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Icing Frequencies Experienced During Climb and Descent by Fighter-Interceptor AircraftData and analyses are presented on the relative frequencies of occurrence and severity of icing cloud layers encountered by jet aircraft in the climb and descent phases of flights to high altitudes. Fighter-interceptor aircraft operated by the Air Defense Command (USAF) at bases in the Duluth and Seattle areas collected the data with icing meters installed for a l-year period. The project was part of an extensive program conducted by the NACA to collect Icing cloud data for evaluating the icing problem relevant to routine operations. The average frequency of occurrence of icing was found to be about 5 percent of the number of climbs and descents during 1 year of operations The icing encounters were predominantly in the low and middle cloud layers, decreasing above 15,000 feet to practically none above 25,000 feet. The greatest thickness of ice that would accumulate on any aircraft component (as indicated by the accretion on a small object) was measured with the icing meters. The ice thicknesses on a small sensing probe averaged less than 1/32 inch and did not exceed 1/2 inch. Such accumulations are relatively small when compared with those that can form during horizontal flight in icing clouds. The light accretions resulted from relatively steep angles of flight through generally thin cloud layers. Because of the limited statistical reliability of the results, an analysis was made using previous statistics on icing clouds below an altitude of 20,000 feet to determine the general icing severity probabilities. The calculations were made using adiabatic lifting as a basis to establish the liquid-water content. Probabilities of over-all ice accretions on a small object as a function of airspeed and rate of climb were computed from the derived water contents. These results were then combined with the probability of occurrence of icing in order to give the icing severity that can be expected for routine aircraft operations.
Document ID
19810068857
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Other - NACA Technical Note
Authors
Perkins, Porter J.
(National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. Lewis Flight Propulsion Lab. Cleveland, OH, United States)
Date Acquired
August 11, 2013
Publication Date
July 1, 1958
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Report/Patent Number
NACA-TN-4314
Report Number: NACA-TN-4314
Accession Number
81N73279
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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