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June 25th 08, 07:27 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.soaring
Larry Dighera
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Posts: 3,953
For the real engineers here
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 10:56:07 -0700 (PDT),
wrote in
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I'm thinking of a clean glider, one that might weigh 1500 pounds and
has a glide angle of say 1 in 25. At 50 miles an hour, that would mean
in an hour's time it might descend two miles (of course scale it
reasonable numbers, I chose those for ease of calculation). That means
it's losing about 1500 * 5280 * 2, or about 16 million foot pounds of
energy an hour.
Now if I add an engine swinging an 8 foot diameter prop, maybe as a
pusher, the question is, how big an engine for cruise only? A
horsepower is 550 foot lbs a second, or about 2 million foot pounds
an hour. If all of that is correct, it suggests with a 50% efficient
prop a little 16 horsepower engine could pretty much keep this thing
at constant altitude.
It passes the reasonableness test as far as I can see. Any serious
disagreements?
It looks reasonable to me, but I'm not qualified to judge.
For those of you who do things in metric units? I went to school a
long long time ago, and here in the US I can buy a little Briggs and
Stanton (spelling?) engine with a horsepower rating, not a kilowatt
one.
Here's a solution for SI conversions:
http://online.unitconverterpro.com/
[rec.aviation.soaring added]
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