution monitor which displays all textual and graphic information on the same screen, and a keyboard and mouse for the input and manipulation of data significant to mission planning. Several capabilities have been identified that will probably find 1 their way into the MSS 1 1 configurations. These configurations include: (1)Refinement of aircraft flight path computations to more accurately support safe escape and ballistic issues (2) Refinement of store ballistics trajectory computations (potentially resorting to the use of very high-fidelity 6DOF simulation algorithms) (3) Application of sophisticated, intelligent computations surrounding safe escape to support the capability of programmatic analysis of delivery options to allow alternativehmproved safe escape criteria (4) Complete encapsulation of weapon delivery planning with a what-if analysis capability so that pilots may easily implore the modification of weapon delivery parameters to support miscellaneous employment constraints, such as threat factors) (5)Support for guided weapons (6)Radical improvements in the madmachine interface to make weapon delivery mission planning easier and more intuitive. Whiie the details of MSS III are not finalized, the objectives of the system are clearly to provide
pilots with an enhanced capability to efficiently plan combat missions in an increasingly complex environment.
10.4 FutureMSS
In recent years, significant advances have been made in tactical systems, especially with the introduction of the F-15E fighter and similar sophisticated aircraft and weapon systems. These advances have provided a tremendous impetus for improved mission planning systems. In both software and hardware, aircraft and weapon systems are leading the development of capable mission planning systems. In response to this situation, thirdgeneration mission planning capability (MSS m)is under development. The system will probably include flight planning, penetration aids, weapon delivery planning, real-time data-gathering capability (threat information), and the like. This system will probably use large optical media devices to provide storage and on-line access to databases that essentially contain all the information currently stored in technical orders.
The future of mission planning and, in particular, weapons delivery is on the threshold of entering an entirely new domain of extremely sophisticated, integrated scenarios. The future will undoubtedly see these systems being interwoven with theaterlevel battle management systems and high-volume, satellite information sources. It also seems likely that in an effort to provide unparalleled support for flexible weapon delivery pIanning, the systems flight and balance algorithms, in the form of complex software packages, will be incorporated into an MSS III. This incorporation would allow complete and extremely high-quality simulation capability, conceivably to the point of simulating the combined trajectories of all aircraft, weapons, and submunitions in a rigorous computational
64
description of the entire air-to-surface environment. While this arrangement may sound unachievable, i f is possible with today's hardware and software technology to construct platforms capable, at least in terms of "raw" computing capability, of doing exactly this type of simulation. In addition to the outright capabilities of such systems, we can expect to see madmachine interface becoming equally sophisticated. Judging from the likely initial operational capability of such a system, it is probable that pilots will communicate with the system using voice, true three-dimensional stereoscopic projection systems, and physical manipulation methods (such as light pens, joysticks, and mice). On an even broader horizon, it is likely that, with the growing integration of weapon system and aircraft avionics, weapon planning systems will probably become mandatory components in all onboard combat aircraft computer systems, including support simulation platforms.
The mission summary is the day-byday working tool of the test engineers and analysts.
65
Another use for the INS input data is for an analytical evaluation of system accuracy after the fnl ia ballistics equations are identified. Given that a weapon is released at point A, it will impact at point B consistently except for a small ballistics dispersion. The only difference a change in drag coefficients or the addition of separation effects is going to have is a change in weapon range and time-of-fall. When these changes are the case, one can analytically model on a mainframe, using the avionics inputs and updated drag coefficients or separation effects, what the sight-picture would have been had the OFP used the updated data. The results should then be compared with follow-up OFP accuracy testing and be included in the accuracy database for increased precision in estimating system capabilities. In the case where an old weapon is being added to a new aircraft, separation-effects testing or freestream ballistic testing can be used for accuracy assessment if the pipper placement is recorded. This is especially true for older weapons which have a large database for freestream ballistic development and a rigid-wing, slow-speed airframe. Experience has shown that,
in this case, release disturbance is highly unlikely to be a major factor in trajectory modeling.
In summary, it is highly encouraged that all possible information such as aircraft TSPI, weapon TSPI, INS inputs, and HUD video he collected when conducting ballistics testing. This procedure allows the use of data in a multitude of different applications and will ultimately result in lower total system development cost than piece-meal testing with data being collected to satisfy only one test objective at one time.
13.0 CONCLUSION
Until recent years, the techniques for performing ballistics analyses/testing have not changed appreciably. Now, however, every day seems to herald new technical advances that touch every aspect of this subject. It is earnestly hoped that publication of this volume will be of value in introducing the reader to this most important subject and stimulating reader contributions that enhance/enlarge the documented database for all to share.
66
REFERElVCES
1. Borden, William A,, "The Bombing of Industrial Plants," Armv O r c l w , The Journal of the Army Ordnance Association, Vol I, No. 3, Nov-Dec, 1920.
13. Richey, V. Scott (Maj) and McCurdy, Ron, "Precision Location Strike System Error Analysis," October, 1984 (unpublished memo).
14. Draft Ballistic Accuracv Verification, -P AFSCISK.
2. Loring, E. J., "Airplane Bombing," & Ordnance, The Journal of the Army Ordnance Association, Vol 11, No. 7, Jul-Aug, 1921. 3. Aircraft Armament Notes, "Ballistics of Bombs," Armv Ordnance, The Journal of the Army Ordnance Association, Jan-Mar, 1921.
4. Sams, William C., Capt, Air Corps,
15. Store Drae Estimation Method. Analvst Manual. Program KDEM, Orlando Technology, Incorporated, 1990.
16. zeparation Effects Estimation Method of Freefall Ballistic Weaoons. Program SEEM. Analyst Manual, Orlando Technology, Incorporated, 1990.
17. Ballistic Error Assessment Model. Vols I & 11, Analyst Manual and Aooendices. Program BEAM, Orlando Technology, Incorporated, 1990.
18. T.O. 1-1M-34. Aircrew Weaoons Delivery Manual, (Nonnuclear). Standard Volume. A-7, A-10. F-4, F-15. F-16. F/FB-111 Series Aircraft, 15 Feb 1986. 19. MSS I and MSS I1 Users Manual. Coik d Weauon Planning Software, 3246th e TestWing/TYD, Eglin AFB, Florida, 6 October 1989. 20. Olive, C.O., ADTC-TR-76-92, Test of the Production Engineering Program GBU-1OCIB - GBU-12BIB Laser Guided Bombs, July and 1976. 21. AGARD Conference Proceedings on Guidance and Control of Precision Guided W e e held in Geilo. Norwav 3-6 Mav 1988, A.D No. C073899, AGARD Report-CP-435-SUPI'L. 22. Advances in Air-Launched Weauon Guidance and Control. Proceedings of the Guidance and Control SvmDosium held in Athens. Greece 5-8 - a w , AD No. A194Cj8, AGARD-CPM 431.
Attack
5. Metz, David R., "Dive Bombing Between the Wars," The Airpower Historian, Vol XII, No. 3, Jul, 1988.
6. Maurer, Maurer, Aviation in the U.S. Arme 1919-1939, Office of Air Force History, United States Air Force, Washington, D.C., 1987.
7. Hardigg, W. B., "Bombing the Alabama," Armv Ordnance, The Journal of the Army Ordnance Association, Nov-Dec, 1921. 8. Davis, Dale M., "Accurate Delivery and Large Bombs," Unpublished Technical Memorandum, Air Force Armament Laboratory, Jun, 1982.
9. Kohn. Richard H. and Harahan., Joseuh P..,Air -Interdiction in World War 11. Korea and Vietnam, Office of Air Force Historv. United States Air Force, Washington, D.C., 1986.
I
10. Gonzales, J. M. and Danny, A.R., Lt, WAF, Theoretical Sensitivitv knalvsis and System Delivery Accuracy Comuutations for High and Low Drav Weaoons at Several Subsonic and Supersonic Delivery Conditions, AFATL-TR70-1 10, Air Force Armament Laboratory, Eglin AFB, Florida, October, 1970.
11. Arnold, R. J. and Epstein, C. S . , AGARD Flight Test Techniaues Series Volume 5 on Store Separation Flight Testing, AGARD-AG300-Vol 5, April, 1986.
12. Nowak, Raymond, Statistical Analvsis of Weauon Imoact Data, TM-78-4SK. Naval Air Test Center, Patuxent River MD, 12 May 1978.
67
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Aircraft Armament Division Notes, "Bombs, Bomb Sights, and Bomb Racks", Armv Ordnance, The Journal of the Arm Ordnance Association, Vol I, No. 6, May-Jun 19 1.
Ballistics Technoloev Review, AD No. 521847, July 72. Range Cauabilities Handbook, Edwards AFB, California. Technical Facilities. Volume I. Range Instrumentation Svstems and Technical SUUDOI?Facilities, Deputate for Technical Support, Armament Division, Eglin AFB, Florida, October, 1988.
Ewell, Arthur W., "Testing Aircraft Bombs," Armv Ordnance, The Journal of the Army Ordnance Association, Jul-Aug 1922. Farrar, C. L. & Leeming, 0. W., Brossevs Battlefield Weauons Svstems & Technoloev. Volume X: Militarv Ballistics - A Basic Manual, Royal Military College of Science, Shriverham, UK. Lavalle, A. J. C., Major, USAF, Aimower and the 1972 Sorinp Invasion, USAF Southeast Asia Monograph Series, Volume 11, Monograph 3, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 1976. Mew, D. R., The O u s t for a Surgical Strike: The United States Air Force and Laser Guided Bombs, Oftice of History, Armament Division, Eglin AFB, Florida, 1987.
~
,& a
Deoutate for Technical Suuuort. Armament Divis i h , Eglin AFB, Florida, Okober 1987.
I chni & Handbooks, (61JTCG/ME-1-2), 1 September 1989.
T.O. 1F-16A-34-1-1 and -2, Nonnuclear Weaoons Deliverv Manual. F-l6A/B, 3 March 1986 and 30 June 1986.
CRC Handbook of Mathematics, 73 Edition. Mathematical Statistics, 2nd Edition, John Freund, 1971.
Methods, Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment, Boscombe Down, FTR/OK/54/81 AVWG, 1982. GE Ammunition Assessment Manual. Bombs, BWB-WM VI 2, Wehrlechnische Dienststelle fur Waffen und Munition, 1989. Stores Certification. Svstems Phase, Volume 111, "Chapter 8". USAF Test Pilot School, Edwards Harris, Charles A., Captain, USAF, Avionics Svstem Comuatibilitv. A New Comuonent of weapons Svitem/Stores Comoatibility WEAPENGlA-m, Royal Australian Air F'orce, 14 November 1989. Harris. Charles A.. Caotain. USAF. Gravitv Weauin DeliVeN AicuraG, , WEAPENGl A-AF, Royal Australian Air Force, 27 November 1989. U L J k , McDonnell Aircraft Company, McDonnell Douglas Corporation. Stehl, Robert P., Tactical Fiphter Ouerational Flight Program IF-16) Follow-On Ouerational Test and Evaluation, "Annex A, Block 15S2," AD No. B116200L, August 1987.
APPENDIX A
QUESTIONS ON BALLISTIC ANALYSES AND TESTING WITH RESPONSES FROM CANADA, FRANCE, AND GERMANY
A-2
2. How are ballistic accuracy requirements established? Presumably, these are established by the military. Specifically, what is the process by which criteria are established for a given store to impact a given distance from the intended target? What is the criteria?
3. Once accuracy requirements are established, what are the demonstration criteria and how are
the criteria established? For example, once the military specifies an accuracy criteria, how many stores are required to be released against a target during a test program to establish statistical confidence as to the results?
4. Who specifies aircraft/store configurations to be tested and aircraft release parameters? Does the military determine this or is this left to the discretion of the test organization? For example, if there is a requirement to establish accuracy for a MK 82 bomb from an F-16, and there are dozens of configurations involved (e.g., with and without fuel tanks, ECM pods, multiple or single carriage, etc.), who decides what the release envelope to be tested should be? For example, should stores be released at multiple aircraft dive angles and at all airspeedslaltitudes that are authorized? This would take a lot of stores!
5. Provide a brief synopsis of the types of aircraft and stores used by your nation for which ballistic
analysis and testing is required and performed, For example, do aircraft have optical sights and/or weapon delivery computers? Are stores generally of the iron bomb type (non-functioning) or do they have functioning fins or other functioning parts that affect ballistic analyses and testing?
6. Summarize ground and airborne test requirements/capabilities to support ballistic analyses and flight testing. For example, how do you track aircraft to obtain exact release conditions/position and how do you pinpoint store impact coordinates? What type of ground cameras are used (frame rate and other technical characteristics)? Describe your overall range procedures for ballistic testing (e.g., procedures for various data sources). Are smoothing procedures used for time-space-positioninformation (TSPI)? What are your camera requirements? What are your data format requirements? What are your telemetry requirements?
7. Describe pretest preparations. For example, are store mass properties determined? Are aircraft boresighted (and if so, how regularly)? Are cameras and other equipment calibrated (and if so, what equipment)?
8. Are aircrews given any special procedures to follow during ballisticls flight testing? If so, what are they (and why were they derived)?
A-3
9. Describe your ballistic analysis and prediction tools/codes. Are you satisfied with their results?
10. When stores do not hit their intended targets, what do you do about it? Accept results? What are considered to he sources of error for stores not hitting their intended targets?
Once the weapon freestream ballistics have been derivedlverifid, do you have any further analysis (is., in support of overall system accuracy assessment)? 11. Provide examples as to how ballistics data is provided to aircrews. 12. What improvements do you plan to make in the coming years to improve ballistic analysis/prediction tools, range capabilities, aircraft instrumentation capabilities, etc.? 13. Have you had any particular problems in the area of ballistic analysis and testing that you would care to discuss? 14. Once requirements are defined, how are ballistic flight test programs developed? Specifically, who developed the test matrix and how is it developed? 15. Is ballistics data ever gathered in conjunction with a store separation test program? 16. Clarify the role of the military and industry in ballistic analyses and flight testing. For example, does the military/government perform all work or is part of (or all) work performed by industry?
17. What portion, if any, of ballistics-related analysis and testing is classified? If classified, what is your classification level?
18. Can a list of references be provided on the subject covered by the AGARD report being prepared? It would be most helpful to obtain a copy of those reports which are considered to be especially informative in describing your nation's capabilities in the subject area.
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A recent reorganization within the air weapons section of NDHQ allowed the CF to now have full-time personnel working on CF air weapon ballistics and to provide configuration control of CF air weapons ballistics activities.
AETE was then tasked by NDHQ to act as the CF source of engineering excellence, with respect to air weapon ballistics, to support the NDHQ air weapon bdlistics personnel. This tasking is a standing project which tasks on a continuing basis. AETE ballistic engineers have established air weapon validation and accuracy procedures for Canadian 2.75-inch rockets (CRV-7) and practice bombs. 2. How are ballistic accuracy requirements established? These requirements are established by CF operational and technical staffs. In establishing an aircraft weapon delivery system accuracy, direct and indirect limitations must be considered. Direct limitation could be errors in the aircraft sight setting, aiming errors, and angle-of-attack errors. Indirect limitations such as the accuracies of the attitude indicator, the altimeter, and the wind corrections must also be considered. Also the human factor is considered with respect to how close to the desired release conditions the pilot will, on average, release the weapon.
3. Once accuracy requirements are established, what are the demonstration criteria and how are the criteria established?
For verification and validation of the CRV-7 rockets ballistic algorithms, an accuracy requirement of
2.0 mils between predicted and actual impact points is required by CF operational and technical staffs. The sample size required to validate ballistic algorithms is not constant, and the method used to determine this sample size is described in the AETE Technical Memorandum No. 545. Once a weapon ballistic algorithm has been validated, the overall accuracy of this weapon when released from different types of aircraft must be estimated and validated. To estimate an aircraft weapon system overall accuracy when releasing a specific weapon, circular error probable (CEP) values are determined within 20 percent of their true values with a 95-percent confidence level. This means that at least 47 independent statistically successful weapon releases are necessary to achieve such an estimation. Once this specific aircraftlweapon CEP has been estimated, the number of test points required to validate it is calculated following the procedure outlined in the AETE Technical Memorandum No. 597. In short, a test of hypothesis approach is followed to ensure the weapon system meets the
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claimed accuracy. This means each case under consideration may require a different number of weapon releases to establish the correctness of the estimation. 4. Who specifies aircraftlstore configurations to be tested and aircraft release parameters? NDHQ operational and technical staffs specify aircraft/store configurations to be tested and release parameters to AETE via flight test Project Directives. Normally, releases are conducted at numerous points in the weapon-release envelope in order to best cover this envelope. As well, all wing stations may be used to release the weapons and to study weapons trajectories after launch. Weapons are also released under selected dive angle, altitude, and airspeed conditions. As an example, for the production of MK 82 bomb delivery tables from the CF-5, an extensive flight trials program was conducted where 150 bombs were dropped in high and low drag configurations. The bombs were dropped at each of four selected combinations of dive angle, altitude, and airspeed from the centerline and the four wing pylon stations. 5. Brief synopsis of the types of aircraft and stores used by Canada for which ballistic analysis and testing is required and performed The CF fighter aircraft that carry weapons are the CF-18 and the CF-5; both aircraft have optical sights and the CF-18 has an integrated fire control system. These fighters are cleared for the following CF air-to-ground weapons: MK 82 LD and HD (Snakeye), MK 20, BL-755, and CRV-7 (C-14 and C15 versions). These aircraft are also cleared to employ other weapons that are not in Canadian inventory. The CF-18 computer system contains all the ballistic data needed to release these weapons. The CF has manual ballistic tables for all weapons cleared on the CF-5, and for the BL-755 and CRV7 for the CF-18. However, CF-18 BL-755 manual ballistic tables have not been verified.
