This study presents experimental modal analysis of an ultra-lightweight composite structure representative of UAV application and to evaluate the suitability of different testing approaches for reliable identification of its dynamics characteristics. The investigated structure is a winglet made of carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) with a lightweight foam core. The experiment was based on impact hammer excitation combined with triaxial accelerometer measurements. Modal tests were performed under three different boundary conditions: free–free suspension using elastic cords, free–free approximation using compliant foam support, and fixed conditions reflecting the operational mounting of the winglet. The results confirm that boundary conditions constitute the dominant factor governing the dynamic response. Transition from free–free to fixed support shifted the dominant bending modal frequency from 331.5 Hz (single-sided response) and 329.9 Hz (double-sided response) 421.2 Hz in the fixed configuration, demonstrating a frequency increase of nearly 27%. Reciprocity and double-sided measurements revealed measurable frequency deviations (e.g., 116.3 Hz to 117.6 Hz) attributed to accelerometer mass loading and geometric misalignment. The 1 g triaxial accelerometer mass was shown to be non-negligible relative to the modal mass of the structure, producing observable shifts in higher-order modes.
Wróbel et al. (Tue,) studied this question.