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Air Force Lab Test Out "Aircraft Surfing" Technique To Save Fuel

coondoggie writes "It's not a totally new concept, but the Air Force is testing the idea of flying gas-guzzling cargo aircraft inline allowing the trailing aircraft to utilize the cyclonic energy coming off the lead plane — a concept known as vortex surfing — over long distances to save large amounts of fuel. According to an Air force release, a series of recent test flights involving two aircraft at a time, let the trailing aircraft surf the vortex of the lead aircraft, positioning itself in the updraft to get additional lift without burning extra fuel."

5 of 205 comments (clear)

  1. Apparently different than drafting... by slew · · Score: 4, Informative

    Apparently things are a bit more complicated in the air...

    Drafting helps by reducing air resistance (drag) and requires you to be really close, this technique is a bit more subtle in that it involves using trailing air vortices to get free "lift". The article had a handy link to explain this... http://www.av8n.com/fly/vortex.htm

    Of course I'm sure that someone will draw such an analogy in a pop-science article...

  2. Re:drafting... by AK+Marc · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's not drafting, it's flying in a V like birds. The lead bird works harder than the rest, and the lead changes when the front gets tired. Birds have "known" about this phenomenon for thousands of years (at least). But I'm surprised someone didn't patent it and charge the military for doing it.

  3. Re:NASCAR by h4rr4r · · Score: 5, Informative

    Drafting is also used in racing leagues that turn right and have drivers and fans educated enough to read.

  4. Re:drafting... by Thelasko · · Score: 4, Informative

    But I'm surprised someone didn't patent it and charge the military for doing it.

    The innovation isn't in the concept of "drafting" another plane. The innovation is in the autopilot system that does it safely and automatically. As shown on Mythbusters the concept is viable, but a human is not capable of keeping the plane in the "sweet spot" safely for an extended period of time.

    --
    One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
  5. Re:Who's up first? by AK+Marc · · Score: 4, Informative

    Drafting, defined as "following someone/something in a manner to reduce your aerodynamic drag by traveling in air moving at a lower relative velocity" excludes this act.

    If you feel it is drafting, please state the definition of drafting you are using, as I've not seen a definition of drafting that would include this.

    It does not depend on mitigating detrimental vorticies. NASCAR drafting does, and the lead car gets the benefit from the reduced drag. This does not benefit the vehicle in the front and is the following car using a predicted vortex to its advantage, while traveling through otherwise undisturbed air. Thus "drafting" where the folower uses the lead car to "break the air" is not happening.

    Rather than having to define "drafting" to a bunch of morons who are too stupid/lazzy to google, I'd rather discuss the efffect of this on commercial aircraft for the rest of us, flight lanes with airplane flocks saving fuel. Or discussions on how much the winglets affect this effect. But no, it's all a discussion of the definition of "drafting" with a bunch of google-illiterite people.