6 . Summarize ground and airborne test requirementsleapabilities to support ballistic analyses and flight testing.
The phototheodolite tracking system is normally the primary data acquisition source used by the CF at AETE. Of the nine Contraves Model F phototheodolites available at AETE, five are normally used to track the aircraft and stores. Data from a minimum of three phototheodolite sites are required for a solution, but five are used to allow for equipment or tracking failures. The phototheodolites are all synchronized and are normally run at 30 frames/second. The azimuth, elevation, IRIG B time code and tracking error are read from each film and are computed to produce time-space-positioninformation. No smoothing of the phototheodolite data is necessary to produce TSPI, but five-point moving arc smoothing is applied to the computed TSPI if velocity or acceleration is to be derived. High speed (400 frames per second) motion picture cameras (IPL photosonics) might be used as well as over-the-shoulder cameras in single-seat CF-18 to record the Head Up Display (HUD).
The following information on the instrumentation used by AETE to support ballistic analysis is also provided:
a. A pickle-tone generator is actuated by the weapon release button and a UHF signal is transmitted to all instrumentation systems for correlation purposes; b. Telemetry is used to give a backup source of aircraft parameters at release, which are also displayed in real time at a ground station, to assist in the conduct of the test; c. Radar is used to generate coarse TSPI as a backup to the phototheodolites and also as an input to the ground station CRT situation display. The test aircraft are normally equipped with C Band transponders for radar tracking, but the aircraft can be skin-tracked with a lesser certainty of maintaining lock; and d. Meteorological data are acquired by tethersodes or radiosondes, just before or after the test flights
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and normally from the ground to the release altitude at intervals specified by the AETE Project Officer. These data are used for ballistic wind corrections and the calculation of true airspeed.
7. Pretest preparations
A weight and balance check of large stores is always performed by AETE prior to flight testing to ensure center of gravity location, weight, and moments of inertia are within the tolerances specified in MIL-STD-1763. Smaller stores, such as Modular Practice Bombs (MPB's) and rockets, are not checked. None of the measurements are entered into ballistic algorithms when comparing actual and predicted trajectories. Prior to accuracy test flights, the gunsight is harmonized. If aircraft-mounted cameras were to be used (normally they are not), they would be calibrated using a grid board prior to the start of testing.
8. Are aircrews given any special procedures to follow during ballistics flight testing?
For ballistic validation flight tests conducted at AETE, the aircraft is flown at specified conditions (dive angle, airspeed, height above target) and as long as it is in a fairly stabilized profile prior to release, the test point is accepted. As AETE is not concerned with hitting a "target" on ballistic missions, any stable release condition is acceptable. Prior to calculations by the AETE Project Officer, the data are subjected to a normality test as all assumptions are based on having a normally distributed population.
10. When stores do not hit their intended targets, what do you do about it?
AETE conducts flight testing for the CF and produces a report for NDHQ. These reports describe the flight test procedures and contain results plus recommendations. Based on these reports, NDHQ decides the actions to be taken in order to improve the results. When flight tests are conducted to establish air weapon ballistic characteristics, AETE engineers do not consider if the weapons bit the target. Once the weapon ballistic characteristics are determined and introduced in its trajectory-predicting algorithm, failure of the weapon to fall within an acceptable distance of the target will be investigated for pilot aiming and aircraft sensor inputs to the mission computer.
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For "smart" aircraft like the CF-18, the information is contained as algorithms in the aircraft mission computer and ballistic tables are used as a backup in case of a mission computer failure and for training purposes only. 12. Planned improvements to improve ballistic methodology The first and immediate improvement planned by the CF is the accuracy of CF-5 and CF-18 rocket ballistics tables and codes. Also the CF has to update the CF-18 mission computer with the most recent store physical and aerodynamic input data. It is planned to improve the 2DOF and 6DOF computer programs currently in use in the CF by providing aircrew with more accurate wind correction factors. 13. Particular problems in the area of ballistic analysis and testing The main problem encountered by the CF was the absence of full-time personnel as air weapon ballistics OPI. This delayed the normal evolution and development of a Canadian ballistics methodology.
14. Once requirements are defined, how are ballistic flight test programs developed?
As discussed previously, NDHQ tasks AETE with a Project Directive which details the objectives of the flight tests. Considering these directives, AETE develops the ballistic flight test program and test matrix according to their resources and experience. 15. Are ballistics data ever gathered in conjunction with a store separation test program? The CF often gathers ballistic data in conjunction with a store separation program. It was done for the MK 82 bombs and for the CRV-7 rockets for the CF-5 aircraft. However, normally stores clearance safe separation data have priority over ballistic data.
16. Clarify the role of the military and industry in ballistic analyses and flight testing.
In the CF, all the flight testing is performed by the military at AETE. With respect to the ballistic analyses, all work is normally performed by the Department of National Defence (DND). However, in some exceptional cases, industry performs ballistic analyses for the CF. As an example, Hunting Engineering Ltd P E L ) has been contracted lately to produce BL-755 manual ballistic tables based on flight test trials conducted by the CF. The reason for this contract award to industry was that the BL-755 bomb is a two-phase weapon type and that the CF does not possess an accurate mathematical model to predict impact points of BL-755 bomblets. 17. What portion, if any, of ballistics-related analysis and testing is classified? Currently, computer programs to calculate stores trajectories, all the input data to run this program, as well as manual ballistic tables are not classified. The only classified material on ballistic-related analysis is the material which contain CEP results of actual live firinglrelease of stores. This material is classified either CONFIDENTIAL or SECRET.
18. References
A general reference document on Canadian air weapon ballistics that we can recommend was published by DREV in Canada under The Technical Cooperation Program (TTCP) and titled Comuendium of Ballistic Table Methodolo&$. This compendium was written by Mr. B. Cheers and Mr. J.F. Teague and could be found in file: 36212-003 under DREV Memorandum 2846/87, July 1987. Twenty copies of this compendium were sent to Dr. D. Daniel, AFATL Eglin AFB, U.S. National Leader, WTP-2.
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AETE engineers have recently produced two technical memorandums to standardize air weapons ballistic procedures within the CF organizations. Draft copies of these technical memorandums were passed to 3246 Test Wing TYD Ballistics Branch on 13 September 1989 for information. The following are the references of these technical memorandums: a. AETE Technical Memorandum No. 595, A Procedure to Validate Rocket Ballistic Tables, b. AETE Technical Memorandum No. 597, A Procedure to Estimate and Validate Weauon Acc-.
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Answer 1
Not much can be said about the history of bomb ballistics in Germany before 1945 since only a few documents are available and bomb ballistics is only a side issue in textbooks. With the buildup of the German Federal Air Force and the introduction of U.S. weapon systems (F-84, F86), the ballistic documents of the USAF were adopted too. Our efforts did not begin before the procurement of conventional weapons for the weapon systems F-104G and Fiat G-91 in the late sixties. The responsibility for bomb ballistics was assigned to Engineering Center 91 (E-91) which was also responsible for the testing of air-dropped ammunition. Since then, release clearance trials have been carried out on the site of E-91 using aircraft of Engineering Center 61 (Manching) and of the Federal Air Force. In the field of bomb ballistics, use could be made of ballistics for artillery, anti-tank and air defense guns where similar trajectory models are used. Additional information in evaluation methods and model philosophy became available during development and procurement of Cluster Bomb BL-755 (produced by Hunting). The evaluation methods were modified and refined during the years in order to achieve the highest possible precision using simple ballistic models.
Answers 2 and 3
Since the Federal Air Force has so far not commissioned the development of any new bombs, such as the MK 82 type, no specific ballistic accuracy requirements have been formulated. So far, the military have only established accuracy requirements for the overall system (sensors, ballistics, and aircrew). For level or dive bombing, the system accuracy is given as relative accuracy in milliradians; for loft deliveries, it is given in meters or feet.
The ballistic accuracy or the ballistic dispersion is essentially determined by the release behavior and the free-flight phase. For multistage systems barachute-retarded bombs, cluster bombs, runway-denial bombs), the time tolerances for the actuation of the various stages must also be considered. It is the task of the ballistics engineer to develop suitable ballistic models which describe the release behavior and the free-flight phase as accurately as possible over the entire operational range. The ballistic model can then be used to establish the ballistic dispersion which will be either accepted or rejected. Importance should be attached to the requirement that the ballistic dispersion and the errors of the sensors and of the aircrew are reasonably balanced.
The number of releases is often determined by the procurement cost for inert bomb bodies, since the dropping of live ammunition is prohibited in Meppen. As an example, no more than 25 bombs are available for trials with a five-bomb configuration vornado), which must cover everything, even the determination of minimum ripple intervals. Of course, this is not enough for a reliable statistical statement. On the other hand, training bombs are available in sufficient numbers.
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Answer 4
The store configurations to be tested are specified by the military. Normally there is a standard test configuration for each bomb type. Experience shows that it is not necessary to test all configurations, particularly since the aircraft computers often use only one ballistic model for one bomb type. The airspeed is the main release parameter which is subject to variation. Release angle and altitude are selected from a tactical point of view. Because of the possible different release behavior, separate trials are conducted for loft deliveries.
Answer 5
High-explosive bomb MK 82 with retarder system BSU 49 B is to be adapted to all weapon systems. Delivery trials using runway denial bombs BAP 100 and Durandal have been completed for the F-4F. Furthermore, trials with modified training bombs are being conducted and/or prepared.
Answer 6
Only ground measurement equipment is used in Meppen for the determination of ballistic characteristics. The airborne instrumentation (cameras) is used primarily to record event times like bomb release, actuation of the fins, and opening of the parachute. A telemetry system is not used with bomb delivery trials. Reference: Ammunition Assessment Manual "Bombs" Para. 2.7.1 Measurement Requirements during Release Trials
Answer 7
Determination of the mass properties and of the bomb center of gravity falls under pre-flight test preparations. In addition, colored markers are added to establish the number of revolutions and to ensure identification during ripple releases. Calibration of the airborne instrumentation is performed by Engineering Center 61 (WTD 61) in Manching.
Answer 8
There are no special procedures for aircrews. They are responsible for meeting the release requirements.
Answer 9
The ballistic analysis tools used in Meppen have proved valuable for the determination of ballistic characteristics. A detailed description is given in paragraph 2.7 "Determination of Ballistic Characteristics" of the Ammunition Assessment Manual "Bombs". Under the heading of "Preliminary Remarks", this paragraph also contains a comment on the prediction tools used by industry.
Answer 10 We are often confronted with this problem. System engineers and aircrews often tend to blame delivery errors on the ballistics engineers. Of course, miss distances caused by faulty ballistics are possible. For example, one of our weapon systems experienced problems with training bomb BDU 33, the
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characteristics of which were determined in level deliveries and the bomb subsequently used for loft deliveries. Such errors can only be found if the complete system is investigated, and the sensor errors and ballistics errors are dealt with separately. Some of the miss distances can be explained with the poor state of the bombs themselves: We found, for example, sand and wood debris instead of the specified filling in inert bombs MK 82, used for system tests. Due to the changed mass distribution, these bombs showed a different pendulum behavior which, in turn, led to higher drag. Short throws were the result. Great delivery errors, in particular with training bombs, are often caused by bent fins. Despite the availability of support in the form of sensors and onboard computers, the aircrews have produced the greatest errors with in-service weapon systems. Only thorough training will remedy this problem.
Answer 11
The ballistic data are handed over to the aircrew in the form of ballistic tables, the format of which essentially corresponds to that of the USAF. The aircrews have indirect access to the ballistic data via the onboard computer.
Answer 12
WTD 91 is planning to improve, in the coming years, its external ballistic measurement capabilities (cinetheodolites) which will afford greater flexibility for the planning of bomb delivery trials. An upgrade of the analysis tools is intended. The use of prediction models will be reserved for industry.
Answer 13
Unfortunately, very few persons in West Europe are studying bomb ballistics. However, a number of model and analysis philosophies do exist. It would be useful if these model philosophies were discussed and standardized by a working group as has already been achieved within NATO for artillery ballistics.
Answer 14
The flight test program (test matrix) is normally prepared by a ballistics expert and a trials engineer. The release conditions are determined by the tactical requirements, although they should, at the same time, cover the entire release area. Since the number of actual releases is often very small, a lot of experience is needed to select the proper trials conditions. A formal procedure does not exist.
Answer 15
The ballistic trials will, whenever possible, be conducted together with release trials for cost reasons.
Answer 16
Due to the organization of the GE MOD Armament Division, the conduct and analysis of the trials belong to the responsibilities of civilian personnel. The GE Air Force provides the jump-off base. Normally, industry is not involved in the analysis of test data.
Answer 17
Ballistic data are only classified "VS-Nur fur den Dienstgebrauch" (equivalent US Restricted).
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Answer 18
1. B W B - W M I V 6 Handbuch der Munitionsbewertung "Bomben" 1988 (Ammunition Assessment Manual "Bombs") 2. Ballistisches Institut der Luftkriegsakademie Formelsammlung zur Bombenballistik 1941 (Ballistic Institute of the Air Warfare Academy, Collection of Formulas for Bomb Ballistics)
3. WTD 91 Arbeitsbereich Flugbahnvermessung un Telemetrie Aufgabenbeschreibung und Gerateausstattung 1985 (WTD 91 Trajectory Tracking and Telemetry Division Terms of Reference and Equipment Allotment)
H. Nie
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1.2 How We Do
a. and b. as in 1.1 c. Wind tunnel tests for safe separation tests Presently only store behavior respective to aircraft is analyzed. These tests are meant to demonstrate that the delivery process will cause no harm to the aircraft. Since Reynolds numbers of such wind tunnel tests which are used are not proper, modeling of the store behavior in the aircraft aerodynamic field is not derived. d. Tests deliveries with cinetheodolite-derived trajectories
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e. The store is flight tested on testbed aircraft. It is then "qualified," that is, it reputedly fills the development objectives.
f. The store is then adapted to the mission aircraft through two types of flights: - separation tests usually flown over sea in safe conditions - delivery tests to demonstrate the accuracy of the overall system.
- imoact uoint versus actually designed uoint (CEP) for ballistics calculation certification -~
evaluation.
Criteria are:
- impact point with respec; to that point which .the crew tried to designate for overall system
After the development phase, a "government evaluation" takes place. A minimum of 3 to 10 stores are then delivered, depending on the delivery envelope and the store's cost. Afterward, a military experimentation will he conducted by "CEAM" (Centre d'Exp6rimentations Aeriennes Militaire, a service of French Air forces), the result of which are part of the final statistic.
b. Calculations and wind tunnel tests allow for captive flight envelope projection. c. Wind tunnel tests provide data to assedadapt delivery items desired characteristics. Limitations to the separation envelope may he derived. From these tests, generally held by industry in government-owned facilities, flight test programs are derived:
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- Radars for real-time guidance of aircraft (typical accuracy = 15m) - Cinetheodolites (film 3" 5 focal 1000 to 2000mm - 5 to 10 framedsecond. Accuracy: lm at 5-km
range; 5m at 10-km range)
- Film cameras (100 framedsecond) for sequence identification - TV camera for safety monitoring of flights - Film cameras (200 to 400 frameshecond) to determine store dive-angle at impact point of accelerated
stores
- Release cameras (6 to 10 typically): 50 to 100 framedsecond; film 16"; focal: lOmm - HUD color camera: 16 framedsecond; film 16mm; focal: 50" - Acquisition and recording devices to collect flight conditions at release point, and inputs and outputs
of any weapon delivery system device involved (radar, baro altitude, INU) - Time base, synchronizing every instrumentation device
7. Re-Test Preparation:
7.1 Store Preparation:
- Determination
- Boresighting of:
weapon delivery system sensors cameras - Calibration of instrumentation - Identification of delays (system instrumentation)
0
8. Test Procedures:
Special procedures are usually given to:
- achieve the desired test conditions as closely as possible - locate the release point at the optimal point with respect to:
0
Hence, crew actions may occur in unusual (or nonoperational) sequences, using special commands to cope with the testbed aircraft.
10. Errors:
Error sources accounted for:
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- wind variation between release point and target - store manufacturing process deviations - atmosphere deviation from that used in the computers
11. Improvements Forecast:
- Use wind tunnel tests to identify store changes influence from one stage of development to another - Collect more accurate TSPI
-
Modelize the initial release movements of store influence on its future trajectory Develop realtime ground aids to assist the test engineer in his decision process during flights.
- Industry is generally responsible for the development programs and associated tests. - Official testing organization is responsible for certification programs and associated tests. These
combine analytical and operational type tests.
15. Is ballistics data ever gathered i conjunction with a store separation test program? n
17. Classification:
Store effectiveness characteristics and weapon system measured accuracy and its influence on future use by the military are CONFIDENTIAL or SECRET depending on the store and/or the mission.
(18. No Response)
Department of the Air Force Headquarters 3246th Ts Wing (AFSC) et Office for Aircraft Compatibility Eglin Air Force Base, Florida 32542-5000
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This Operating Instruction covers test requirements, data reduction requirements, and factors to be considered in a comprehensive ballistic and Operational Flight Program (OFP) deliver accuracy analysis for unguided non-self-propelled weapons.
