A small, simple fixture has been found to be highly effective in reducing destructive unsteady hydrodynamic loads on a miniature submarine that is attached in piggyback fashion to the top of a larger, nuclear-powered, host submarine (see Figure 1). The fixture, denoted compact ramp, can be installed with minimal structural modification, and the use of it does not entail any change in submarine operations.


An investigation of flow-control modifications to reduce the unsteady hydrodynamic loads was initiated. Of thirty modifications that were considered, the one judged to be most promising was the installation of a compact ramp on the host submarine hull between the rear ends of the aft pylon pair, near the stern of the ASDS. Unlike other flow-control modifications examined, this one is not based on the concept of confronting and reducing the flow separation directly; instead, it is based on the concept of mitigating the adverse pressure gradient and moving the flow separation away from the critical stern components of the ASDS and harmlessly onto the host hull downstream of the ramp, as depicted schematically in the lower part of Figure 2.
In water-tunnel tests on a scale model, the installation of the compact ramp was found to result in reductions of as much as 50 percent in unsteady hydrodynamic forces and moments on the stern appendages of the ASDS, leading to the selection of the compact ramp as sole candidate recommended for testing in fullscale sea trials. It has also been conjectured that structural components similar to the compact ramp could, potentially, confer flow-control and load-reduction benefits in applications that involve piggyback or other external attachments to aircraft.
This work was done by John Lin of Langley Research Center. LAR-17364-1

