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Historical informatics
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Kuzmin, Y.V. (2022). Production and development of four-seat airplanes in the XX century. Statistical analysis. Historical informatics, 2, 87–110. https://doi.org/10.7256/2585-7797.2022.2.38184
Production and development of four-seat airplanes in the XX century. Statistical analysis
DOI: 10.7256/2585-7797.2022.2.38184EDN: HWYFSQReceived: 30-05-2022Published: 19-07-2022Abstract: The subject of the article is the worldwide production and development of four-seat general-purpose airplanes in the XX century. This is the most important segment of general aviation: more four-seat aircraft have been built than three- and 5-10-seat aircraft combined. One of the article's goals is to determine whether the requirements for products designed to transport four people by air are really changing. The methodology of the work is collecting information about all aircraft models built. Data about 871 models and more than 2500 records of their production are collected. For the first time, production pace and the number of new models of four-seated airplanes have been presented, country-by-country. Priority constructions are described. The dominant role of the USA and the stable duopoly of Cessna and Piper firms are revealed. It is shown that the demand for aircraft varies greatly in accordance with the socio-political situation in the world. The role of the USSR as one of the leading manufacturers of four-seated airplanes is revealed. It is shown that designers systematically respond to the decline in demand by increasing the intensity of design work, which, however, does not lead to the desired result - an increase in sales. Therefore, such behavior should be recognized as ineffective. Keywords: aircraft industry, aviation history, R & D in the aircraft industry, historical databases, quantitative history, statistical analysis, history of the XX century, industrial history, psychology of consumption, production and developmentThis article is automatically translated. Introduction The article studies the history of production and development of an important segment of aircraft construction of the XX century – four-seat civil aircraft. For the first time in the world, consolidated data on the production of four-seat aircraft and the number of their models, broken down by country and design features, have been collected. It shows how many planes, when, in which countries and by which companies were built. As far as I know, such summary data has never been published. It was studied how the demand for aircraft of this class changed, did the intensity of development correlate with this? Based on the collected data, it is proved that developers and business owners, in general, respond adequately to market growth, but inadequately to its decline. Instead of adaptation, cost reduction, there is an "agonistic" reaction – disorderly activity, an increase in the volume of design work during a decline in sales, attempts to improve the quality of the proposed product despite the increase in cost, and even attempts to occupy neighboring markets. To identify the described reaction, the method of calculating the sliding correlation of series describing the release and development of new aircraft models was used. In the second part of the article, the technical evolution of four-seat aircraft during the XX century will be considered. Problem statement During the XX century, airplanes have changed a lot. Their speed has increased tenfold, their mass has increased by hundreds, and the power of power plants has often increased by thousands. Graphs in articles and books on the history of aviation either take off exponentially, or have a pronounced form of an integral curve, the values of the lower and upper asymptotes of which differ at times, if not by orders of magnitude. For example, the speed of the first fighters was just over 100 km/h, and in recent decades it has stabilized (with some exceptions) at the level of 2000-2500 km/h. The growth of the most important indicator by one and a half orders of magnitude was achieved in just half a century. At the same time, it is not taken into account that the requirements for aircraft themselves change over time. Cargo and passenger traffic are growing sharply in the civilian area, which requires more spacious aircraft. The globalization of the economy, the emergence of new development centers lead to an increase in the range of transportation. If between the World Wars the busiest international route was the route across the North Atlantic, now an increasing proportion of passengers need to cross the Pacific Ocean. The growth in traffic volume has made it profitable to invest heavily in infrastructure – the construction of airports with long and strong runways. And this weakened the requirements for the take-off and landing characteristics of civil aircraft. The military area feeds itself. If a potential opponent has faster ones (for example) aircraft, then this means that during the fighting he will impose the initiative: choose when to take the fight, when to dodge it. Therefore, the aircraft being created should fly even faster. The development of military equipment, unlike civilian technology, is a process of continuous competition with constant overcoming of physical and economic barriers. So, in both the civil and military industries, rapid progress, expressed, among other things, in the growth of the main indicators (masses, sizes, absolute and specific capacities, wing loads, range, altitude, etc.) at times, or even more than an order of magnitude, is natural and has its own internal logic. Sometimes such growth can be stopped by a psychological, physical economic barrier, and more often by their combined action. So, for most passengers, it is not so important whether they will fly to another hemisphere in six hours or fifteen, since such trips are relatively rare and are not planned in one day. On the other hand, air resistance at supersonic speeds increases dramatically, aerodynamic quality decreases and flight becomes much more expensive for the consumer. Therefore, the increase in the speed of passenger aircraft slowed down on the approach to the speed of sound.