1. Test Requirements
a. For a standard ballistic lest, a minimum of three weapons is required for each test point. Normally, one-third of the weapons will be dropped at the maximum speed the aircraft is capable of flying, onethird dropped at the minimum speed, and one-third in the medium range. Normally, weapons will be dropped in level, dive, and loft deliveries. Aircraft loadouts and delivery conditions will be optimized for the user's go-to-war configurations. Consideration should be given to "footprinting" a particular aircraft with inexpensive munitions (e&, BDU-33/B) prior to testing with expensive or scarce assets. For each pass, the following data will be provided:
(1)Aircraft Data
(a) Aircraft type @)Aircraft tail number (c) Complete aircraft loadout (d) Aircraftlrack station associated with each pass for weapons that were released (e) Which OFP block software update is incorporated in the aircraft
(2)Weapon Data
(a) Weapon type (include if item is live or inert) @)Weapon weight associated with each pass for weapons that were released (c) Center of gravity (CG) and moments of inertia (d)Fuze type (if applicable) (e) Fuze setting (time or altitude, and RPM if applicable)
(3) Rack data
(a) Rack type @)Ejection cartridges and orifice settings b. An Operation Flight Program (OFP) delivery accuracy analysis requires, in addition to the data listed above, avionicslsensor data and the pipper location associated with each pass.
(1)Aircraft Sensor Data (Actual Release Parameters from HUD, etc.)
(a) Prior to starting a series of computer-aided releases, the aircraft avionics and weapon delivery system should be recalibrated. A white vertical 16-foot by 16-foot panel with a black cross should be erected as a target marker to facilitate early target acquisition during level and lowangle deliveries (this is also an aid in data reduction). Stabilized flight conditions are to be maintained on each weapon delivery run. Prescribed tolerances for planned release conditions are k50 KTAS, + l o degrees climh/dive, +500 feet MSL, and + O S g's. While pipper placement on the target during bomb release run-in is important, execution of an abrupt maneuver at the last instant before weapon release in an attempt to keep the pipper on the target is to be avoided. Collect the following data from aircraft instruments at the moment of release:
1. Airspeed (KTAS/Mach number) 2. Flight Path Angle (deg) 3. Altitude AGL/MSL (ft) 4. Slant Range to Aim Point (ft) 5. Load Factor (g's)
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6. Dynamic Pressure (Q) 7. Winds at Altitude from INS 8. Delivery Mode 9. Pilot's Inputs to OFP
(2)Pipper (Release)/Weapon (Impact) Location
(a)To facilitate assessment of aim point error from the optical sight camera film or video tape, distinguishable markings surrounding the target are required. The range markings should be concentric about the target center at ro-foot intervals to a distance of 200 feet. Using these procedures, the following distances should then be determined (uprange/short distance is negative, downrange/long distance is positive, cross-range right is positive, and cross-range left is negative): Range Cross-Range ___ __ Weapon Impact Relative to Target (ft) Aim Point pipper) Relative to Target (ft) __ __ Weapon Impact Relative to Aim Point (ft) __
~
a. The aircraft and weapon will be tracked by a minimum of three cinetheodolite cameras operating at a
. 5 black and white film and Integrated Range Instrumentation nominal 30 frames per second with 3 " Group (IRIG) time to provide the following coverage:
(1) Of the aircraft from a minimum of 3 seconds prior to release to as long after release as the aircraft appears on the film of the cinetheodolites tracking the weapon.
(2)Of the weapon from release to either cluster opening, fuze function, or impact (whichever is longest). b. Time of weapon separation from the aircraft will be determined as available from the following data sources: (1)By means of instrumentation installed on racks which either transmit the data to be recorded by ground telemetry systems or from a magnetic tape recorder on the rack with IRIG time with 1millisecond accuracy. (2)By medium-speed tracking cameras on 35" black and white film operating at a nominal 96 frames per second with IRIG time with 5-millisecond accuracy. (3)By the tracking cinetheodolite cameras to within ,0167-second accuracy. Note: This accuracy is acceptable for ballistic computations only when weapons are released at velocities less than or equal to 300 knots. c. Any special event times such as fin opening, chute deployment, chute separation, weapon functioning, and impact will be recorded by the instrumentation described in subparagraph Z.b.(l),(Z), or (3) above to accuracies as stated. Thirty-five-millimeter film will be used to record these data. Color film will be used to record events where color contrast is an occurrence. Otherwise, black and white film will be used. For events requiring timing accuracies higher than those specified above (i.e., 1-millisecond or greater), 1 " cameras operating at nominal frame rates of 1000 frames per second or greater and 6 R I G time may be required. d. Impact times, velocities, and angles for submunitions or a weapon too small to be tracked by cinetheodolites or the medium-speed tracking cameras described above will be determined by CZR-1, fixed Milliken, or similar grid cameras with black and white film and IRIG time.
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(1)For function heights from approximately 500 to 4000 feet, to *lo-foot accuracy, using cinetheodolites and medium-speed tracking cameras (nominal 96 frames per second frame rate) and
3Smm black and white film with IRIG time, the function point will be projected vertically to the range surface. This method is used primarily for determining the fuze function heights of clusters or submunition dispensers.
(2)For function heights from approximately 10 to 50 feet, to 1-foot accuracy, using cinetheodolites and 16mm high-speed cameras (nominal 1000 frames per second frame rate, black and white film and IRIG time), and a flag of known height at the impact points to be photographed post-impact by the cinetheodolites. (3)For function heights of 4 inches to 10 feet, to accuracies of h3-6 inches using 16mm film, highspeed cameras operating at 2000 to 4000 frames per second with color film, and IRIG time. These cameras are mounted on mounts modified to enable these cameras to track in azimuth only. Suitable lenses will be used as necessary to provide the required vertical weapon terminal trajectory coverage. Up to two 2-foot x 8-foot x %-inch colored fuze function height reference panels are located post-impact at the impact points and photographed by these cameras.
(4)If the fuze function is not clearly apparent on the film (that is, as apparent as in the case of a dispenser), the weapon must be modified to provide a clear manifestation of the fuze function, either by the installation of instrumentation such as strobe lights for camera frame rates of over 400 frames per second, or by fuzes with boosters installed in weapons drilled to permit the fuze function explosion products to be evidenced outside the weapon, or the equivalent.
f. Weapon or submunition impact and scoring data: (1)Ground impacts of large weapons such as the MK 82 will be scored (Cor example, with Photo-T/flag) using the near edge of the weapon crater and polar coordinates oriented to the target and to the flightline downrange of the target. (2)For submunitions and other weapons released on grids (separated by item types or dispensers), measurements along track and cross track 1 foot should be oriented to the target to provide the following pattern data: (a) Standard grid coordinate scoring will be used for either the submunition initial or final impact locations. Scoring by initial impact locations may not be practical if the submunitions do not possess sufficient velocity to dent the grid surface. @)Number of items located (c) Number of duds
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range cinetheodolites. The cinetheodolites will operate at a nominal 10 frames per second, recording IRIG time in bursts of approximately 5 seconds each at %-minute intervals. This data will be incorporated into the final reduced ballistics data printouts.
LINE2
# OF POINTS SMOOTHED
LINE3
OUTPUT ORIGIN LATITUDE LONGITUDE H T OF TGT FLIGHTLINE
SOURCE OF RELEASE TIME (dc UHF tone, cameras, cine-t, or a/c rack instrumentation)
GAMMA
PAGE 1
ZULU TIME TIME SINCE RELEASE POSITION COORDINATES (X,Y,Z) VELOCITY COORDINATES WX,VY,VZ) HEIGHT OF TARGET ABOVE MSL
TOTAL VELOC
PAGE 3
TIME SINCE NORMAL ACCEL ACCEL DUE TO DRAG MACH
KLI
DIVE
ANGLE
REL
HORIZ ACCEL
VERT ACCEL
CROSSRANGE ACCEL
DYNAMIC PRESSURE
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a. In the reduction of smoothed data: (1)The line of flight will be aircraft track at release. (2)The origin of the coordinate system will be the target. b. TSPI printouts will be hand-annotated by the organization in charge of the reduction of the cinetheodolite data to indicate events such as fin opening, chute start out and chute completely open, fuze arm and function, etc. c. Impact data will be collected as required.
(1)Plots of impact data will specify the location of each weapon (or submunition) for each release. Plots will be annotated with line-of-flight, release point, and other pertinent parameters.
(a) The mean point of impact (MPI) will be computed either per release for inultiple releases or cumulatively for sequential passes as specified. @)The location of each weapon or submunition will be tabulated with respect to the established coordinate system. The origin of the coordinate system will be the target. (c) For submunitions, impact pattern statistical data (CEP, sigma X, sigma Y) and other parameters will be computed.
d. TSPI will be provided on both magnetic tape and hardcopy outputs as specified in the Test
Directive.
Office for Aircraft Compatibility 3246th Test Wing/TY Eglin Air Force Base, Florida 32542-5000 January 1990
c-2
Freestream K,
The computer program which determines freestream store drag is called K, Estimation Method (KDEM). The program uses an optimal estimation method where the objective or cost function is to minimize the sum of the squares of the residuals between measured and modeled trajectory parameters. Since the 3DOF model is nonlinear with respect to K, (a function of Mach), a linearization about an initial estimate for K, is made and an iterative procedure is used to determine a converged estimate of K,. The details of this mefhod are developed below.
TSPI measurements are coordinates of position and velocity as a function of time. For N measurements or time intervals, a measurement vector, Z, is developed such that
[X Y z x
a'
(1)
The position measurements are X, Y, and Z and the velocity measurements are X, Y , and 2 The . measurement vector is a column matrix where each coordinate measurement is expanded for N measurements. Thus,
The Z matrix is a 6N x 1 (6N rows and 1 column) matrix. The 3DOF equations of motion are used to compute corresponding values for each measurement. These differential equations for the freestream portion of the trajectory are (Coriolis and centripetal acceleration are omitted here but not in KDEM).
f =
f f vx m
d2V -Y
m
(3)
+
Z =
&vz m
where
V d m g
p = air density = total velocity
gravity a.cceleration.
c-3 If the correct KD is used and the measurements are perfect, then
H(KJ
(4)
where H(K,) is a 6N x 1 matrix representing the 3DOF model output for each measurement. However, the correct K, is not known and the measurements are not perfect. Thus, Z = H(KJ
+
(5)
where E is a column vector of errors (6N x 1) presenting measurement errors and K, errors. The objective is to minimize the sum of the squares of the residuals (SSR) which is
If the model was linear with respect to K,, linear least squares could be used to find the value of which minimizes SSR. In the linear case, SSR is minimized by taking the derivative of SSR with respect to K,, setting it to zero, and solving for KD. The result would be, in matrix form, KD
=
(HT H)-' H T Z
(7)
where H replaces the H(K,) notation. The model may be linearized by a Taylor series expansion about an initial estimate of K, which is noted as k,. Thus,
z(2D) +
a H(KJ
a KD
(KD - KJ
If the estimate, gD, sufficiently close to K,, the higher order terms may be dropped. The linearized form is of equation (5) becomes
In the above equation the difference between K, and g, may be determined by developing a form of equation (7) since equation (9) is now linear with respect to the difference or delta K,. Note that the difference between the measured value and the computed value using the estimate has been formed on the left-hand side of equation (9). This difference or residual is treated as the measurement in equation (7). Thus,
Equation (10) provides an estimate of the change in E, that has minimized (linear least squares) the , , residuals. When A$, is added to $ a better estimate of $ is obtained. The process of determining updated estimates may continue until further deltas would be less than an arbitrary small value.
c-4
K, is a function of Mach number and cannot be assumed constant for any trajectory. For simplicity, assume that K, may be modeled as
KD = C, + C, M
C, M 2
(11)
where M is the Mach number. The estimation process now is to estimate the constants in the above polynomial which will minimize SSR. Equation (9) becomes
Where and are estimates of the polynomial coefficients and is the vector of these estimates. From equation (ll), the differences or delta coefficient changes may be determined sim.ilar to equation (9)
el,e2, e3
as
where i = 1, 2, and 3. These equations provide improved estimates over the initial estimates and iterations may continue until an arbitrary small delta in each coefficient is obtained. The solution of equation (13) is dependent on the proper development of the sensitivity matrix, a H/a Ci. The elements of the sensitivity matrix are the partial derivatives of the 3DOF output with respect to the coefficients or parameters being estimated. For the second-order polynomial containing three coefficients, the matrix is
.....
. . . . .
.....
c-5
The dashed line denotes a partition where each partition contains n rows or a row for each measurement. TSPI measurements are provided as a function of time. The time intervals between measurements are nominally 0.1 or 0.2 seconds. It is computationally convenient if the intervals are constant for all
measurements being processed. These intervals must be known in advance because the elements in the sensitivity matrix must be determined and synchronized with the TSPI. The elements of the sensitivity matrix are determined from a set of differential equations developed by taking the partial derivative of each equation of motion with respect to each coefficient. For the stated example, nine differential equations are developed. For example, both the axla C, and the ax/a C, are obtained from the equation
and
Since the partial derivatives are continuous, the order of the differentiation may be reversed so that
and
Thus, equation (15) may be expressed as a second-order differential equation in the variable a x/a C,. All nine differential equations developed in this manner are integrated along with the equations of motion to produce the elements of 8 H/a C and the elements of Z(c). Convergence of the iterative process is dependent on the accuracy of the initial estimate of the parameters or coefficients to be estimated. Too large an error in the initial estimate will cause divergence because the higher order terms in the series expansions could become significant. To eliminate novice error in providing an initial guess for the coefficients in the drag model, a computed mean drag is derived from TSPI. This mean drag estimate is further refined by repeated trajectory calculations using C1(0 = C1(1-l) +
x (I-1)
ax
C-6
where I denotes the iteration step, X is the measured range, and x is the 3DOF model output. In usually fewer than four iterations, the range error (X - x) is less than 50 feet. An accurate initial estimate for C, is obtained. The other coefficients, which add the effect of Mach number variation, are set to zero. This initialization scheme produces convergence of the K, procedure for both low-drag and high-drag bombs. Another problem that the computer program solves for the user is that it selects a K, model based on the Mach number level and variation for each drop. The selections include a first-order polynomial for low Mach variation, a third-order polynomial for large variations in the transonic region, and the following model for all subsonic conditions with some Mach variation during the drop.
KD =
c, +
2-kP
In the above equation, M is Mach number. The TSPI for the bomb drop is processed first to determine these variations. The coefficients for the K, versus Mach model or equation is determined to less than a 3-percent change in their value from one iteration to the next. This level of convergence is achieved, in most cases, in fewer than three iterations. The derived model is only valid for that particular drop. It is used only to predict the K, for a specific Mach number, which must be within the Mach interval of the test data. Similar data from other drops in the same Mach region may have significantly different coefficients but predict about the same K,. For a small interval (k 0.005) about a given Mach number, K, predictions are made using the equations developed from drops that have the given Mach in its Mach variation range. These Mach number "bins" may have KD values from several drops. The mean KD for each Mach bin is the estimate of the K, for that Mach number.
These K, values are plotted in Figure C-1 for three different bombs. Note that two bombs have the same shape but different physical properties. The computer program determined that, although the shape is the same for both bombs, the 3DOF ballistics are slightly different. The KD curves labeled as STDTAPE are the data approved for use by the Air Force and represent the results from a large number of test drops. It is used as a standard to validate the computer program.
Separation Effects
A computer program called Separation Effects Estimation Method (SEEM) uses similar techniques to those developed in KDEM to determine the drag, lift, and side force coefficients to predict the bomb trajectory while the bomb is under the influence of the aircraft's flowfield. The 3DOF equations are written to include these forces. The equations are
where
C, = drag coeficient = X/n K, Cs = side force coefficient C = lift coefficient , y = velocity vector pitch angle = velocity vector heading or yaw angle.
0
0
l
>
iQ
1 1 1
0
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
L 4
1
VlJ
in
>
0
;T,
OJ 0
0
X
x
0
X X
L
L-3
x
X
C-8
The forces are illustrated in Figure C-2. These equations are written in the wind axis system. The same equations in the earth's axis system are
Kb (CDi+ C, Vn) + g
where
Kb
= =
-xp V d L 8m
v ,
Note that when the lift coefficient (CJ and the side force coefficient (C,) are zero, these equations reduce to the freestream equations given in equation set (3). Force coefficient variations during the separation phase are due largely to the angular motion of the weapon. Small changes in weapon total yaw angle induce large changes in the force coefficients. The yawing motion of the weapon is characterized as a damped oscillation which seems to have been initiated by forces in addition to the ejection mechanism forces. The weapon usually yaws to its maximum amplitude within the first half cycle which is characteristic of damped oscillation. If damped harmonic motion represents the angular motion of the weapon, tlie variation in forces proportional to the yaw (angle of attack and sideslip) should also exhibit the same nature. The variation in any general force coefficient, C,, should be characterized by the differential equation for damped harmonic motion which is
CF + K, 6,
& C,
.= F(t)
(24)
where K, acts as a damping coefficient and & acts as a restoring force coefficient. The term on the righthand side represents an external influence such as the induced flow about the aircraft. The constants should be related to the physical and aerodynamic properties of the weapon. The form and value of the influence term representing separation effects should be dependent on aircraWweapon configuration and the release conditions. This term as well as the constants could be estimated from TSPI if the data were accurate enough to observe the short duration effect of the forces on displacing the weapon. Such an approach would require TSPI accuracy of less than an inch at time intervals less than 5 milliseconds apart. Figure C-3 represents a possible yaw angle time history curve in the upper window. The lower window ., represents the corresponding variation in drag coefficient, C Note that the minimum C, occurs when the yaw angle is zero. A curve connecting the minimum values is actually a curve for the zero-yaw drag coefficient. Since this coefficient does not vary with time, the variation seen is a reflection of Mach number , variation with time. The maximum C value occurs at maximum absolute yaw angle. Thus, the time between consecutive maximums gives the half period of oscillation which provides additional information on the aerodynamic nature of the weapon. Since state-of-the-art TSPI accuracy is not adequate to implement
c-9
jw
kW
c-IO
0.8
PROBABLE
06 .
n
0
04 .
