Publication | Closed Access
Relative importance of open rotor tone and broadband noise sources
56
Citations
17
References
2011
Year
Unknown Venue
AeroacousticsAudio ElectroacousticsEngineering Noise ControlEngineeringNoise ControlRelative ImportanceRotor DynamicTone Deletion TechniquesElectromagnetic CompatibilityRig 140Engineering AcousticUnderwater Noise MitigationPropeller AerodynamicsNoiseAcoustical EngineeringAcoustic AnalysisPropulsionAerospace EngineeringRig ThrustAir Mobility Noise
A study is made of the noise levels and spectral characteristics of three contra-rotating propeller rigs: rig 140 tested in 1989, rig 145 build 1 tested in 2008, and rig 145 build 2 tested in 2010. We use tone deletion techniques, applied to the inflow microphone data, to show the relative importance of propeller broadband noise to propeller tones with increasing frequency and, in particular, that by the time we reach only moderate frequencies, the one third octave spectra become dominated by the broadband noise components. We also show that the broadband noise continues to be important as blade speed and rig thrust are varied and that these spectral characteristics are present on both modern and older contra-rotating propeller designs – even those with a profusion of tones and strong tone protusion. We also show how the tone and broadband noise levels have reduced with more recent, and aeroacoustically improved, blade designs
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