The military has its own limitations, again, combining both needs (a further increase in the speed of the aircraft does little to reduce reaction time, but makes it difficult to detect targets) and physical and technical limitations (a speed of 3 or more sound speeds requires the use of non-standard materials for aviation, much more expensive and less processed than usual duralumin alloys). So rapid growth is replaced by a plateau. But will such a picture of development persist if we choose a subclass of aviation technology that solves the same problem throughout the period under review? Will there be a period of rapid growth of characteristics or not? How quickly the change of generations differing in design solutions will be replaced by their coexistence (for this change in the phases of technology development, see [1, 2]). This article answers these questions. The object of the study In articles [3, 4], an analysis of the development of piston fighters was carried out, in [5] – agricultural aircraft. Passenger cars are the next big class, but their commercial load has grown dramatically over the century, so it's difficult to compare the six-seat Junkers F.13 (1919) and the wide-body Boeing 747 (1969). Therefore, a subgroup with the same commercial load was chosen for the study, namely, four–seat, including pilot, general-purpose aircraft. This is one of the most popular classes. Such aircraft are widely in demand, they are used both as "air taxis", and as private planes, and, often, as training or patrol, and as glider towers, and sanitary, and for many other purposes. Of course, we do not include combat and cargo aircraft with a crew of four people in this class. The almost constant commercial load (although the estimated mass of a person in aviation has grown noticeably over the XX century) greatly reduces the spread of aircraft characteristics. Almost all four-seat aircraft have the same cabin layout: two rows of two seats. In three-seat airplanes, there are more options: one or two people in front. The uniformity of tasks, layout, and load reduces the variation in the characteristics of four-seat aircraft and allows you to isolate the changes associated with the progress in aviation. References
1. Kuzmin, Yu. V. (2019). From the history of technology to the laws of technology development. Annual conference IHST RAS, Moscow, pp. 276-280
2. Kuzmin, Yu. V. (2021). Global nature of crisis in aircraft industry. 15th conference «History of science and technology. Museum art». 3. Kuzmin, Yu. V. (2021). Evolution of fighter aircraft: usage of cluster analysis in history of technology. Historical informatics, No. 1, pp. 66-130. doi: 10.7256/2585-7797.2021.1.35084 4. Kuzmin, Yu. V. (2021). Evolution of fighter aircraft: usage of cluster analysis in history of technology. Part two. Historical informatics, No. 2, pp. 24-78. doi: 10.7256/2585-7797.2021.2.36064 5. Kuzmin, Yu. V. (2020). History of agricultural aircraft production in XX century. Legends and myths of aviation, Issue 10, Moscow: Russian Vityaz, pp. 179-226 6. Kuzmin, Yu.V. (2018). The aircraft production in countries participating in World War Two. Historical informatics, No. 2, pp. 27-57. doi:10.7256/2585-7797.2018.2.26630 7. Kuzmin, Yu.V. (2020). The correlation between production and development in world aircraft industry 20th century. Historical informatics, No. 2, pp. 63-87. doi: 10.7256/2585-7797.2020.2.32892 8. Kuzmin, Yu.V. (2021). Bibliographical reference book for 20th century airplanes. Moscow: IHST RAS. 559 p. [Digital edition, pdf]. Retrieved from www.istina.msu.ru/publications/book/437131586/ 9. Henning, J. (2021). Aircraft production data, 1947-2020, collected from GAMA annual reports. Washington: General Aircraft Manufacturer Association 10. Abel, A., & Abel, D.W. (2004). Bellanca's golden age. Brawley: Wing Canyon, 126 p. 11. Four seat piston singles (2018). Plane & Pilot, No. 5, p. 5 12. Beach, S.Y. (1912). The New York Aero Show. Description of some novel American aeroplanes on exhibition. Scientific American, 25 May 1912, pp. 472-48 13. Opdycke, L.E. (1999). French aeroplanes before the Great War. Atglen: Schiffer Publishing, 288 p. 14. Lewis, P.B. (1962). British aircraft 1808-1914. London: Putnam, 1962, 576 p. 15. Simpson, R. (2005). The General Aviation Handbook. London: Midland, 320 p. 16. Ells, S. (2008). Endurance test, circa 1958. AOPA pilot, 5 March 2008 17. Kuzmin, Yu. (2018). The numerical history of airplane manufacturing in XX century. 31th ICAS Congress. Belo Horizonti. Report 2018_0705. 13 p. 18. (1962). An eye to the Sky. Cessna. First fifty years. Wichita: Cessna aircraft, 77 p. 19. Makarov, Yu.V., & Torbenko, K.S. (1989). We build airplanes ourselves. Moscow : Mashinostroenie, 240 p. 20. (2002). Type Specification data sheet A45CE Rev.1. FAA, # A45CE 21. (2001). General Aviation statistical databook, 1990-1991 edition. Washington D.C.: General Aviation Manufacturer Organization, 29 p. 22. Rodengen, J.L. (1997). The legend of Cessna. Wichita: Write Stuff. 255 p. 23. Kuzmin, Yu.V. (2019). Decrease of airplane production in USSR during 1980s. Historical informatics, No. 2, pp. 106-146. doi: 10.7256/2585-7797.2019.2.29402 24. Kuzmin, Yu.V. (2022). The crisis of the world aircraft industry of 1911-1914. Aerospace Sphere Journal. 2022 No. 1. PP. 84-93
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