0.2
l
I
1
-0
0
7 -
TIME (SEC)
c-1 I
such a force coefficient model, several alternate models were investigated. The following model seems to represent the mean C, as a function of time 0.
c ,
c,
__
c ,
1 + T
This equation form is also applicable to lift (C,) and side (C,) force coefficients. Figure C-4 illustrates a possible angle-of-attack time history for an undamped and a damped motion. If the motion is undamped, the net lift force sums to zero since the lift force, unlike drag, is equally positive and negative. For the damped motion, the net lift does not sum to zero because the half yaw cycle produces so much lift, regardless of the direction, that the summation is biased in that direction. The effect of the lift and side force models is to bias the forces in the proper direction. The bias is initially large and decays to near zero in 2 to 3 seconds after release. This type of model gives a smooth transition to freestream motion. Thus,
c ,
c 4 c, + __ 1 + T
c ,
c ,
C 6 l + T
The coefficients, C, through C,, become the parameters or constants to be estimated so that the computed trajectory closely matches the TSPI trajectory. The measurement vector for determining these coefficients is
z =[v$elT
which is derived from the measurements of x, y, and z. The expanded sensitivity matrix is
Initial estimates for C,, C,, and C5 are obtained by solving for C,, C,, and C (22) and using average values , of V, $, and 0 from the TSPI. Initial estimates for &, C,, and C, are set to zero. These initial estimates are sufficiently accurate to assure convergence of the estimation process. The set of coefficients, C, through C,, serve only to predict the drag, lift, and side force coefficients for a given bomb drop. Bomb-to-bomb variations and release variations will produce significantly different coefficient values. An analysis of the coefficients derived from approximately 50 CBU-58 bombs dropped
c-12
TIME ( S E C )
C-4. Typical Damped and Undamped Angle of Attack Time Histories and the Effect on Lift
C-I3
from an F-16 aircraft exhibited a strong correlation between the force coefficients initial values at time equal to zero and the release Mach number and the release angle of attack. At approximately 3 seconds time of flight, the correlation with angle of attack was weak, but the force coefficients strongly correlated with expected freestream values.
,c c ,
= =
c,
c ,
C6
c,,
c, + c,
c,
+
The subscript "0" denotes initial values. The initial values may be related to release Mach (M) and release by angle of attack (a)
C,,
=
=
M b, '
M' d ,
+
+
C ,
-+-
: :j:
+
b, a2
d4 ' a
The coefficients in these equations are determined by linear least squares regression. The results obtained from the CBU-58 test data are shown in Figures C-5 to C-7. These results are plots of the initial coefficients derived from flight test data and the same coefficients predicted by the above equations after the regression. Mach number is the "hidden" variable in these plots.
Additional equations are developed by regressing (linear) C, versus C,, C, versus C,, and C, versus C6. Using the drag force coefficients as an example, the following equations
C Z c, + __ l + T
c ,
c,
and
C,
=
c, c,
+
(33)
a5
a6 C,
(34) C,,
have three unknowns, C,, C,, and C,. a, and a6 come from the linear regression of C, versus C,. derived from the above equations, is
c ,
c,
c ~ o as T 1+a6 l + T
(35)
32 .5
2.25
1
I-
00
0
%
OU
1.75
1.25
1 3 1
I
I
n "
12
.9
0
.8 .7
.6
0
cn
.5 .4
0
b b
..
?
0
0
.I
I
1
859
0
oi
I
I
0
0 0
10
12
i l
.25
0
0 .
-.25
-.75
-1.25
t
0
o.0 0f
d*
D 00
0 0
d
2
6 8 10 AIRCRAFT ANGLE OF ATTACK (DEG)
4
12
C-17
Likewise,
c ,
,, c
CJO - bs
l+b6 l+T
%o
c ,
, c
T l+d6 l+T
- d,
(37)
where b, and b, come from the linear regression of C, versus C,. The coefficients d, and d, come from the , regression of C versus C,. Equations (31), (39, (36), and (37) are used to determine the drag, side force, and lift coefficients for a 3DOF simulation of a bomb trajectory. The role of each force coefficient in improving the 3DOF simulation accuracy is illustrated in Figure C-8. Each dot on the plot is the difference between the 3DOF output and the TSPI at the point of trajectory termination. The first or left-hand frame compares a 3DOF using only freestream drag from release to termination. C,, C,, CLindicated as "OFF" means no additional forces are added during separation. The next frame shows the addition of the drag due to separation effects and related conditions. The maximum payoff from KDEM and SEEM is obtained when the programs are used to develop 3DOF ballistics for a new bomb. With sufficient TSPI and bomb diameter and weight data, a user can determine both separation effects force coefficients and freestream drag coefficients. Inputs from similarity analysis or wind tunnels are not needed. Given the TSPI on magnetic tape, a user should be able to complete a 50bomb drop analysis in less than two working days. The computer program execution time, on a modern mainframe computer, for a SO-bomb drop file is less than 25 seconds. Most of the time required in completing the analysis is used in preparing the input files. The accuracy of the 3DOF simulations using the KDEM and SEEM coefficients should be on the order of 7.0 mils or less for dispensers like the CBU-58 and 3.0 mils or less for low-drag bombs like the MK 82 LDGP. The following accuracies have been obtained from 3DOF simulations using coeficients derived by SEEM: AIRCRAFT F-16 F-16 F-16 F-4 F-4
BOMB
CBU-58 MK82LDGP MK 82LDGP CBU-52 MK-20
RACK
TER TER PYLON TER TER
BIAS ERROR x(milS)y(") 0.60 -0.60 0.68 0.90 0.88 0.38 0.63 0.09 1.10 0.62
KDEM produces a high-fidelity estimate of KD because the process attempts to match the entire freestream trajectory. The convergence criteria is less than a 3-percent change in KDfrom the previous iteration. This criteria is much better than adjusting a KDversus Mach curve until all drops are predicted with less than a given range error of +SO feet evenly distributed. The miss-distance adjustment criteria had previously shown that the BDU-5; had the same ballistics as the MK 82 LDGP. Indeed, the range error difference between BDU-50's and MK 82 LDGP's appear low and insignificant. However, the BDU-SO K, was at least 23 percent higher. While this difference is insignificant for low-altitude release, it would become significant for high-altitude release.
I
I
I- : :
>
1-t
c-19
1. On-site and on-time weather measurements. 2. Accurate measurements for the first second o f flight. 3. Accurate measurements for aircraft G, Mach number, and angle of attack.
Some tests are conducted with weather measurements from some other site several miles away and several hours prior to, or after, the test. TSPI on a bomb for the first second of flight is usually poor. In fact, SEEM has to ignore any TSPI until 1.2 seconds into the trajectory. The algorithms relating separation effects to bomb release conditions need accurate measurement. Angle-of-attack measurements are critical at low angles of attack. There is considerable force coefficient sensitivity in the low angle-of-attack region as shown previously in Figures C-5 to C-7. On the other hand, KDEM and SEEM may not reduce the number of bomb drops required to develop an accurate 3DOF model. With perfect measurements, KDEM will determine a K, curve that will match the TSPI trajectory from the onset of freestream conditions to impact with little or no error. However, a different drop will produce a different K, curve because the bomb exhibits its ownunique trajectory. Bombs and bomb trajectories are like snowflakes; no two are identical. Several drops are still required to predict the "average" bomb. Testing must also produce sufficient data to predict the "average" bomb rack and the "average" flowfield effect.
OFT Considerations
The C,, C,, and C, equations were developed for possible addition to the Onboard Flight Program (OFP). There are no transcendental functions or non-integer exponents in the equations. However, the number of terms or coefficients may be prohibitive. The SEEM computer program also performs linear least squares regression of alternate equation forms for the initial force coefficients. The following forms are also regressed where CDois used as the example: a. C ,
~~
= M'
(al)
C.
C ,
M a, '
[ 2 ):
t
-+2
The prediction accuracy of each form is also provided to aid the user in selecting the form to use. Since a, and as are always used, the use of form "a" requires 9 coefficients, form "b" requires 12 coefficients, form "c" requires 15 coefficients, and form "d" requires 18 coefficients. The value of "r" is parametrically set to 0, 1, 2, and 3 to find the best power of Mach. Another concern of OFP developers is computation time and the number of integration steps needed to accurateIy integrate the trajectory. Accelerations due to separation forces are high in some cases and may require less than a 0.2-second integration step size for accurate results. Current OFP computers may not be able to accurately compute these high accelerations.
c-20
OFP mechanization of these equations may not be the best approach in developing an accurate OFP ballistics model. Another approach is to replace the 3DOF model and integration technique in SEEM with a model of the actual OFP trajectory routine. Modeling errors, mechanization errors, and integration errors would be absorbed in the regressed coefficients.
KD = K ,
ICD,@
K is the drag coefficient at zero yaw angle. K is the induced drag coefficient caused by the bombs total , , , yaw angle, 6. The K and K,, values should be the same for each bomb drop, given the same Mach number variation during the drop. Thus, only a few bombs are required to determine the ballistic coefficients. However, several more bombs may be required to find the average 6 although a 6 of zero is expected for the average bomb.
There is no need to develop a 6DOF ballistic analysis capability if instrumentation capabilities do not exist to measure a state variable from each degree of freedom of the bombs motion.
Instrumentation
Major advances in instrumentation have occurred in the past ten years. There are technology programs that will produce even more advances within the next ten years. Yet, ballistic analysis procedures are limited to the use of ground-based tracking devices. Even these devices could be enhanced to give better than a 3foot bomb position measurement accuracy. However, adapting instruments to measure the required state variables is not a straightforward task. The most desired measurements are the bombs center of gravity acceleration and the bombs angular acceleration about each body axis. Instruments to make these measurements must be precisely located at the bombs center of gravity and precisely aligned with each body axis. Thus, a special modified bomb with the embedded instruments is needed. These instrumented bombs would he costly and, therefore, may he undesirable. Instruments located elsewhere in or on the bombs are subject lo coupling effects of angular and translational motion. That is, a fixed point in a translating and rotating reference frame (bomb body axes) has an inertial acceleration of
a=a,+ox(oxr)
c-21
where a. is the inertial translational acceleration of the axis system origin, o is its angular rate, and r is the position vector to the point. If a linear accelerometer is placed with its input axis parallel to the x-body axis, then the accelerometer would measure a = am - x (42 + 13) where a a, p,q,r x,y,z
= accelerometer output = the non-gravitational x component of the bomb's acceleration = components of the angular velocity; roll, pitch, and yaw respectively
+
y @4 - i ) + z@r
4)
This measurement could not be used as the acceleration of the bomb's center of gravity directly. With measurements of the angular rates and accderation, a derived center-of-gravity acceleration can be obtained. An alternate technique may locate two linear accelerometers on the x-axis at different points. The two measurements permit a derivation of the x-component of the center-of-gravity acceleration. Instrumentation location and subsequent derivation of the desired state variables from these measurements can be determined. Most instrumentation locations will be in a modified nose fuze, a tail fuze, and in the tailkin assembly. With solid-state microcircuitry, some very small and reliable linear and angular accelerometers and gyros are likely available for this application. One ongoing technology program is developing a very thin wafer than contains inertial sensing devices. This program may produce a "peel and stick" inertial sensor. Instrumentation performance requirements are to be defined. Some requirements are severe while some are relatively benign. Gyro drift rate errors may be tolerated at large values since measurement durations will likely be less than 5.0 seconds. An extreme duration would be 30 seconds. Scale factory error or g sensitivity for linear accelerometers may have to be extremely low. The highest angular rate of a bomb is its spin rate which could be as high as 600 rpm. A point on the surface of the bomb where an accelerometer could be located may have as much as 100 g's acceleration.
Analysis Methods
Analytical methods to estimate 6DOF aerodynamic coefficients from the measured motion of the bomb are being developed. Most of the software needed can be readily developed. However, there are software interfaces needed with the instrumentation suite. The software must interface with the variables that are being measured. There are numerous combinations of state variables in either earth-fixed axes or in bodyfixed axes that are suitable for the estimation process. For example, it is possible to use current TSPI and body-fixed strap-down gyros to obtain position data in the earth axes and angular rate data in the body axes. Any combination is suitable as long as there are measurements from each degree of freedom of body motion.
The analytical methods should be similar to the 6DOF parameter estimation procedures in use today. However, for free-fall weapons, the aerodynamic coefficient must be modeled as a function of Mach number, angle of attack, and angle of yaw for each drop. A mathematical model having three independent variables may be too difficult to construct. A reasonable approach is to model the time variation of the aerodynamic coefficient as a polynomial and, given the polynomial, correlate the coefficient with Mach, angle of attack, and of yaw at the same time marks.
Regardless of the technique used, the mathematics are complex but not impossible. Although large size matrices are involved, there are sufficient computer memory and computing speed to solve the problem.
c-22
The primary focus of both h e instrumentation and the analytical methods is to determine and model the bomb motion during the first 2 to 3 seconds of flight. The resultant ballistics model at the 6DOF level may be suitable for computer mainframe applications such as generating bombing tables. Much less sophisticated ballistics modeling is needed for OFP applications, at least until much larger and faster OFP computers are available. Such models can be developed from the more sophisticated 6DOF model.
Payoffs
The highest expected payoff is more accurate ballistic models. The ballistic prediction error should have a zero mean and a CEP no larger than the natural ballistic CEP of the weapon.
The next payoff should be in the number of bomb drops required. The complete freestream 6DOF ballistics can be determined with a few bombs. However, separation variations could increase this number four-fold. The problem here is that the 6DOF capability c m o t account for the variations in the hardware. It only determines the aerodynamic coefficients needed to predict the measured bomb motion.
Payoffs in time are likely because most of the analyses will be accomplished on a computer, and there will be fewer flight tests.
A cost savings may be the least expected payoff. While flight costs, personnel costs, and data reduction costs are expected to be lower, the instrumented bomb cost will be higher. How much higher depends on the types of instruments and their accuracy requirements. Instrument price is usually proportional to instrument precision.
APPENDIX D BALLISTIC SENSITIVITY ANALYSES STUDY FOR CBU-58 AND MK 84 LDGP STORES
Office for Aircraft Compatibility 3246th Test Wing/TY Eglin Air Force Base, Florida 32542-5000 January 1990
D-2
Introduction
A ballistic sensitivity analysis determines the impact error caused by an error in the nominal value of a bomb input parameter or a release parameter. The magnitude of the impact error divided by the magnitude of the parameter error is the error's ballistic sensitivity. Such analyses are performed by using a GDOF computer program and by inputting incremental changes to those input parameters identified as having an error. These parameters may include bomb weight, moments of inertia, aerodynamics, ejection velocity, release timing error, and numerous others. If the input parameter can have an error, it is o referred to as an error source. Virtually all inputs are potential error sources, but some are prone t occur more often than others. It is the random combination of these errors from bomb to bomb that produces the bomb's ballistic dispersion. If the magnitude of the error sources is known, a large number of random combinations (Monte Carlo trials) should produce a theoretical estimate of the bomb's ballistic dispersion. Theoretical estimates of a bomb's dispersion are beneficial during the design phase and production phase of the bomb. Using ballistic sensitivity analyses, a bomb may be designed to have minimum dispersion when released from a specific aircraft. The GDOF methodology, in this case, must have aircraft flowfield interference methods. In general, design specifications can be set so that the freestream dispersion will be less than a given value.
If a production bomb exhibits an undesired level of dispersion, a ballistic sensitivity analysis could identify the error sources most likely to be causing the undesired dispersion. Such an analysis can also evaluate a proposed product improvement to minimize or eliminate a given error source. While the sensitivity to one error source may be large, its removal from the possible combinations of errors may have little effect on reducing the bomb's dispersion.
If a new bomb is being certified for release from a particular aircraft, a ballistic sensitivity study should be performed using design specification tolerances for error source magnitude. Excessively large dispersions could indicate that the design tolerances, in combination with the aircraft's flowfield, may produce erratic and possibly dangerous separation dynamics. If the theoretical dispersion estimates appear acceptable, the dispersion value may be used in test planning to determine the number of bomb drops required to realistically determine the bomb's dispersion.
In developing ballistic coefficients and other ballistic algorithms, the process continues until a minimum ballistic prediction error is reached. The random component of ballistic prediction error cannot be less than the bomb's natural dispersion. When developing ballistics for a new bomb, this limiting value can be useful. If the ballistics data and algorithm produces a ballistic prediction error that is several magnitudes above the theoretical estimate, the ballistician needs to seek alternate algorithms and possibly request other tests. The following sections present data from a recent ballistic sensitivity analysis study. Data were generated using the Ballistic Error Assessment Model (BEAM) computer program. Results of this study indicate that the CEP for the CBU-58 when released from a modern tactical fighter aircraft should be less than 6.9 mils, and the CEP for the MK 84 should be less than 2.3 mils.
