Miper,
First, thanks forthe extra information, especially regarding the possibility of a fuel tank in the aft baggage compartment. I guess I'll just have to get familiar with Keflavik, not that there's much there to get familiar with.
"Detailed analyses of canard configurations by Ilan Kroo and others show that, from a minimum interference drag standpoint, the best vertical location for a canard is well above the main wing. This is similar to the result from biplane theory, that shows positive stagger to be better than negative stagger. Canard test results confirm this conclusion, even if it isn’t intuitive. Like you, I had thought a low canard was better before I saw these results. In any case, few configuration lend themselves to a high canard, and the proposed Boeing Sonic Cruiser is one of the few I’ve seen."
As I recall from my reading, the reason for positive stagger in biplanes was to preventthe high pressure region below the upper wing from interfering with the low pressure region above the lower wing, rather than anything to do with wake interference. Surely, if the foreplane on the Avanti, which is separated from the mainplane more than sufficiently for pressure region interference to be a non event, is producing lift, then the wash will be deflected downward, passing under the mainplane, this wash position being first determined by the low position of the cannard, which means that a downward tending airflow starts out in a low position. I can understand the analysis results if the cannard is close to the mainplane, and pressure region interference is a possibility, but with the separation on the Avanti, I just don't see how a high cannard would be superior to the position chosen.
If analyses and tests indicate otherwise, all I can say is "I'm gobsmacked!" I also find it hard to envision how the foreplane wake can interfere with the mainplane on the Avanti. Still, I've just managed to make a circuit, which was perfect on paper and in simulation, stop oscillating when realized as a prototype. Nothing to do with the design, but the printed circuit board added some "phantom" components which managed to add TWO positive feedback loops to the circuit, so I shouldn't be surprised if, in aerodynamics, a subject about which I know far less than I know of electronics, "Things are not always what they seem, skimmed milk masquerades as cream!" (G&S).
One aircraft which has a cannard above the mainwing is the EF2000 Typhoon, which uses a cannard/delta configuration for extreme maneuverability. But comparing the configuration of a supersonic, high maneuverability fighter with a nine place executive turbo-prop is probably an exercise in frustration. I do notice, however, that the cannard on the Typhoon is far closer to the mainplane than it is onthe Avanti. Perhaps there is a preffered vertical position for the foreplane for every separation, for which a simple formula/graph could be derived. Just a thought.
John
John