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  2. Lift fan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lift_fan

    The Verticraft Verticar of 1961 was a similar single-fan, directed-thrust, all-wing (or lifting body) aircraft, of conventional but very low-aspect-ratio wing planform. It failed to fly. A tandem-fan version was proposed but never built. [5] By contrast the Ryan XV-5 Vertifan of 1964 was an otherwise conventional delta-wing jet. It had a large ...

  3. FanWing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fanwing

    The FanWing is a type of aircraft rotor wing in which a horizontal-axis cross-flow fan is used in close conjunction with a fixed wing. The fan forces airflow over the fixed surface to provide both lift and forward thrust. The concept was initially developed around 1997 by designer Patrick Peebles and is under development by his company FanWing ...

  4. Annular lift fan aircraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annular_lift_fan_aircraft

    The Ryan XV-5 and the F-35B use relatively smaller lift fans, either fan-in-fuselage or fan-in-wing, with very high disc loading. According to the momentum theory of the ducted fan, [ 2 ] [ 4 ] high disc loading leads to low hovering efficiency (see power vs disc loadings , JSF fan), so the F-35B can hover for only a short time, at the cost of ...

  5. Ducted fan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ducted_fan

    The most common ducted fan arrangement used in full-sized aircraft is a turbofan engine, where the power to turn the fan is provided by a gas turbine. High bypass ratio turbofan engines are used on nearly all civilian airliners , while military fighters usually make use of the better high-speed performance of a low bypass ratio turbofan with a ...

  6. RFB/Grumman American Fanliner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RFB/Grumman_American_Fanliner

    The RFB/Grumman American Fanliner was an experimental German light aircraft of the 1970s, propelled by a piston engine driving a ducted fan.A joint venture between the German company Rhein-Flugzeugbau (RFB) and the American general aviation manufacturer Grumman American, two examples were built, but no production followed.

  7. Ryan XV-5 Vertifan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryan_XV-5_Vertifan

    The engine power setting determined the lift from the fans, as fan RPM was determined by the exhaust output from the J85 engines and the load on the fan. [2] Roll control was by differential actuation of the wing-fan exit louvers. Aircraft performance was subsonic, with delta wings superficially similar to those on the Douglas A-4 Skyhawk.

  8. Edgley Optica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edgley_Optica

    The Edgley EA-7 Optica is a British light aircraft designed for low-speed observation work, and intended as a low-cost alternative to helicopters.The Optica has a loiter speed of 130 km/h (70 kn; 81 mph) and a stall speed of 108 km/h (58 kn; 67 mph).

  9. Environmental control system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_control_system

    To increase ram-air recovery, nearly all jetliners use modulating vanes on the ram-air exhaust. A ram-air fan within the ram system provides ram-air flow across the heat exchangers when the aircraft is on the ground. Nearly all modern fixed-wing aircraft use a fan on a common shaft with the ACM, powered by the ACM turbine.