D-3
Aircraf/Rack Errors
This group of errors includes release timing errors, pylon alignment errors, and ejection rack errors. The timing error is the error in time from the cockpit switch to the ejection cartridge ignition. The pylon alignment error is an error in the bomb's initial pitch and yaw angles relative to the aircraft. The ejection rack errors include a lengthy list of possible errors because the BEAM computer program includes a fairly detailed simulation of the ejection rack interior ballistics and resulting forces and moments imparted to the bomb. These error sources could contribute 0.9 mils for the CBU-58 released from a multiple bomb rack (Le., the TER-9) and 3.4 mils when released from a parent pylon bomb rack (i.e., MAU-12). The MK 84 LDGP's CEP could be 0.7 mil when released from the MAU-12.
The most sensitive source of error in this group is the ejection rack. The MAU-12 sensitivity is higher than the TER-9 because the MAU-12 imparts larger forces and moments and has more components included as error sources. The MAU-12-induced CEP is 3.3 mils for the CBU-58 and 0.66 mil for the MK 84 LDGP.
Atmospheric Errors
Atmospheric errors include errors in air density, air temperature, wind magnitude, and wind direction. This group of errors in the real world are correlated and quite variable. The BEAM computer program includes a weather model which generates a typical weather profile as a function of altitude for a random day of the year. Thus, the sensitivity defined here is the sensitivity to day-to-day weather change. The sensitivity was determined from 75 random days or weather files. These files were used to compute 75 trajectories having the same initial conditions. The dispersion obtained was 3.25 mils CEP for the CBU58 and 1.75 mils CEP for the MK 84 LDGP.
Aerodynamic Errors
This group of errors include aerodynamic force, restoring moment, and damping moment variations. These errors are due to body shape variations, fin and nose misalignments, surface texture variations, and lug height variations. In the BEAM computer program, any aerodynamic force variation that does not act through the center of gravity also produces a moment variation. Rather large aerodynamic forces can act through the center of gravity and cause little variation in the dispersion. A force standard deviation equivalent to 6.7 pounds (5 percent of freestream) acting through the CBU-58 center of gravity and parallel to the x-axis produces a 1.0-mil CEP. Only a 0.32-pound force variation acting normal to the xaxis and on the surface of the bomb produces a 3.0-mil CEP. Similar forces on a percentage basis produces only a fraction of a 1.0-mil CEP for the MK 84 LDGP. Another source of error is the aircraft's flowfield. The causes of variations in the flowfield are speculative because the problem is complex. Given the same atmospheric conditions, the same aircraft altitude, and the same aircraft configuration, there should be no variation in the flowfield. Wind tunnel testing would prove this statement. However, no two aircraft are identical, stores are suspended with variations, and pilots fly the aircraft differently. Regardless, the study shows that if there is a 5-percent variation in the aerodynamics describing the flowfield, the effect on CEP is O S mil for the CBU-58 and 1.33 mils for the MK 84 LDGP,
Impact on T s i g etn
This ballistic sensitivity study shows:
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The study could recommend changes to the testing procedures which could reduce the level of ballistic dispersion. But this measured dispersion would not represent the real world and could only be referred to as a "test" dispersion.
I
The study does show that the MAU-12 needs to be serviced and inspected to reduce its effects on the test CEP. The weather should be measured accurately and timely to reduce its effects on the test CEP. Transverse measurements of the bomb's center of gravity may eliminate some "wild" dispensers like the CBU-58 before they are dropped. Such eliminations would reduce the test CEP.
APPENDIX E
Office for Aircraft Compatibility 3246th T s Wmg/TY et Eglin Air Force Base, Florida 32542-5000 25 July 1988
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1.0 INTRODUCTION
This Method of Test (MOT) Annex identifies test procedures and related data collection, reduction, and analysis requirements to accomplish stated test objectives. The 3246 Test Wing, Eglin AFB, Florida, is the designated RTO. The test is designed in response to 3246 TES'IWITY letter, dated 26 May 1988, subject: Work Request (WR) for BLU-l07/B Parent Carriage on F-16AIB Aircraft. An AD technical report will be required.
1.1 Background/Overview
1.1.1 Headquarters Tactical Air Command has identified a requirement (TAC Certification Request 4-86) to certify the BLU-107 Purandal) parent carriage on F-16PJB aircrafi. The testing to be accomplished under Test Directive (TD) 2671AL71 will provide data to support certification for carriage and employment of the BLU-107 on the F-16 parent pylons. The certification recommendations will be made by 3246 TESTWRY. 1.1.2 The scope of testing under TD 2671AL71 will encompass assessment of sway brace pad torquing, captive compatibility flights, flutter investigations, and aircrafM"ition separation demonstrations. TimeSpace-Position-Inforation (TSPI) will also be collected on BLU-107 munitions released from F-16 aircraft. 1.1.3 The test missions to be conducted are outlined in the mission summary attached to this MOT' Annex (Attachment 1). Applicable flight test configurations and related flight clearance/limits are as established by 3246 TESTWRY. 1.1.4 The AD Airborne Test ReviewISafety Board (ATRISB) will act as final authority (ref. ADR 127-2) on the safety aspects of the flight test missions associated with the test. The flight test? will be conducted over authorized AD test areas using standard flight profiles.
12 Test Objectives .
1.2.1 Evaluate the new loading procedure for torquing sway brace pads one half turn beyond initial contact. 1.2.2 Demonstrate captive carriage compatibility of BLU-107IB munitions on F-16 aircraft to be prescribed flight limits using a specified aircraft/weapon flight test configuration and flight profile. 1.2.3 Collect flutter flight test data on specified F-l6/external store configurations involving the carriage
of BLU-10703 munitions.
1.2.4 Demonstrate the release and separation of BLU-10703 munitions released from F-16 aircraft using specified aircraft flight test configurations and munition release conditions. 1.2.5 Collect ballistics data (TSPI) on BLU-107IB munitions released from F-16 aircraft.
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2.1.3 Aircraft/Munition Separations. The F-16 aircraft used for the conduct of this phase of the test (F-16 flutter-instrumented aircraft excluded) must have an appropriate onboard motion picture capability, i.e., AIM-9 camera pods and strake/chaff cameras to provide photographic coverage of the It will be essential that TFOA personnel keep the GADS aircraft/munition separation events. office (KRT) informed of camwallens combination changes that occur after the initial setup and calibration of the F-16 onboard camera system.
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2.2 BLU-lOIIB Munition. The BLU-107lB is a parachute retarded, rocket boosted, concrete penetration bomb designed for low-level release against airfield targets. Physical properties pertaining to the BLU107/B are reflected in Attachment 2 to this M m Annex. The BLU-107lB munitions provided for this test are to be configured with inert warheads and live rocket motors.
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photographically. (NOTE: 3246 TESTWITY will be presented when the aircraft munition loading is inspected prior to and after each captive test flight.) 4.1.2.1.5 The pilot conducting the captive compatibility investigation will provide, as part of the test records, a written report describing the actual flight profile performed, including maneuvers, airspeeds, and g-loads demonstrated during flight. Any aircraft-handling problems peculiar to the flight test configuration flown or aircraft system malfunctions that adversely affected the outcome of the flight test mission will also be documented in the report. 4.1.2.1.6 The pilot of the chase aircraft will be responsible for advising the pilot of the primary test aircraft of any problems observed with the F-16lexternal store configuration during captive carriage. As part of the test records, the chase pilot will provide a written report of his observations should problems be encountered with the F-16 flight test configuration. 4.1.2.1.7 As part of the test records, the aircraft flight test configuration for captive carriage investigations will be documented by still photographs as requested by the test engineer. 4.1.2.2 Criteria. Acceptance criteria for captive compatibility flights will be in consonance with Para. 250.4, Test 250, MIL-STD-1763. Criteria for success of the sway brace tightening procedure will be on the basis of observations by test personnel that during flight all sway brace pads remained tightened/intact and that the physical integrity of the sway-brace pads was not adversely affected, Le., no fractures or breakage. 4.1.2.3 Resources Required. Principal resource requirements related to captive carriage flight test investigations will include: 4.1.2.3.1 F-16 aircraft and assigned 3247th flight test pilot 4.1.2.3.2 Safety chase aircraft 4.1.2.3.3 Tanker aircraft 4.1.2.3.4 BLU-107lB test munitions 4.1.2.3.5 Munition loading checklists 4.1.2.3.6 3246th Munition Maintenance Squadron support (load crews) 4.1.2.3.7 Munition handlingluploading equipment 4.1.2.3.8 Water test area 4.1.2.3.9 CCF (monitorlcommunications with primary test aircraft) 4.1.2.3.10 Still documentary photography 4.1.2.3.11 Mass properties measurement facility (Bldg 990) 4.1.2.4 Data Records. Pertinent test records (data sources) will be: 4.1.2.4.1 Test pilot's flight test mission report (1 copy to 3246 TESTWlTY) 4.1.2.4.2 Test engineer's flight test mission records, including results of postflight inspection of aircraftlmunitionslsway braces and any related photography.
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4.1.2.4.3 Still documentary photographs (flight test configurations). TESTWRY. 4.1.2.4.4 Mass property records (munitions). 1 copy to 3246 TESTW/TY. 4.1.2.5 Data Reduction: None
4.1.2.6 Data Analysis. Pilot's test mission reports and test engineer's test mission notes will be reviewed and assessed for evidence of adverse physical integrity of the MAU-12 rack/BLU-107 munition combination as the result of captive carriage flight. The adequacy of the sway brace tightening procedures employed for the captive flights will be evaluated. Evidence of any conditions that may have adversely affected aircraft handling characteristics or safety of flight as a result of the captive carriage of the BLU107 munitions on the F-16 aircraft will also be ascertained. 4.1.2.7 Summary of Missions. Ref. Mission No. 1 and Mission No. 2, Atch 1 to this MOT Annex. 4.1.2.8 Potential Hazards. No safety hazards are envisioned that would elevate risks above those normally associated with captive flight investigations, i.e., not categorized as high risk flight test mission (ref. ADR 127-2). 4.2 Flutter Test Flights. (Ref. Para. 1.2.3, Test Objectives) 4.2.1 Purpose. To collect quantitative flight test data to establish Limit Cycle Flutter (LCF) onset and decay for selected F-16/BLU-107 flight test configurations flown within a prescribed flight envelope. 4.2.2 Method. 4.2.2.1 Procedure. 4.2.2.1.1 Mass properties measurements will be made and recorded as part of the test records with respect to the weight, c.g. location, and moments of inertia (pitch and yaw) of the BLU-107 munitions provided for the test. Mass properties measurements for other external stores will also be accomplished as needed and the results recorded as part of the test records. Items with mass properties different from those indicated in the 3246 TESTW/TY Flight Clearance letter must be cleared by 3246 TESTWITY prior to scheduling a flight test mission. 4.2.2.1.2 Approved munition loading checklists (ref. AFSCR 66-1 and ADR 136-3) and aircrew prefligWpostflight checklists (ref. ADR 127-2 and AD Sup 1 to AFSCR 80-33) must be available prior to the start of flight testing. 4.2.2.1.3 Use of a safety chase aircraft in support of flutter test flights will be commensurate with ATRlSB requirements. Aerial tanker support may be used to extend flight duration for primary and/or chase aircraft. 4.2.2.1.4 The pertinent flight test configurations and related data points for the flutter investigations are shown in Attachment 1 to this MOT Annex. 4.2.2.1.5 The Centralized Control Facility (CCF/TELEMAG), Bldgs 380/381, will be required to receive and record time correlated telemetry (TM) signals. Selected TM parameters will be required to be displayed in real time for analysis by 3246 TESTWlTY flight test specialist. A dedicated radio frequency will be required for mission control purposes. Direct and frequent communication between mission controller/flight test specialists and the pilot of the F-16 primary test aircraft is essential for an instant abort notification on a test point. All test related ground/aircraft communications will be recorded (time correlated) for subsequent playback in conjunction with post mission data analysis, if required.
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4.2.2.1.6 Ground-based radar will be used as required to vectodcontrol and/or track the F-16 primary test aircraft during the conduct of the flutter investigations. Requirements for primary TSPI data recording and/or secondary radar pen plots will be as specified by the test engineer. 4.2.2.1.7 The F-16 primary test aircraft will be prepositioned at a prebriefed altitude and airspeed over the authorized AD test area prior to execution of the first flight test maneuver in the flight test mission profile. Initiation of an investigation at a given test point will be communicated by the TZG Test Engineer at the CCF. Upon assessment of the real-time displays during the execution of a test point, the flight test specialists at the CCF in conjunction with pilot qualitative assessments will determine whether the pilot of the F-16 primary test aircraft will repeat a test point or proceed to another selected test point in the flight test mission profile. Until the go-ahead is given to establish the next test point, the pilot of the F-16 primary test aircraft will loiter at his discretion at a safe airspeedlaltitude. TY flight test specialist will require hard copies of CRT displays when critical performance limils are approached.
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4.2.2.1.8 An abort of a test point will be based on the judgment of the pilot and/or the flight test specialists at the CCF observing real-time displays of the frequency and amplitude of selected parameters. If an abort is called, the pilot is to immediately cease the test maneuver and enact the appropriate abort procedure established at the pilot preflight briefing. The F-16 primary test aircraft may then loiter until further instructions are received. If a radio failure occurs, the flight test mission will be stopped and the F-16 primary test aircraft will return to base within the safe return airspeed envelope. 4.2.2.1.9 Upon landing after each F-16 flutter test mission, the aircraftlexternal store flight test configuration will be visually inspected for indications of external store looseness/structural integrity. Inspection results will be documented by the test engineer as part of the test records. 4.2.2.1.10 The TY flight test specialists who will be working at the CCF during the flight tests must participate in the preflight briefing of the pilot of the primary F-16 test aircraft. Test pilot briefings will include the specific flight maneuvers to be accomplished, the identificalion and discussion of the critical data points to be attempted, pertinent flight envelope restrictions, and test proceduresldecision criteria. Concise terminology for executing an abort of a test point will be established also. A postflight debriefing of the F-16 test pilot for flight test engineering personnel will be established by the test engineer as deemed necessary. 4.2.2.1.11 As part of the test records, the test pilot of the F-16 primary test aircraft will provide the test engineer with a written flight test report upon completion of each test flight. Any problems with aircraft handling qualities/characteristics will be identified. Awarenedevidence of uncharacteristic oscillations, vibrations, noise, buss, flutter, or other dynamic aeroelastic instabilities during the accomplishment of test points will be noted and repoited. Deviations between actual and briefed test points will be documented. Weather or air turbulence conditions that adversely affect the results of the test flight will be identified. Any problems experienced with respect to the operation of onboard instrumentation, ground/air communication, or test mission control procedures will be identified also. 4.2.2.1.12 The TZ test engineer will maintain a flight test log to include a record of the flight test configuration, related munition mass properties, total flight time, and test points completed. Pilot flight test mission reports will be included as part of the flight test log. Any deficiencies occurring in airborne systems or ground support that adversely affected the conduct of the missions will be recorded. As part of the test records, still descriptive photographs will be made to document flight test configurations and test setup, including aircraft instnunentation installations and supporting test site equipment/displays used in the conduct of the test. 4.2.2.2 Criteria. Acceptance criteria with respect to the outcome of the flutter investigations will be in et, consonance with paragraph 210.4, Test 21, Flutter T s s MIL-STD-1763. 4.2.2.3 Resources Required. Principal resource requirements related to acquisition of flutter flight test data will include:
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4.2.2.3.1 Flutter-Instrumented F-16 aircraft and assigned 3247th flight test pilot 4.2.2.3.2 BLU-107 munitions 4.2.2.3.3 Associated external stores (inert AIM-gP, L missiles; external fuel tanks) 4.2.2.3.4 External stores loading checklists and external store handling/loading equipment 4.2.2.3.5 3246th MMS support (load crews) 4.2.2.3.6 3246 TESTW/TFES support (airborne instrumentation) 4.2.2.3.7 Penthouse (Bldg 130) telemetry support 4.2.2.3.8 CCFlTELEMAG (telemetry recordingldisplay) 4.2.2.3.9 Computer Sciences Directorate (KRB) support (data reduction) 4.2.2.3.10 AD Water Test Area 4.2.2.3.11 Ground radar monitor/control @rimary test aircraft) 4.2.2.3.12 Chase aircraft 4.2.2.3.13 Aerial tanker support 4.2.2.3.14 Precision Measurements Facility (Bldg 990) 4.2.2.3.15 Still documentary photography 4.2.2.4 Data Records. Pertinent test records (data sources) will he: 4.2.2.4.1 Aircraft onboard recording (PDAS/HUD) 4.2.2.4.2 Telemetry/Recording (ground TM site) 4.2.2.4.3 Telemetry real time stripout records 4.2.2.4.4 Hard copies of CRT displays 4.2.2.4.5 Ground/air communications recordings 4.2.2.4.6 Radar monitoringltracking plots (if applicable) 4.2.2.4.7 Test pilot's flight test mission reports 4.2.2.4.8 Test engineer's flight test records 4.2.2.4.9 Mass Properties records (munitionslexternal stores) 1 copy to 3246 TESTW/TY 4.2.2.4.10 Still descriptive photography 4.2.2.5 Data Reduction
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4.2.2.5.1 Format and time intervals for telemetry data reduced from magnetic tapes will be as established The real-time displays of the selected parameters during flight should by TY and/or TFE. normally suffice for the flight investigations. Otherwise, reduction of data from the magnetic tape would be limited to selected TM stripouts for instrumentation checks to verify that all parameters were recorded during flight. Copies of reduced telemetry data are to be made available as follows: 2 copies to TY, 2 copies to TFES.)
