The Stemal III was a
parasol wing test bed for a wing with variable
camber, intended to increase the speed range of aircraft and to lower landing speeds. It was based on a
Nieuport 80.
Design and development
Stefan Malinowski's several aircraft designs were all named Stemal, the first syllables of his names joined together. The Stemal III was a test-bed for his ideas for extending the speed range of aircraft using variable camber wings, which he had begun to develop at the beginning of
World War I whilst studying the
Gustave Eiffel wind tunnel results
[ on the lift generated by cambered aerofoil sections. His first experiments were with a modified ]Caudron
The Société des Avions Caudron was a French aircraft company founded in 1909 as the Association Aéroplanes Caudron Frères by brothers Gaston and René Caudron. It was one of the earliest aircraft manufacturers in France and produced planes for ...
wing but the external mechanism he used increased the drag
Drag or The Drag may refer to:
Places
* Drag, Norway, a village in Tysfjord municipality, Nordland, Norway
* ''Drág'', the Hungarian name for Dragu Commune in Sălaj County, Romania
* Drag (Austin, Texas), the portion of Guadalupe Street adj ...
unacceptably. Instead, he developed a wing with ribs which were flexible aft of the main, forward, spar together with an internal, rear spar, cam-based mechanism to bend them.[
Malinkowski then took the device though aerodynamic tests in wind tunnels in Italy and made some initial practical tests with ]Ansaldo
Ansaldo Energia S.p.A. is an Italian power engineering company. It is based in Genoa, Italy. The absorbed parent company, Gio. Ansaldo & C., started in 1853. It was taken over by Leonardo S.p.A. In 2011, Leonardo S.p.A. sold 45% stake in An ...
in Turin, all with encouraging results. The first full scale wing panel for structural and operational tests was built in 1921 at Bydgoszcz
Bydgoszcz ( , , ; german: Bromberg) is a city in northern Poland, straddling the meeting of the River Vistula with its left-bank tributary, the Brda. With a city population of 339,053 as of December 2021 and an urban agglomeration with more ...
, in the workshops of the military flying school there. As a result Malinkowski obtained support from the Department of Aerial Navigation to build and fly a complete wing.[
The test aircraft was originally built as a Nieuport 80 ]biplane
A biplane is a fixed-wing aircraft with two main wings stacked one above the other. The first powered, controlled aeroplane to fly, the Wright Flyer, used a biplane wing arrangement, as did many aircraft in the early years of aviation. While ...
, a two seat trainer variant of the Nieuport 12 fighter aircraft
Fighter aircraft are fixed-wing military aircraft designed primarily for air-to-air combat. In military conflict, the role of fighter aircraft is to establish air superiority of the battlespace. Domination of the airspace above a battlefield ...
. With its wings and the rear cockpit removed and with a new empennage, it was converted to a parasol wing monoplane. The Malinowski wing was held over the fuselage on each side with two outward-leaning inverted V-struts from the upper fuselage to front and rear spars and wire-braced above from a strut pyramid above the wing centre and below with wires from the lower fuselage longeron
In engineering, a longeron and stringer is the load-bearing component of a framework.
The term is commonly used in connection with aircraft fuselages and automobile chassis. Longerons are used in conjunction with stringers to form structural ...
s. The camber changes were confined to the central part of the wing so that the ailerons were unaffected.[
Piloted by Jerzy Kossowski, the Stemal III flew for the first time in late August 1922. The subsequent trials yielded promising results, with take-off and landing distances halved, rate of climb increased by 33% and service ceiling by 20%. Its stalling speed was reduced from without camber to with camber and its speed range, about 1:3.4, was much better than that of any of its contemporaries.][
These tests generated some interest, particularly at the Technical Services of Aerodynamics (S.T.Aè) in Paris in 1924, leading to studies by Hanriot of a similar wing. In 1925 the Warsaw Technical University made air-tunnel measurements on a wing with a greater camber range over its full span, controlled with a simplified mechanism.][ Apart from the Stemal III, the only other aircraft to incorporate the variable-camber wing was Malinowski's Dziaba, a highly ambitious ]flying wing
A flying wing is a tailless fixed-wing aircraft that has no definite fuselage, with its crew, payload, fuel, and equipment housed inside the main wing structure. A flying wing may have various small protuberances such as pods, nacelles, blis ...
glider. This should have competed in the Second Polish Glider Contest, held in August 1923. It attended but was badly damaged in the run-up to its first launch and though it was repaired before the end of the competition a lack of wind kept it on the ground.[
Funding problems limited any further wing development by Malinowski and although he sold his patents in November 1925, nothing more was made of them.][
]
Specifications
See also
References
{{reflist, refs=
[{{cite book, title=Polish Aircraft 1893-1939, last=Cynk, first=Jerzy, year=1971, publisher=Putnam Publishing, location=London, isbn=0 370 00085 4, pag]
588-590
url-access=registration, url=https://archive.org/details/polishaircraft1800cynk/page/588
[Cynk (1971) pp.672-3]
[{{cite book , title= A History of Aerodynamics, last=Anderson, first=John D. Jnr., year=1997, publisher=Cambridge University House , location=Cambridge , isbn= 0-521-66955-3, pages=268–82]
Single-engined tractor aircraft
Parasol-wing aircraft
1920s Polish experimental aircraft
Variable-geometry-wing aircraft
Aircraft manufactured in Poland
Aircraft first flown in 1922