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Ol Shy & Bashful
May 19th 08, 01:39 PM
Anyone here seen that picture of the Beech 18 with 13 jumpers outside
hanging on or sitting on top of the fuselage? They started out at
14,500' and when they were all outside, the flight continued for at
least a minute and a half while the photos were taken.
I was prompted to post this in response to someone talking about
lateral weight and balance in fixed wing. Lateral weight and balance
is noticeable in helicopters much more obviously.
Ol S&B

Tina
May 19th 08, 02:16 PM
When you wrote parasite instead of parasitic drag I was sure you'd be
talking about members of the newsgroup, many of whom can be
characterized as offering drag with no compensating lift.

Are helicopter bodies wide enough compared to rotor radius to make
lateral moments a serious factor? I'm ignorant about the matter, but
would have thought since the center of lift is 'way up there' --
helicopters being the ultimate in high wing design -- that even if
all of the weight was hanging on one side of the cabin the lateral
compensating angles would be small.


On May 19, 8:39 am, "Ol Shy & Bashful" > wrote:
> Anyone here seen that picture of the Beech 18 with 13 jumpers outside
> hanging on or sitting on top of the fuselage? They started out at
> 14,500' and when they were all outside, the flight continued for at
> least a minute and a half while the photos were taken.
> I was prompted to post this in response to someone talking about
> lateral weight and balance in fixed wing. Lateral weight and balance
> is noticeable in helicopters much more obviously.
> Ol S&B

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