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4.2.2.5.2 Primary radar TSPI (if applicable) will be reduced only at the request of the test engineer. Any secondary data pen plots will be forwarded to the test engineer as part of the test records. 4.2.2.5.3 PDAS recordings will he reduced as necessary to verify selected aircraft performance parameters. 4.2.2.6 Data Analysis 4.2.2.6.1 Real time displays of flutter data and any related data will be used by 3246 TESTWRY is assessing flight test values with respect to analytical predictions for each respective aircraft test configuration. Lack of aeroelastic stabilityldamping at a given test point will be identified. Limiting airspeeds for a given aircraft/external store configuration will be established, as required. Certification recommendations related to safe carriage of BLU-107 munitions of F-16 aircraft will be the responsibility of 3246 TESTW/TY. 4.2.2.6.2 The test engineer's flight test records and test pilot's flight test reports will be used to identifylcorroborate test item deficiencies or aircraft system or instrumentation malfunction that adversely affected test results. 4.2.2.6.3 Playback of voice recordings or HUD video will be accomplished as necessary in resolving data assessment problems. 4.2.2.7 Summary of Missions. Reference Mission No. 3 and Mission No. 4, Atch 1 to this MOT Annex. 4.2.2.8 Potential Hazards. Flight hazards which are normally associared with flutter investigations will be minimized by adherence to the existing 3246 Test Wing letter, da%ed12 November 1985, Subject: Uniform Abort Policy for F-16 Limit Cycle Flutter &CF) Flight Testing. This letter imposes flight parameter limits related to limit cycle phenomena during F-16 flutter testing. 4.3 Aircraft/Ordnance Separation Missions (Re. Para 1.2.4 and 1.2.5, Test Objectives) 4.3.1 Purpose. The conduct of aircraft/ordnance separation test missions is to demonstrate the separation characteristics of a given ordnance when released/launched/jettisoned from the aircraft under prescribed flight conditions. Time-Space-Position Information (TSPI) on the aircraft prior to weapon release and on the weapon at release and during separation/fallaway from the aircraft will be used in addressing ballistic/trajectory characteristics. 4.3.2 Method 4.3.2.1 Procedure 4.3.2.1.1 Weight, center of gravity location, and moment of inertia (pitch and yaw) will be verified and recorded as part of the test records for those munitions used in the conduct of aircraft/munition separation flight test investigations NOTE: Items with mass properties different than those prescribed by 3246 TESTWlTY within their related flight clearance letter must be cleared by TY prior to scheduling for upload on the aircraft.
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4.3.2.1.2 Meteorological records will be required as part of the ballistic data acquisition effort. The required meteorological data are to be provided as outlined in TZP Standard 76-01. 4.3.2.1.3 Boresights of onboard cameras for documenting aircraftlmunition separation events must be checked and maintained during this phase of the flight test. N(TrE: It is essential that the GADS office (KRB) be informed by TFOA instrumentation personnel of camerallens combination changes that occur after the initial setup and calibration of the camera system of the F-16 primary test aircraft. 4.3.2.1.4 Aerial tanker support will be used as required to extend flight duration for the primary andlor chase aircraft on selected test missions. 4.3.2.1.5 Under this phase of the test, the release of BLU-107 munitions from the F-16 primary test aircraft will be accomplished. The specific flight test configurations and munition release conditions are outlined in the Mission Summary (ref Attachment 1 to the M m Annex). Tolerances (unless specified otherwise) for flight test conditions are: Airspeed: +10 KCAS (except Mission No. 6, -10 KCAS only); Mach: kO.2 (except Mission No. 6, -0.2 Mach only); G's: k0.2; Altitude: *lo0 ft; Angle: _+5deg. Pilot may use onboard recording of HUD displays to provide supplementary record of flight parameters for post-mission reviews of ordnance release events. The Programmable Data Acquisition System (PDAS) may also be used to record aircraft flight parameters.
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4.3.2.1.6 F-16 onboard motion picture coverage and photo-chase motion picture coverage will be scheduled as required to document munition separation characteristics on each airdrop. Continuous motion picture coverage is needed for release events from just before the munition is released and until it clears the aircraft on fallaway. Color film at 200 frames/second is required. Processed airborne photographic film will be reviewed by the test pilot, the test engineer, and the TY separation engineer after each aircraft/munition separation mission for evidence of unsafe separation Characteristics. The decision to conduct the next flight test mission in the series will be determined at this film review. NOTE: Quantitative film assessment (GADS) may be required before building up to the next release condition for munition separation test points where simulations/analysis reflect caution, Le., possible collision with aircraft. Such test points will be identified by 3246 TESTW/TY. 4.3.2.1.7 Tracking of the aircraft/munition combinations by time-correlated cinetheodolites (SSCW, 30 f p s ) and ground-based tracking cameras (color 96 f p s ) will be required to obtain TSPI during the munition trajectory. Tracking of the aircraftlmunition combination should commence a minimum of 3 seconds prior to the munition release event. The munition will be tracked from just before the instant of release, through fallaway, to ground impact. Ground-based radar may be used to monitor, track, or position the bomb-releasing aircraft on approved flight profiles. Radar also may be used to aid HARP support may be used cinetheodolite acquisitions for aircraftlmunition tracking purposes. when appropriate to aid the pilot to establish release conditions.
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4.3.2.1.8 Upon landing after a bomb release mission, the F-16 primary test aircraft will be visually inspected for evidence of any adverse effects on aircraft skin, bomb racks, or adjacent external stores. Observed discrepancies will be documented photographically. 4.3.2.1.9 As part of the test records, the pilot of the F-16 primary test aircraft will provide the test engineer with a complete flight test report upon completion of each aircraft/ordnance separation mission. Deviations between briefed and actual release conditions (airspeed, altitude, dive angle, and g load) will be included in the report. Any problems experienced in the carriage or release of the test munitions or with aircraft handling characteristics will also be included in the report. 4.3.2.1.10 The test engineer's flight test record will include a complete description of each flight test configuration, including bomb rack loading and related ordnance mass properties, rack orifice opening, type ejector cartridges, and ordnance release mode. Munition separation problems, test support problems, or aircraft malfunctions that adversely affected the outcome o f a mission should be documented. Still descriptive photographs will be made as directed by the test engineer to document the aircraft flight test
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4.3.2.4.3 Cinetheodolite fl (TSPI) im 4.3.2.4.4 Ground tracking camera film 4.3.2.4.5 Munition mass properties records (1 copy AD/KR; 1 copy 3246 TESTWRY) 4.3.2.4.6 Meteorological records (1 copy ADKR; 1 copy 3246 TESTWRY; 1 copy McAir) 4.3.2.4.7 Test pilot flight test mission report (1 copy 3246 TESTW/TY) 4.3.2.4.8 Test engineer test records 4.3.2.4.9 Still documentary photographs (2 sets if prints 3246 TESTWRY)
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4.3.2.4.10 HUD recordings (when applicable) 4.3.2.4.11 PDAS recordings (including telemetry recordings; where applicable)
The following identification data should be on each roll of film: Msn No., date, type A/C, type munition, and actual ordnance release parameters.
4.3.2.5 Data Reduction/AnaIysis. 4.3.2.5.1 Cinetheodolite and related ground-based tracking camera film will be reduced to provide ballistics data in accordance with AD/KR procedure and format, as related to TZP Standard 76-01, dated 2 Sep 86. (Output origin axis should be rotated to align with aircraft ground tracking at munition release.) Three copies of reduced data to be provided to 3246 TESTW/TYDB. 4.3.2.5.2 3246 TESTW/TY will select film footage for GADS reduction. Separation data will be plotted in standard GADS format to depict munition pitch, yaw, roll characteristics upon ejection and fallaway from the aircraft. Two copies of reduced GADS data will be provided to 3246 TESTWITY. 4.3.2.5.3 All airborne photography will be reviewed to ascertain the presence of any aircraft/external store separation characteristics that pose safety hazards with respect to the release of BLU-107 munitions from F-16 aircraft. 4.3.2.5.4 Test pilot's flight test reports, HUD, andlor PDAS recordings, and engineer's test records will be used as necessary to provide inputs for data assessments and to corroborate test item deficiencies, aircraft system malfunctions, or test support/range problems that adversely affected the outcome of a given test mission. 4.3.2.5.5 Final analysis of test data with respect to the carriage and employment of BLU-l07/B munitions using the F-16 aircraft will be the responsibility of 3246 TESTW/TY. The routing and/or integration of pertinent test data into the freestream database related to T.O. 1F-16-34 ballistics tables will also be the responsibility of 3246 TESTWITY. 4.3.2.6 Summary of Missions. Ref. Mission No. 5 and Mission No. 6, Atch 1 to this M(TT. 4.3.2.7 Potential Hazards. For planning purposes, 3246 TESTW/TY initially estimates aircraft/munition separation risks as indicated below. Elevation of any flight test missions designated as Category 1 into a high-risk regime must be accomplished in accordance with procedures set forth in ADR 127-2.
a. Category 1 - Likely collision between released store and aircraft. b. Category 2 - Possible but unlikely collision between released store and aircraft. c. Category 3 - Unlikely collision between released store and aircraft.
5.0 Interim Test Reviews (Ref. TZ 01 80-4). Test program reviews should be accomplished by the test engineer if any one of the following events occur: unsatisfactory data acquisition, safety problem, or test items deficiencies which dictate that testing should be suspended or discontinued.
Date:
21 Mar 88
Page 1
Of
BLU-l07/B
nstrumentation qequirements
N4
ALTITUDE: Below 1000 f t MSL LOAD FACTOR ("G"):
Mission Details
:onduct a minimum 30 minute captivi ,rofile WW MIL-HNBK-244 m a s 6.2.1.7.6.2 (f). (9). (h). lhis is t o verify non- standard 3waybrace tightening procedure of 3LU-107 on MU- 12.
+5.5/- 1.0
107
300
AIM-9s stations 1,9 BLU--107 station 3 300 Go1 Tank station 5 Line 1
f swaybrace pads crack or fail, WM program manager must be contacted @or t o flying subsequent nission.
~~
Station Loading
I
300
Locking F m a r d
Safety Chase
BLU 107
CAPTIVE COMPATIBILITY: Conduct a captive compatibility flight test IAW MIL-HNBK-244, paras (f). (g), (h). and 6.2.1.7.6.2 6.2.1.7.7. Handling qualities are n o t a n issue. The minimum total flight time should be 1.5 hows as specified by p m a 6.2.1.7.3 t o emwe ionipiete structural evaluation. Contingent o n Mission 1. Do not exceed 600/1.2 configuration. for this
Atch 2
page 1 of 3
Prepared by:
Date:
22 FEB 88
Page
Of
Msr No. 3
Test Conditions
istrumentation leauirements
:ondard utter flight :st instruentation th telemetry
Mission Details
Flutter F k b t Test Profile a d e r will be determined 3y N E flutter test director. The following may be performed 3 t each test point.
.80 1.20 .85 (600 KCAS) .90 .95 .98 (600 KCAS)
AIM-9L Stations 2,8 BLU-107 Stations 3,4.6.7 OPT 300 gal tank Station 5
Same as mission 3
Atch 2 Page 2 of 3
.ated)
p'wsdbl
Date
22 ~ p aa r
page 3 of 3
1st
0.
Test Conditions
URSPEED (KCAS): 540 LTITUDE (FT M S ) : 1000 .OAD FACTOR ("G"): SIM: 1.0 UNSYM: NA ?ELEASE M O D E SINGLE
nstrumentation 'leauirements
Onboard and chose camera required. Gather TSPl IAW TZP STD 76-0 1
Mission Details
Pass 1: Release one BLU-107 f r o m station 3. Pass 2 Release one ELU-107 f r o m station 7. Pass 3 Release one BLU-107 f r o m station 4. Pass 4: Release one BLU-107 from station 6. SEPARATION CATEGORY IllB NOTE TYEA must review onboord and chose film along with actual conditions. Only upon N E ' S approval may the next mision b e flown. Contingent o n Mission 1 . Pass 1: Release one BLU-107 from station 3. Pass 2 Release one BLU-107 f r o m station 7. Pass 3 Release one BLU-107 from station 4. Pass 4 Release one BLU-107 f r o m station 6. SEPARATION CATEGORY lllB NOTE TYEA m u s t review onboard and chase film along with actual conditions. Only upon TYE's approval n a y the next mision be flown. Contingent o n Mission 1 . Atch 2: page 3 of 3
L d i n q Fmard
300
NTERVAL (ms): NA
XXEWNCES:
Airspeed: Mach: Gs: Altitude:
+/-
+/-
+/+/-
Station Loading 6
L&ing
Fmard
4IRSPEED (KCAS): 600 4LTITUDE (FT MSL): 1000 .WD FACTOR ("G"): SIM: 1.0 UNSYM: NA ?ELEASE MODE: SINGLE
Onboord and chase camera required. Gather TSPl IAW TZP STD 76-0 1
107 107
300
107 107
MEWPL (ms): NA
TOLERANCES:
Airspeed Mach: Gs: Altitude:
+/+/+/+/-
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DATE
20 Mar 86
BLU-107/6
TYPE
(Durandal- French)
483 l b s ( 2 1 9 . 1 kg)
L E N G T H (loch-0)
NA I
98.07
(2491 mm)
l l A M E T E R (Inches)
Four f i n s .
FIN SP4.N ( I n s h c s J
17.03
( 4 3 2 . 5 mm)
SUSPENSION (InrhcsJ
F I N A N G L E F R O M L U G S (DeWocsJ
S e l e c t a b l e a t 15"
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14 (355.5 mm)
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J U T L l N E A N D MOUNTlNG D R A W I N G OR R E F E R E N C E
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Time d e l a v imoacr.
7EMARKS ( C o n l i n u c on r e v e r i e I 1 n e c e s s a r y )
I. 2. 3.
BLU-l07/B Bomb s t o c k #1325-14-398-7137. Properties represent all- up live configuration. When FWO p a i r o f mounting l u g h o l e s a r e u s e d , t h e f o l l o w i n g dimensions apply:
FWO mounting l u g : 24.27 i n . CG a f t o f FWD l u g : 11.95 + 0 . 5 i n .
Atch 3
AD
DO
,="N"r, 694
P R E V I O U S E D I T I O N W L L BE U S E D
F- I
TEST DIRECTIVE 2671AL78 F-16/Z-1 OPERATIONAL FLIGHT PROGRAM (OFP) FOR SPECIFIED WEAPONS
I
I
Office for Aircraft Compatibility 3246th Test WinglTY Eglin Air Force Base, Florida 32542-5000 21 December 1988
F-2
1.0 INTRODUCTION
This Method of Test ( M m ) Annex identifies test procedures and re1at.d data collection, reduction, and analysis requirements to accomplish the test objectives. The 3246th Test Wing is the designated responsible test organization. The test is being conducted in response to 3246 TESTW/TY letter, Work Request for the F-16/Z-1 Operational Flight Program (OFP) for Specified Weapons, Test Directive Number 2671AL78, dated 23 November 1988. A final test report is reguired. 1.1 Background,
1.1.1 There is a Hq TAC requirement to verify the accuracy of the F-16IZ-1 OFP for all weapons having updated ballistics and/or separation coefficients. Table F-1 lists weapons and configurations to be tested at Eglin AFB under this effort: 'lhble F-1. Data on Weapons and Configurations for Test a t Eglin F-16 MCL NO. Quantity Munitions Suspension
20 22 24 24
6 4
1.1.2 All configurations have been flight tested and certified in T.O. lF-l6A--l except for the BLU-l07/MAU configuration which will be covered by TY Flight Clearance 88-092. Attachment 1 contains the mission summaries, and Attachment 2 contains the data reduction worksheets to document and coordinate flight test data. Attachment 3 contains the acceptable mass and physical properties for munitions to be used during this test program. 1.1.3 All testing will be consistent with existing T.O. 1F-16A-1 aircraft operating procedures. Standard -33 loading procedures and -34 aircrew procedures will be used, except for the BLU-IO'IIMAU configuration. A local loading procedures checklist will be developed and approved for the BLU-107IMAU configuration. 1.2 Test Objectives. 1.2.1 Collect munitions impact, dispersion, time-space-position-information (TSPI), and pilot aiming error data on specified munitions released from F-16 aircraft with OFP Block 2:-1 software. 1.2.2 Collect data to develop a footprint database on Armament Division (AD) F-16 aircraft for BDU-33 Continuously Computed Impact Point (CCIP), Dive Toss (DTOS), and Continuously Computed Release Point (CCRP) delivery modes for OFP Block Z-1 Software. 2.0 TEST ITEM DESCRIPTION 2.1 F-16 Primary Test Aircraft. F-16 primary test aircraft will he equipped with OFP Block Z-1 software and the Programmable Data Acquisition System (PDAS). A detailed description of the basic F-16 aircraft is contained in T.O. 1F-16A-1. 2.2 Test Munitions. Detailed descriptions of test munitions are contained in T.O. 1F-16A-33-1-1. Inertfilled warheads and dispensers with inert submunitions will be used if available. Live fuzing will not be required except for dispenser openings.
F-3
3.O INSTRUMENTATION.
