-
positioning of the
elevons e.g. one wing's
elevons completely down and the
other wing's
elevons partly down. An
aircraft with
elevons is
controlled as though...
-
leading edge that was
swept back at a 45-degree angle.
There were four
elevons mounted at the
trailing edges of the
delta wings, and the
combination rudder...
-
variant flight control surfaces such as a V-tail ruddervator, flaperons, or
elevons,
because these various combined-purpose
control surfaces control rotation...
- and dual-wheel main gear, and has six
control surfaces,
including two
elevons and four "inlaids". The
inlaids are
small flap
structures mounted on the...
-
penetrated by the jet
engine inlets, and a
secondary spar used for
mounting the
elevons. It was
designed with a 7g load
factor and a 1.8×
safety rating giving...
-
functions of
aircraft flight control systems such as ailerons, elevators,
elevons,
flaps and
flaperons into
wings to
perform the
aerodynamic purpose with...
- sections.
Control was
achieved via two wing-tip
elevons,
which combined the
functionality of
traditional elevons and ailerons; a pair of
Fowler flaps were also...
- and a
single engine in
tractor configuration.
Control surfaces include an
elevon at the
trailing edge of each wing and a
conventional vertical stabilizer...
-
between the
inboard and
outboard elevon deflections,
varying at
differing speeds including supersonic. Only the
innermost elevons,
attached to the
stiffest area...
-
surfaces are used
throughout the aircraft's
flight envelope, the
inner elevons are
normally only in use at slow speeds, such as landing. To
avoid potential...