Pelikan tail


The Pelikan tail is an experimental tail design for fighter jets. It was originally conceived by Ralph Pelikan, who was hired by McDonnell Aircraft, later worked for McDonnell Douglas after the merger of McDonnell with Douglas and, after another merger, retired from Boeing. His design has not to date been incorporated into any publicly available aircraft. However, it has been considered or included in design specifications in the original Boeing X-32 fighter design.

Advantages and disadvantages

The Pelikan design differs from the typical layout of flight control surfaces and empennage, in that it uses only two moveable surfaces in order to achieve control of pitch, yaw and roll. When evaluated by Boeing engineers in October 1998 while designing what became the X-32, they found advantages of greater pitch control at high angles of attack and that two tail surfaces would have a lower radar signature than the four surfaces eventually adopted. However, they also found that using two larger control surfaces instead of four might actually make the aircraft heavier. The bigger hydraulic pumps and cylinders needed to operate the larger surfaces would add of weight to the design. This and other factors made them use a four-surface tail instead.

Tests by Virginia Tech students

students built a model aircraft with a Pelikan tail and got positive results for its viability using a wind tunnel. The analysis by the students found several advantages