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Aircraft Winglets
WHAT ARE WINGLETS FOR?
By Airline Ratings
Developed in the late 1960s, winglets were proven to reduce drag on aircraft by as much as five percent, resulting in a number of significant performance improvements and economic savings.
Introduced into production in
the early 1990s, winglets are now flying on nearly all jet airliners in service
today.
How it
works
The
simple explanation of how winglets work is that in addition to air flowing
across the top and bottom of a wing inflight, air is also moving over the wing
laterally from the root outboard toward the wingtip.
This is
called “span-wise flow” and when these two high-speed air masses from
above and below the wing meet at a straight wingtip, they
converge into a cyclonic tube of turbulent air.
Winglets
help reduce aerodynamic drag by transforming this turbulent cylinder into a
smooth ribbon of air flowing out behind the winglet.
Wake
turbulence
The
resultant turbulent air, known as wake turbulence, is the reason that smaller
aircraft must be separated from larger ones by certain distances to avoid being
thrown out of control by the larger aircraft’s wake turbulence.
Tragically,
there have been a number of fatal crashes resulting from aircraft being
impacted by wake turbulence to both small and large aircraft.
Winglets
reduce wake turbulence thus minimizing its potential effect on following
aircraft.
Shapes
and sizes
Winglets
come in different shapes and sizes with each type performing the same basic
drag-reducing function.
They
have proven to be very effective even when retrofitted to aircraft originally
designed in the 1960s.
More
modern aircraft designed and manufactured with digital technology, such as the
Boeing 777 and 787, have specially designed wingtips that curve backwards
called racked wingtips that alleviate the need for winglets.
Aircraft
with winglets offer reduced drag, increased range, and lower fuel consumption,
thereby saving airlines millions of dollars over the lifespan.
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