Table 4 provides functional dimensions for males and females not included within the scope of Table 2. Only 5th and 95th percentile measurements are indicated since these were deemed to be the most useful for design purposes.
A Male Data: U.S. Air Force Flying Personnel, 1967; Churchill, Kikta, and Churchill, Aerospace Medical Research Laboratories, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, 1967.
A, D, F Female Data: Air Force Women, 1968; Clauser, et al., Anthropometry of Air Force Women, Technical Report 70-5, Aerospace Medical Research Laboratories, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, 1972.
B, D Male Data: U.S. Air Force Flying Personnel, 1950; Hertzberg, Daniels, and Churchill, Anthropometry of Flying Personnel, 1950, Technical Report no. 52-321, Wright Air Development Center, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, 1954.
B, E Female and E Male Data: Woodson and Conover, Human Engineering Guide for Equipment Designers, 2d ed. (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1964), pp. 5–16, 5–17, 5–18, 5–19.
C Male Data: Snow and Snyder, Anthropometry of Air Traffic Control Trainees, Report no. AM 65-26 (September 1965), Federal Aviation Agency, Oklahoma City, Okla.
C Female Data: Airline Stewardesses, 1971; Snow, Reynolds, and Allgood, Anthropometry of Airline Stewardesses, Department of Transportation, Report no. FAA-AM-2, FAA Office of Aviation Medicine, Civil Aeromedical Institute, Oklahoma City, Okla., 1975.
F Male Data: Hertzberg, et al., The Anthropometry of Working Positions, Report no. WADC TR-54-520, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, 1956.