No unique or special purpose instrumentation is required in support of this test. Existing ground and
airborne facilities and the capabilities identified in AD Technical Facilities Manuals p o l 1 and Vol 2) are adequate. Applicable technical support requirements and procedures are detailed in the Technical Support Annex (Annex B to the Test Directive). 4.0 OBJECTIVES, PROCEDURES, AND DATA 4.1 Objectives 4.1.1 Objective 1.2.1. Collect munitions impact, dispersion, time-space-position-information (TSPI), and pilot aiming error data on specified munitions released from F-16 aircraft with OFP Block 2-1 software. 4.1.2 Objective 1.2.3. Collect data to develop a footprint database on AD F-16 aircraft for BDU-33 Continuously Computed Impact Point (CCIP), Dive Toss W S ) , and Continuously Computed Release Point (CCRP) delivery modes for OFP Block 2-1 software. 4.2 Purpose. Time-space-position-information will be used to address weapons ballisticdtrajectory characteristics. Weapons scoring will facilitate quantification of weapon delivery performance with respect to a particular munition and a related delivery mode. 4.3 Method. 4.3.1 Testing will be in accordance with the attached Mission Summary. The flight parameters listed in the Mission Summary have the following tolerances. Test tolerances are 20 KTAS, t 200 feet MSL (must ensure safe escape), 0.5 g, and 25 degree dive. Do not exceed T.O. 1F-16A-1 limits. Testing will occur in two phases: Production Representative Demonstration and Operational Verification. 4.3.1.1 Production Representative Demonstration. F-16A-0609 and F-16A-0761 (if available) will be footprinted to determine total system bias. Footprinting will be accomplished by flying CCIP, DTOS, and C C W profiles specified in the Mission Summary (see Mission No. 1). Upon completion of Mission Nos. 1 and 2, 3246 TESTW/TY personnel must review and analyze the data before proceeding to subsequent missions. 4.3.1.2 Operational Verification. F-16 specific operation profiles have been coordinated with Hq TAC for each configuration. Data will be collected to determine the total system accuracy for each profile of the F-16 aircraft. 4.3.2 Aircrew executing weapon deliveries will use aircraft onboard recording to document pipperlcursor location with respect to the target at the time of the weapon release event. Aircrew will attempt to keep the pipper/cursor aligned with the target; however, the aircrew should not aggressively maneuver the aircraft immediately prior to release. This will permit the weapon release computer system to function with stabilized parameters during computations prior to weapon release. Other operational considerations for pilots participating in this test follow. 4.3.2.1 Dive Toss (DTOS). Release altitudes refer to the altitude at which the pilot initiates the g pull-up maneuver. 4.3.2.2 Continuously Computed Impact Point (CCIP). The aircrew should initiate a smooth pull at briefed range to 4 g's within 2 seconds. The aircraft should be kept in a steady 4-g pull with wings level following the steering cues. Wings will be level one second prior to release. Radar ranging will be used. 4.3.2.3 Continuously Computed Release Point (CCRP). The aircrew should initiate a smooth pull at briefed range, to 4-gs within two seconds. The aircraft should be kept in a steady 4-g pull with wings
F-4
level following the steering cues. Wings will be level one second prior to release. Radar ranging will be used. 4.3.3 Weight, center of gravity, and moments of inertia (pitch and yaw) will be verified and recorded as part of the test records for test items released from the F-16 test aircraft. Items with mass properties different from those specified must be cleared by 3246 TESTW/TY prior to scheduling for upload on the aircraft. 4.3.4 Approved munitions loading checklists (ref. AFSCR 66-1 and ADR 136-3) and aircrew preflight/postflight checklists (ref. ADR 127-2 and AD Sup 1 to AFSCR 80-33) must be available prior to the start of flight testing. 4.3.5 Meteorological records will be required as part of the ballistic data acquisition effort. The required meteorological data are to be provided as outlined in TZP Standard 76-01. Pibal data is required within one-half hour of actual munition releases. 4.3.6 The test flights will be conducted over authorized AD test areas using standard flight profiles under supervision of the AD Airborne Test Review/Safety Board (ATR/SB). 4.3.7 Use of safety chase aircraft in support of weapon delivery test missions will be commensurate with ATR/SB requirements. Aerial tanker support will be used as required to extend flight duration for the primary andlor chase aircraft on selected test missions. Aerial photography of impact is desired to satisfy impact data requirement. 4.3.8 An AD land test area with appropriate cinetheodolite coverage will be required for the acquisition of ballistics data. Ground-based radar will be used as necessary to monitor, track, or position the bombreleasing aircraft on approved flight profiles. Radar also may be used to aid cinetheodolite acquisition for aircrafhunition tracking purposes. 4.3.9 Tracking of the aircraft/external store combinations by time-correlated cinetheodolites (B&W, 30 f p s ) and ground-based high-speed tracking cameras (color, 96 f p s ) will be required to obtain TSPI during the munition trajectory. Tracking of the aircraft/munition combination sb.ould commence a minimum of 3 seconds prior to the munition release event. The munition will be tracked from release, through fallaway, to bomb ground impact or dispenser opening event, as applicable. 4.3.10 A white vertical Idfoot x 16-foot panel with radar reflector will be erected as a target marker to facilitate early target acquisition ducing level and low angle deliverim. To facilitate assessment of aimpoint error from optical sight camera (KB-25/A) film, distinguishable markings surrounding the target are required. The range markings should be concentric about the target center at 50-foot intervals to a distance of 200 feet. NOTE: Distinguishable target markings must be maintained to aid aircrew and AD/= personnel in assessing aiming error. 4.3.11 Cluster munitions should be dropped one weapon per target, four targets per grid. reflector will be installed in the center of each target. A radar
4.3.12 When appropriate, the test engineer may request spotting tower reports or BDU-33 bomb impacts points. Pertinent target center coordinates are also to be provided to the test engineer. 4.3.13 In addition to safety if flight considerations, factors which are to be considered in aborting test missions are identified below. In general, abort if any of the following coiiditions exist: 4.3.13.1 Wrong OFP's 4.3.13.2 If impact scores are unreasonably far from target (greater than 1,000 feet from target) and/or outside range safety footprint.
F-5
4.3.13.3 If winds gust by more than 10 knots, Le., 5 knots gusting to 15 or if wind condition is judged to be too severe by the test engineer. Surface wind conditions will be determined by the Range Automated Weather System (RAWS) Site 0 1 . 4.3.13.4 If onboard systems are inaccurate, i.e., poor radar ranging, or bad INS with high drift rate of accelerometer vertical channel not properly compensating during Lm3S mode. 4.3.13.5 If EOD considerations apply, e.g., sequential failures (non-opening) of two dispensers filled with submunitions will cause termination of a drop mission over a given target area. 4.3.14 The F-16 primary test aircraft will be visually inspected upon landing for evidence of any adverse effects on bomb racks, pylons, or aircraft skin resulting from the release of munitions. Observed discrepancies will be documented photographically. 4.3.15 As part of the test records, the pilot of the primary F-16 test aircraft will provide the test engineer with a written flight test report upon completion of each bomb drop mission. Each report should include, but not necessarily be limited to, informationlcomments on the following: 4.3.15.1 Identification of F-16 primary test aircraft, OFP software installed, flight test configuration, including type of munitions uploaded and respective fuzdtime settings. 4.3.15.2 Deviations between planned and actual munitions release conditions, including release mode. 4.3.15.3 Apparent aiming error (HUD film review). 4.3.15.4 Problems with aircraft subsystems. 4.3.15.5 Problems with carriage and/or release of munitions, including related problems with aircraft handling characteristics. 4.3.15.6 Postmission inspection of aircraft. 4.3.15.7 Incidents which may adversely affect aircraftlaviouics boresight alignments. 4.3.16 The test engineer will maintain flight test mission records which will include a complete description of each aircraft flight test configuration, including bomb rack loadings, rack orifice openings, type ejection cartridges, and munition release conditions/mode. Munition identifications will include mass properties, the type fuzes installed, and fuze/timer settings. Results of boresight checks will be included as part of the test records as well as results of aircraft postflight inspections after completion of a bomb drop mission. Aircraft malfunctions, munition separation problems, or test support problems that adversely affected the outcome of a test mission will be documented. Copies of reduced TSPI as well as copies of plots of munition impact coordinatedpatterns and related target center coordinates should be included as part of the test records. Still descriptive photographs will be made as directed by the test engineer to document test munitions and aircraft flight test configurations. Copies of onboard recordings will also be included as part of the test records. 4.3.17 The 3247th Test Squadron aircrew will: 4.3.17.1 Ensure that safety-of-flight issues are resolved prior to flight. 4.3.17.2 Review safe escape data found in T.O. IF-16A-34-1-1, Section 4, for each mission. Primary release parameters are airspeed and dive angle while release altitude is driven by safe escape and tactical considerations. 4.3.17.3 Perform a 13-minute INS alignment prior to taxi.
F-6
4.3.17.4 Perform in-flight INS and radar ranging systems checks prior to releasing munitions. 4.3.17.5 Complete the PilotlTest Engineer Mission Summary Report. Review HUD video imiediately after flight and complete the Data Reduction Worksheet, AFSC Form 4772, and draw a target area sketch depicting aimpoint and estimated impacts per release. The exact configuration, OFP software installed, munition fuze and timer settings, aiming error, etc., must be accurately documented. Approximate impact scores from spotting towers or testlsupport aircraft will be included in the AFSC Form 4772 and updated by the test engineer once more when accurate data is available. 4.3.17.6 Report to the test engineer any hard landings which may misalign the aircraft's boresight. 4.3.17.7 Report any aircraft system errors, especially INS anomalies, on the data reduction worksheet and to the test engineer. Include INS debrief data with report, if applicable. 4.4 Criteria, 4.4.1 A pass condition for a weapons delivery mission is defined as all events related to a particular weapon delivery mode function in accordance with pre-defined sequence. A fail condition results if: 4.4.1.1 All events do not occur. 4.4.1.2 All events occur but are not in proper sequence. 4.4.1.3 More events occur than should have (even if there is no adverse system impact). 4.4.2 The criteria for success of the overall weapon delivery flight test is the acquisition of sufficient quantitative data and qualitative information to establish baseline weapon system delivery performance for the selected munitions and test conditions. 4.5 Resources Required. Principal resource requirements related to acquisition of ballistics data on munitions release from F-16 primary test aircraft will include: 4.5.1 F-16 primary test aircraft equipped with PDAS. Technical Order -99 INS calibrations must be performed monthly. Also, it must be verified that camera control and RBS beacon tone circuitry do not alter the standard release pulse timing sequence generated by the OFP and FCC. 4.5.2 Chase aircraft (commensurate with ATWSB requirement). 4.5.3 Aerial tanker support. 4.5.4 Test munitions and associated equipment as listed in the attachments. 4.5.5 3246th MMS Load Crews 4.5.6 Munition handlinghploading equipment. 4.5.7 Munition PMF (Etldg 990). 4.5.8 Authorized land test area with cinetheodolite and associated ground high speed motion ]picture coverage. Spotting tower support. Bomb scoring.
4.5.9 Targets (white, 16-foot x 16-foot vertical panels with radar reflectors) including target coordinates (latitude and longitude).
4.5.10 Meteorological support (ref. TZP Standard 76-01).
F-7
4.5.11 CCF (test engineer - Ground/air test communicationdcontrol). 4.5.12 Still documentaryldescriptive photography. 4.6 Data Records. Principal test records (data source) will be: 4.6.1 Cinethwdolite film. 4.6.2 High speed ground camera film. 4.6.3 Radar TSPI (when applicable). 4.6.4 Munitions ground impact measurements (copy to KR). 4.6.5 Target center coordinates (copy to KR). 4.6.6 Onboard recordings (copy to KR). 4.6.7 Postmission inspection results (aircraft). 4.6.8 Meteorological records (copy to KR). 4.6.9 Munition mass properties records (copy to TYDB). 4.6.10 F-16 pilot flight test mission reports (copy to TY). 4.6.11 Test engineer test records. 4.6.12 Still descriptive photographs. 4.6.13 F-16 PDAS printout (copy to TY). 4.7 Data Reduction/Analysis. Principal requirements follow: 4.7.1 Cinetheodolite and related high-speed ground camera film will be reduced to provide ballistics data in accordance with AD/KR procedure and format, as related to TZP Standard 76-01, dated 2 Sep 86. (Output origin axis should be rotated to align with aircraft ground track at munition release.) Three copies Cinethwdolite and related high-speed of reduced data will be provided to 3246 TW/TYDB. ground camera film associated with gross misses (+ 1000 feet) should be retained for purpose of flow field assessment.
m:
4.7.2 Onboard recordings will require assessment to establish pipper placement with respect to ground target (aim point error) at bomb release event. 4.7.3 In conjunction with the reduced ballistics data, 3246 TW/TYDB requires a data worksheet for each bomb release event. ADIKRnR, the test engineer and the test pilot will provide timely inputs for completion of data sheets. 4.7.4 The test engineer's flight test records and F-16 pilots flight test reports will be used as required to provide inputs for the data reduction and to corroborate test item deficiencies, aircraft system malfunctions, or test support problems that adversely affected test results. 4.7.5 Final analysis of collected test data to validate the performance of the F-16 weapon delivery system using F-16 2-1 OFP ballistics software by correlation and analysis of munition impacts, dispersion, and pilot aiming error will be the responsibility of 3246 TW/TY. The integration of pertinent test data into the
F-U
freestream database related to T.O. 1F-16-34 ballistics tables will also be the responsibility of the 3246 TWiTY as well as assessments of any effects due to the position of a given munition in the aircraft's flowfield.
4.8 Summary of Mission. Ref. Attachment 1 to this annex.
4.9 Potential Hazards. No safety hazards are envisioned that would elevate risks above those normally associated with aircraft/munition separation flight test investigations, Le., not categorized as high risk flight test missions (ADR 127-2). 5.0 Interim Test Reviews (Ref. TZ 0 80-4. Test progress reviews will be accomplished by the test 1 engineer if any one of the following events occurs: unsatisfactory data acquisition, safety problems, or test item deficiencies which dictate that testing should be suspended or discontinued.
PREPARED BY
DATE
1BNOYBB
PA= OF
'
14
MIKE JOHNSON
CONFIGURATIONS
TEST CONDlTlONS
NSTRUMENTATION REQUIRED
isPl IAW
Z STD P
ggl
IEOUIRED
'DAS
IUD AVW
OP1
BDU.?3%UU-20
I
AFT LOOKlNG
I
I
FORWARD
WAS):
540
IALTIAW:
:
OR:
ELMODE
TSPl !AW
ELO
TZP STD
7Mn REQUIRED POAS
a
4g
DTOS
SINGLE RELEASE
SEE MISSION 1
HUD AVW
ANALydD BY TMIB
PREPARED BY MIKE JOHNSON ROJECT TITLE -16 21 OFP VERIFICATION FLIGHT TEST TEST ARTlCES ANICONFIGURATIONS TEST CONDmONS
DATE 18NOVfB
PAGE 2 OF 1 4
I 2671AL78
I
ISN 0.
-
MISSION DETAILS
91R PHOTOS OF IMPACTS REQUIRED
AFT LOOKING
II
x
AIMQ
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X
AIM4
ITIMERSETTING:
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TER-SA
CBU-87mR S L A M 2
AFT LOOKING
4
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1 1 2 1 3 14 1 5 1 6 1 7 1 8 1 9
SEE NtiSSlON 3
I SINGLERELEASE
TIMER SETTING:
4.0 SEC
DATE 18NOV88
PAGE 3 OF 14
MSN NO.
78
INSTRUMENTATIOI REQUIRED
MISSION DETAILS AIR PHOTOS OF IMPACTS REQUIRED VEAPONS TO BE DROPPED )N SEPARATE GRIDS
AFT LOOKING
I\
FOEWARD
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T(AGL):
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7 m
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1 1 2 1 3 1 4 1 5 1 6 1 7 1 8 19
SEE MISSION 5
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I
ALT(AGU: 35My DWANGLE: -20 LOAD FACTOR4 SINGLE RELEASE DELMODE: 010s TIMER SRTING:
4.0 SEC
DATE 18NOV88
PAGE 4 OF 14
SN
3.
AFT LOOKlNG
MISSION DETAILS AIR PHOTOS OF IMPACTS REQUIRED MAPONS TO BE DROPPED 3N SEPARATE GRIDS
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REQUIRED PDAS
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MAU-120
MU-12 MU-12
MU-12
DATE 18NOV88
2671 78
PAGE 5 OF 14
.--- - . ...-
INSTRUMENTATIC REQUIRED
MISSION DETAILS
AIR PHOTOS OF
IMPACTS REQUIRED W O N S TO BE DROPPED
)N SEPARATE GRIDS
I
C B U - 8 7 M U - I2 AFT LOOKlNG
1
MAU-12
MU-12
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SEE MISSION 9
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FORWAR+S (WAS): 480 ALT(AGL): 1003 3NEANGLE: +% LOAD FACTOR: 49 DELMODE CCRP SINGLE RELEASE TIMER SETTING:
4.0 SEC
DATE
18NoV88
PAGE 6
OF
14
AFT LOOKING
SWAS):
540
rspi ww
r p STD
76-01
3EQUIRED
'DAS
x
AIMS
TIMERSRTING:
0
mu-120
0 @ 0M U 4 2
MU42
AIM-9
MUM2
ALT(AGL):
4500'
1 1 2 1 3 1 4 1 5 1 6 1 7 1 8 1 9 -SINGLE RELEASE
SEE MISSION 1 2 TIMER S E " G :
4.0 SEC
PREPARED BY MIKE JOHNSON IECT TmE 2 OFP MRlFlCATlON FLIGHT TEST 1 TEST ARTICLES AN[CONFIGURAllONS TEST CONDITIONS
DATE 18NOV88
PAGE 7 OF 14
WORK D l R E C l M NO.
