Everything about Biplane totally explained
A
biplane is a
fixed-wing aircraft with two main
wings. The first powered heavier-than-air
aircraft, the
Wright brothers' Wright Flyer, used a biplane design, as did most airplanes in the early years of
aviation. While a biplane wing structure has a structural advantage, it produces more drag than a similar
monoplane wing. Improved structural techniques and materials, as first pioneered by
Hugo Junkers in 1915, and the need for greater speed, made the biplane configuration obsolete for most purposes by the late 1930s.
The term is also occasionally used in
biology, to describe the
wings of some
flying animals.
Aviation
In a biplane aircraft, two wings are placed one above the other. Both provide a portion of the lift, although they're not able to produce twice as much lift as a single wing of similar
planform. This is because a wing's effect is imposed on a circular cylinder of air as the craft moves forward. In the case of the biplane, the upper and the lower are working on nearly the same portion of the atmosphere. In a wing of aspect ratio 6, and a wing separation distance of one chord length, the biplane configuration can produce about 20 percent more lift than a single wing of the same planform.
In the biplane configuration, the lower wing is often attached to the
fuselage, while the upper wing is raised above, although other combinations have occurred. Almost all biplanes also have a third horizontal surface, the
tailplane, to control the pitch, or
angle of attack of the aircraft (although there have been a few exceptions). Either or both of the main wings can support flaps or
ailerons to assist lateral and speed control; usually the ailerons are mounted on the upper wing, and flaps (if used) on the lower wing. Often there's bracing between the upper and lower wings, in the form of wires (tension members) and slender
struts (compression members) positioned symmetrically on either side of the fuselage.
Variations on the biplane include the
sesquiplane, where one wing (usually the lower) is significantly smaller than the other, either in span, chord, or both. Sometimes the lower wing is only large enough to support the bracing struts for the upper wing. The name means "one-and-a-half wings".
Another (aerodynamically quite distinct) variation is the
tandem wing which is an aircraft with one wing in front of the other (for example a wing in the nose and a wing in the tail). This isn't usually considered a biplane, as the two wings are not one above the other.
Advantages and drawbacks to biplane designs
Aircraft built with two main wings (or three in a
triplane) can usually lift up to 20% more than can a similarly sized
monoplane of similar
wingspan, which tends to afford greater
maneuverability. The struts and wire bracing of a typical biplane form a
box girder that permits a light but very strong wing structure.
On the other hand there are many disadvantages to the configuration. Each wing negatively interferes with the aerodynamics of the other. For a given wing area the biplane produces more
drag and less
lift than a monoplane, but this effect can be reduced by placing one wing forward of the other. Placing one wing forward of the other is known as
stagger. Forward stagger (where the upper wing is further forward) is most common, but backward stagger has also been used, notably in the
Beechcraft Staggerwing. Excessive amounts of stagger distort the box girder effect of the wing - and this tends to reduce the structural benefits of the biplane layout.
History
Most successful early aircraft were biplanes, in spite of considerable experimentation with
monoplanes. For a period - (~ 1914 to 1925) almost all aircraft were biplanes. In retrospect, this seems strange, but the explanation is far from irrational.
In the early days of aviation all wing structures were strengthened by external bracing wires and struts. Effective lateral control (whether using
wing warping or
ailerons) requires a wing that's rigid enough to minimize
unintended wing warping, and the unwanted lateral rolling that results. The structure of a biplane wing (having the characteristics of a
box girder) provided this almost by default, whereas the design of a sufficiently rigid ‘’externally braced’’ monoplane wing was highly problematic.
The long-term answer to the problem was a
cantilever wing – having sufficient stiffness to dispense with external bracing. Such wings were already being designed, pioneered by Hugo Junkers, and used in Germany during the last year of the
First World War; and following research in the post war years by the
National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics and similar European bodies, as well as the concurrent development of
aluminum alloys, cantilever monoplane wings were becoming the norm for most applications by the early nineteen thirties; and the era of the biplane was almost over.
Modern biplane designs now exist only in specialist niche roles and markets such as
aerobatics and
agricultural aircraft.
The vast majority of biplane designs have been fitted with
reciprocating engines of comparatively low power; exceptions include the
Antonov An-3 and
WSK-Mielec M-15 Belphegor, fitted with
turboprop and
turbofan engines, respectively. Some older biplane designs, such as the
Grumman Ag Cat and the aforementioned An-2 (in the form of the An-3) are available in upgraded versions with turboprop engines.
Famous biplanes include the
Polikarpov Po-2,
Sopwith Camel,
Avro Tutor,
Antonov An-2,
Beechcraft Staggerwing,
Boeing Stearman,
Bristol Bulldog,
Curtiss JN-4,
de Havilland Tiger Moth,
Fairey Swordfish,
Hawker Hart,
Pitts Special and the
Wright Flyer. The Stearman is particularly associated with stunt flying with wing-walkers. Famous sesquiplanes include the
Nieuport 17 and
Albatros D.III.
Most biplanes in history have been either designed with the wings positioned directly "one-above-the-other", as first done with the Wright's 1903
Flyer I, or with the upper wing positioned with its leading edge ahead of the lower wing, in a "positive stagger" format. Some examples of biplanes with the lower wing's leading edge ahead of the upper wing, called "negative stagger", were the
Airco DH.5,
Sopwith Dolphin, and the
Beechcraft Staggerwing.
The biplane in ultralight aircraft
Larry Mauro created the
Easy Riser biplane
ultralight. Mauro also made a version powered with solar cells driving an electric motor for successful flight. Mauro's
Easy Riser was used by the man who became known as "Father Goose",
Bill Lishman.
The biplane in avian evolution
It has been suggested the
feathered dinosaur Microraptor glided, and perhaps even flew, on four wings which were held in a biplane-like arrangement. This was made possible by the presence of flight feathers on both the forelimbs and hindlimbs of
Microraptor, and it has been suggested the earliest flying ancestors of birds may have possessed this morphology, with the monoplane arrangement of modern birds evolving later.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Biplane'.
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