267lAL78 INSTRUMEMATIOI REQUIRED
AFT LOOMNG
AIS (WAS):
480
TSPl IAW
rzp s m
7601 REQUIRED
1 1 2 1 3 1 4 1 5 1 6 1 7 ) 8
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U
TER-SA
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K
AIM-9
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TWGL):
3sw
REQUIRED
PDAS
TIMER SETTING:
4.0 SEC
HUD AVTR
DATE 18NOV88
PAGE 8 OF 14
ISN !O.
I
TEST CONDITIONS
h S MAS):
287
~~
-78
INSTRUMEMATIC REQUIRED
TSPl IAW TZP STD 78-01 REQUIRED PDAS MISSION DETAlLS
AFT LOOKING
16
0
I\
480
1 W
AIR PHOTOS OF
IMPACTS REQUIRED MAPONS TO BE DROPPED )N SEPARATE GRIDS
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REO AVTR
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TSPl IAW TZP STD 7601 REQUIRED PDAS
17
SEE MlSSiON i 6
HUD AVlR
PREPARED BY MIKE JOHNSON PROJECT rmE F-16 21 OFF MRlFlCAllON FLIGHT TEST TEST ARTICLES ANOCONFlGURATlONS TEST CONDmONS WORK DIRECTIVE NO.
I
PAGE g OF 14
MSN NO.
AFT LOOMNG
18a
11
MISSION DETAILS
(WAS): T(AGL):
520
3500'
rspi IAW
rzp STD
76-01
AIR PHOTOS OF
IMPACTS REQUIRED WEAPONS TO BE DROPPED 3 N SEPARAE GRIDS DROP FROM STATIONS 341 AND 7/1 (FIRST TWO STORES)
LOAD FACTOR:@
DEL MODE: DTOS SINGLE RELEASE
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PREPARED BY MIKE JOHNSON 'ROJECT TITE '-1 8 1 OFP VERIFICATION FUGHT TEST 7 .
~~
DATE 18NOV88
PAGE10 OF 14
I 2871
TEST CONDITIONS
MISSION DETAILS
AFT LOOKING
0-"
1 I
FORWARC VS WAS): 550/0.6?mach \LT(AGL): 4ooo' J o )WE ANGLE: -30 .OAD FACTOR: 49 )EL MODE: DTOS SINGLE RELEASE
nMER SEITING: 4.0 SEC
AIR PHOTOS OF
IMPACTS REQUIRED W O N S TO BE DROPPED )N SEPARATE GRIDS
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OPT
TER-SA
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FORWARI VS WAS): 480 !LT(AGL): 2ooo' WEANGLE: 0 OAD FACTOR 1g )EL MODE: CClP ;INGLE RELEASE
x
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0
Mu-120
MU42
0
MU-12 MAU-12
x
AIM-9
M E R SETllNG:
4.0 SEC
DATE 18NOV88
PAGE11 OF 14
I 7R71 .
TEST CONDITIONS
.78
INSTRUMENTATIO REQUIRED
TSPl IAW TZP STD 7 m REQUIRED PDAS HUD AVlR
MISSION DETAILS
AFT LOOKING
I\
!A6 M A S ) :
600
MAU-12
MAU-12
:BU-WU-l2
AFT LOOKING
78-01
'
'
PREPARED BY MIKE JOHNSON ROJECT TITLE -16 21 OFP VERIFICATION FUGHT TEST TEST ARTICLES ANCCONFIGURATIONS TEST CONDITIONS WORK DIRECTIVE NO.
9671
DATE 18NOV88
PAGE 12 OF 14
78
INSTRUMEMATIO REQUIRED TSPl IAW TZP STD 7601 REQUIRED PDAS MISSION DETAILS
$ .I .
AIM-9
0
MAU-120
0
@
MAU-12 MAU-12 MAU-12
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HUD A m
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AFT LOOKING
FOF
DATE 18NOV88
PAGE 13 OF
14
I 2671AL78
TEST ARTICLES ANCCONFIGURATIONS TEST CONDITIONS INSTRUMENTATIO REQUIRED TSPl IAW TZP STD 78-M REQUIRED PDAS HUD A m MISSION DETAILS AIR PHOTOS OF IMPACTS REQUIRED N W O N S TO BE DROPPED 3N SEPARATE GRIDS M O P FROM STATIONS 3AND 7 FIRSTTWO STORES)
__
AFT LOOKING
2%
MSN NO.
II
FORWARD
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AIR PHOTOS OF
IMPACTS REQUIRED WEAPONS TO BE DROPPED ON SEPARATE GRIDS DROP FROM STATIONS 4AND 6 (lASTTW0 STORES)
PREPARED BY MIKE JOHNSON 'ROJECT TITI '-16 Z1 OFP VERIFICATION FLIGHT TEST WORK DIRECTM NO.
m 1AI 7R 7
_ _ . . I _ . _
DATE 18NOV88
PAGE 14 OF 14
ISN 0.
26
MISSION DETAILS
AIM-9
000
TER-9A TER-SA
HUD A m
BLU-l07/ER
AFT LOOKING
27
I\
'
FoRwAR%S
WAS):
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MU-i20
MAU-12 MAU-12
MU-12
3LU-107iMAU-12
F-23
TECHNICAL SUPPORT ANNEX TEST DIRECTIVE NO. 2671AL78 F-16/Z-1 OFP VERIFICATION
1.
w. This test program is to verify the delivery accuracy of the Z-1 OFP while employing
CBU-87, CBU-89, and BLU-107 munitions. Support will be required from these organizations: Photographic Support (Photolab Contractor), Operations Support (DOUP), Meteorological Support (ADNE), Mathematical Computation (AD/KR), Engineering Support (TFR, TFE), and the Range O&M Contractor.
c. Meteorological S U O U OA ~ . N E will: ~D
(1)Provide the weather parameters from the readings nearest the mission time to include wind speed and direction, temperature, humidity, pressure, and density.
(2) Coordinate the release of a pibal for track by the Contraves cinetheodolites within 30 minutes post mission.
d. Eneineerine S U U D O ~ ~ . (1)TFE will preflight the PDAS and HUD video on the scheduled F-16 aircraft. (2)TFR will provide the 16-foot x 16-foot vertical white target panels with a radar reflector centered on each panel facing the aircraft approach heading. The target for submunition drops should be marked with concentric circles at %-foot intervals out to 200 feet from target center.
e. Mathematical Comautation. AD/KR will reduce and analyze the cinetheodolite film to obtain TSPI
on the delivery aircraft to release and the munition from release to function and/or impact. Rotate the data to aircraft ground track at munition release. Reduce the pibal track to obtain wind data for the ballistic calculation. Provide plot and orientation data for the submunition patterns scored by the O&M Contractor.
F-24
(2) Operate up to four cinetheodolites to track the mission aircraft to release and the munition from release to function and/or ground impact. Operate the cameras at 30 frames per second for this portion of the track and track a pibal to mission altitude plus 500 feet within 30 minutes post mission at 10 frames per second.
cameras operation at 96 frames per second with color (3) Set up a tracking mount with two 35" film, one camera with an 80-inch lens and one with a 32-inch lens, to track the mission aircraft to release and the test item from release to function andlor impact. (4)Provide target support as requested by TFR to assure a good 16-foot x l6-foot target with radar reflector for each munition release.
(5)Operate the low-level-sounder weather equipment on the MAWS when scheduled to provide wind data within 30 minutes of the scheduled mission time. Winds at the mission altitude are
required. Wind gusts are of interest when in excess of 10 knots. Calculate deviations in wind speed and direction using RHAWS data at 60 samples per minute (spm) with outputs each minute. (6)Provide scoring relative to the target for all munitions released when requested by the Test Engineer. Score submunition patterns. 3, Data Classification. Authority: F-16 Security Classification Guide.
a. Tracking Accuracy:
b. Any data (TSPI, etc) which reveals "a" above - CONFIDENTIAL, declassify on OADR.
c. Specific frequency and frequency band, frequency separation between channels, wide-band- or narrow-band-commanded frequencies, and first local oscillator frequency of ANiAPG-68 radar SECRET, declassify on OADR.
RALPH..I PARRETT Chief, Technical Support Branch
Annex-1-1
Annex 1
Volume Number 1.
2.
Tide
Basic Principles of Flight Test Instrumentation Engineering by A.Pool and D.Bosman (under revision) In-Flight Temperature Measurements by ETrenkle and M.Reinhardt The Measurement of Fuel Flow by J.T.France The Measurement of Engine Rotation Speed by M.Vedrunes Magnetic Recording of Flight Test Data by G.E.Bennett Open and Closed Loop Accelerometers by LMclaren Strain Gauge Measurements on Aircraft by E.Kottkamp, H.Wilhelm and D.Kohl Linear and Angular Position Measurement of Aircraft Components by J.C.van der Linden and H.A.Mensink Aeroelastic Flight Test Techniques and Instrumentation by J.W.G.van Nunen and GPiazzoli Helicopter Flight Test Instrumentation by K.R.Ferrell Pressure and Flow Measurement by W.Wuest Aircraft Flight Test Data Processing - A Review of the State of the Art by L.J.Smith and N.O.Mattbews Practical Aspects of Instrumentation System Installation by R.W.Borek The Analysis of Random Data by D.A.Williams Gyroscopic Instruments and their Application to Flight Testing by BStieler and H.Winter Trajectory Measurements for Take-off and Landing Test and Other Short-Range Applications by P. de Benque d'Agut, H.Riebeek and A.Pool Analogue Signal Conditioning for Flight Test Instrumentation by D.W.Veatch and R.K.Bogue Microprocessor Applications in Airborne Flight Test Instrumentation by M.J.Pnckett Digital Signal Conditioning for Flight Test by G.A.Bever
Publication Dare
1974
1973
3.
1972
4.
1973
5.
1974
6.
7.
1974
197h
8.
1977
9. 10.
1979
1980
11.
1980
12.
1980
13.
1981
14.
1981
15.
1982
16.
1985
17.
18.
1986
1987
19.
1991
Annex-1-2
2.
Number
Title
Guide to In-Flight Thrust Measurement of Turbojets and Fan Engines by the MIDAP Study Group (UK)
Publicuiion Dute
AG237
1979
The remaining volumes are published as a sequence of Volume Numbers of AGARDograph 300.
Volirnie Number
1.
Title
Calibration of Air-Data Systems and Flow Direction Sensors by J.A.Lawford and K.R.Nippress Identification of Dynamic Systems by R.E.Maine and K.W.1liff Identification o Dynamic Systems - Applications to Aircraft f Part 1: The Output Error Approach by R E M a i n e and K.W.Iliff Dctcrmination of Antenna Patterns and Radar Reflcction Characteristics of Aircraft by H.Bothe and D.McDonald Store Separation Flight Testing by R.J.xrnold and C.S.Epsrein Developmental Airdrop Testing Techniques and Devices by H.J.Hunter Air-to-Air Radar Flight Testing by R.E:Scott Flight Testing under Extreme Environmental Conditions by CLHenrickson Aircraft Exterior Noise Measurement and Analysis Techniques by H.Heller Weapon Dclivcry Analysis and Ballistic Flight Testing by R.J.Arnold and J.B.Knight
Publicurion Dute
1983
1985
2.
3.
1986
4.
5.
I986
I986
1987
6.
7.
1Y88
8. 9.
10.
1988
1991
1992
At the time of publication of the present volume the following volumes were in preparation: Identification of Dynamic Systems. Applications to Aircraft Part 2 : Nonlinear Model Analysis and Manoeuvre Design by J.A.Mulder and J.H.Breeman Flight Testing of Terrain Following Systcms by C.Dallimore and M.K.Foster Reliability and Maintainability by J.Howell Testing of Flight Critical Control Systems on Helicoptcrs by J.D.L.Gregory Flight Testing of Air-to-Air Refuelling of Fixed Wing Aircraft by %Bradley and KEmerson Introduction to Flight Test Engineering Edited by EStoliker Space System Testing by A.Wisdom
Annex-2-1
Number
Author
Title
Flight Testing Under Extreme Climatic Conditions Aircraft Vertical Center of Gravity Determination Using the Ground Inclination Method Electrical Subsystems Flight Test Handbook Hydraulic Subsystems Flight Test Handbook Environmental Control Subsystems Flight Test Handbook Development of Curves for Estimating Aircraft Arresting Hook Loads A Comprehensive Approach to ln-Flight Thrust Determination Voice Stress Analysis as a Measure of Operator Workload Handbook on Aircraft Noise Metrics
Dute
1988 1975
AFFTC-TIH-88-004 AFFTC-TIM-75- 11
1984
1983
1982
1982
NATC-TM-79-33SA
Chapin,P.W.
1980
NATC-TM-79-3SY
1980
NASA-CR-3406
1981
Pilot's Handbook for Critical and Exploratory Flight Testing. (Sponsored by AIAA & SETP - Library of Congress Card No.76-189165)
1972
1980
__
4. Security Classifical
UNCLASSIFIEL
5 . Originator
Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Development I North Atlantic Treaty Organization 7 Rue Ancelle. 92200 Neuillv sur Seine. France
h-
6. Title
7.Presented at
8. Author(s)/Editor(s)
9. Da.te
2/oq
I
July 1992
ilz
170
1,3
11. Pages
Department of the Air Force Headquarters 3246th Test Wing (AFSC) Eglin Air Force Base, Florida 32542-5000, United States EDistribution Statement
This document is distributed in accordance with AGARD policies and regulations, which are outlined on the back covers of all AGARD publications.
13-Keywords/DEscriptors
EAhstract
/--
L This volume in the AGARD Flight Test Techniques series treats stores ballistic mtrdelingltestinl
from the overall system standpoint. All aspects of the ballistic testing design, data collection techniques, data reduction, analysis techniques, and finally the Operational Flight Program modeling techniques are addressed. Considerable effort has been expended to keep this report straightforward so that it can be understood by management as well as engineering personnel, h~ with sufficient engineering principles addressed so that a true ballistician could use it from an application perspective.'^. .-,
This AGARDograph has been sponsored by the Flight Mechanics Panel of AGARD.
AGARDograph 300 Volumc 10 Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Development, NATO WEAPON DELIVERY ANALYSIS AND BALLISTIC FLIGHT TESTING by R.J.Arnold and J.B.Knight Published July 1992 170 pages This volume in the AGARD Flight Test Techniques series treats stores ballistic modelinghesting from the ovcrall system standpoint. All aspects of the ballistic testing design, data collection techniques, data reduction, analysis techniques. and finally the Operational Flight Program modeling techniques are addressed. Considerable effort has been cxpendcd to keep this report straightforward so that it can he understood by management as well as engineering personnel, but with sufficient engineering P.T.O. AGARDograph 300 Volume 1 0 Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Dcvelopment, NATO WEAPON D E L N E R Y ANALYSIS AND BALLISTIC FLIGHT TESTING by R.J.Arnold and J.B.Knight Published July 1992 170 pages This volume in the AGARD Flight Test Techniques series treats stores ballistic modelinghesting from the overall system standpoint. All aspects of the ballistic testing design, data collection techniques, data reduction, analysis techniques, and finally the Operational Flight Program modeling techniques are addressed. Considerable effort has been expended to keep this report straightforward so t h a t i t can be understood by management as well as engineering personnel, but with sufficient engineering P.T.O.
AGAKD-AG-30C Volume 10 $allisticsanalysis kcuracy verification lallistic verifiication 3allistic modeling Sxternal stores )FP ballistic testing
AGARDograph 300 Volume 1 0 Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Development, NATO WEAPON DELIVERY ANALYSIS AND BALLISTIC FLIGHT TESTING by R.J.Arnold and J.B.Knight Published July 1992 170 pages This volume in the AGARD Flight Test Techniques series treats stores ballistic modelinghesting from the overall system standpoint. All aspects of the ballistic testing design, data collection techniques, data reduction, analysis techniques, and finally the Operational Flight Program modeling techniques are addressed. Considerable effor! has been expended to keep this report straightforward so that it can be understood by management as well as engineering personnel, but with sufficient engineering
AGARD-AG-300 Volume 10 jallistics analysis 4ccuracy verification 3allistic verifiication 3allistic modeling External stores 3 F P ballistic testing
P.T.O.
AGARD-AG-300 Volume 10 3allistics analysis 4ccuracy verification 3allistic verifiication Ballistic modeling External stores 3 F P ballistic testing AGARDograph 300 Volume 10 Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Development, NATO WEAPON D E L N E R Y ANALYSIS AND BALLISTIC FLIGHT TESTING by R.J.Arnold and J.B.Knight Published July I992 170 pages This volume in the AGARD Flight Test Techniques series treats stores ballistic modcling/testing from the overall system standpoint. All aspects of the ballistic testing design, data collection techniques, data reduction, analysis techniques, and finally the Operational Flight Program modeling techniques are addressed. Considerable effort has been expended to keep this report Straightforward so that it can be understood by management as well as engineering personnel, hut with sufficient engineering P.T.O. AGARU-AG-300 Volume 10 Ballistics analysis Accuracy verification Ballistic verifiication Ballistic modeling External stores OFP ballistic testing
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