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#1
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Here is a thought:
Was in the back yard making thousands of soap bubbles (Mr. Bubbles) for the baby. Slight breeze. Clearly could tell the entire airflow pattern in the back yard....even a little ridge lift over the glider trailer! Wonder if you could add a soap bubble machine to a sailplane? Turn it on when you first hit a thermal and a trail of bubbles is created. After one circle, just fly toward the highest bubbles and that is where the thermal's core is. I could see the bubbles about 200 feet away, but might could add a color die to enhance visibility further. Any thoughts on this? |
#2
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Assuming this is not a troll-
In the spring I like to use 'controlled' burns in the forests for this. I can spot the smoke from a long way, and by examing the plumes try and figure out the strongest lift areas. Depending on how high above the fires I can use the smoke smell as an olfactory vario. Typically these burns are done with an unstable atmosphere to keep the smoke from sitting low in an inversion. Once fire season gets going again I don't venture near the conflagarations, but sometimes watch them from afar. At 15:24 19 April 2004, John wrote: Here is a thought: Was in the back yard making thousands of soap bubbles (Mr. Bubbles) for the baby. Slight breeze. Clearly could tell the entire airflow pattern in the back yard....even a little ridge lift over the glider trailer! Wonder if you could add a soap bubble machine to a sailplane? Turn it on when you first hit a thermal and a trail of bubbles is created. After one circle, just fly toward the highest bubbles and that is where the thermal's core is. I could see the bubbles about 200 feet away, but might could add a color die to enhance visibility further. Any thoughts on this? |
#3
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John wrote:
Here is a thought: Was in the back yard making thousands of soap bubbles (Mr. Bubbles) for the baby. Slight breeze. Clearly could tell the entire airflow pattern in the back yard....even a little ridge lift over the glider trailer! Wonder if you could add a soap bubble machine to a sailplane? Turn it on when you first hit a thermal and a trail of bubbles is created. After one circle, just fly toward the highest bubbles and that is where the thermal's core is. I could see the bubbles about 200 feet away, but might could add a color die to enhance visibility further. Any thoughts on this? You should install a sound system and play this guy's music. http://www.welkshow.com/welk.html But maybe you could integrate a bubble generator with a pilot relief system. Its already an over-board liquid dispensing system, plus you'd have the added benefit of discouraging leachers, at least those that are familiar with your system. :-) Seriously, I'd use dust or smoke. I suspect the airspeed would shred all but the smallest bubbles. Also, would enough bubbles persist long enough to be seen? I do think visibility of bubbles would be the biggest problem. Can you make bubbles with glitter in the solution? Or dispense with the bubbles and just funnel the glitter out the vent window. Hmm, sink rate is probably more than the glider's so it would only work in a strong thermal. Also could clog the pitot system. Shawn |
#4
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![]() "John" wrote in message om... Here is a thought: Was in the back yard making thousands of soap bubbles (Mr. Bubbles) for the baby. Slight breeze. Clearly could tell the entire airflow pattern in the back yard....even a little ridge lift over the glider trailer! Wonder if you could add a soap bubble machine to a sailplane? Turn it on when you first hit a thermal and a trail of bubbles is created. After one circle, just fly toward the highest bubbles and that is where the thermal's core is. I could see the bubbles about 200 feet away, but might could add a color die to enhance visibility further. Any thoughts on this? Sounds maybe a little silly but it's sound thinking. Way back in the 1960's I worked for Paul McCready at a little company called Meteorology Research in Pasadena, California. One of my projects was to develop techniques to map boundary layer turbulence. We had made the same observation you did that soap bubbles trace airflow very well. The first idea was to generate a bunch of bubbles, film them with a pair of carefully calibrated movie cameras to get 3D data and then analyze the film to plot the individual bubble trajectories. We thought we could do a lot of interesting science with this data. (With the Lawrence Welk TV show the rage, you can imagine the reputation this project quickly developed - Welk was a band leader who used soap bubbles on his set to highlight his "champagne music") There were several problems. First, soap bubbles don't last very long - maybe 20-30 seconds outdoors. (It seems UV degrades the soap films.) Second, even with dye in the soap solution, bubbles are nearly invisible. We tried filling them with colored smoke which reduced the average bubble lifespan to about a second. Tackling the bubble half life problem head on, I sought the help of some chemists at CalTech who recommended adding polyvinyl alcohol to the bubble solution. With PVA in the solution, a solid PVA film formed as the PVA was polymerized by UV. The PVA+soap film seemed to be pretty gas tight and the bubbles lasted a long time, but now they were heavy and quickly sank to the ground. Back at the drawing board, we dreamed up a modified bubble machine that allowed the introduction of a carefully controlled amount of helium. With this device pouring out bubbles, we could adjust the helium needle valve until the bubbles showed neutral buoyancy. Now the bubbles traced the airflow streamlines perfectly, we just couldn't see them very well and the cameras didn't see them at all. Welk wasn't impressed. Now we were delving into bubble optics. We knew that tiny glass spheres would reflect light back to the source since that is what is used in reflective paint on highway signs. Would bubbles do the same? Yes, but altogether too well. The little glass spheres in reflective paint are deliberately flawed. Our bubbles were perfect so they reflected a searchlight beam directly back into the searchlight. If you were standing next to the searchlight, you saw no reflections. Now we built a camera mount with a huge beamsplitter so the cameras could look right down the axis of the searchlight beam. Success! Our little bubbles shown like stars tracing every little twist and turn of the airflow. So here's the scene, high noon in downtown Pasadena with a couple of rented Hollywood carbon arc searchlights, 35mm movie cameras and billions of bubbles drifting around the buildings. It took several hours and the company attorney to convince the authorities we weren't filming a movie and didn't need a permit to do so. We moved the project to the desert. It expanded from bubbles to Mylar balloons, dozens of cameras and produced mountains of data. Unfortunately, the IBM 360 punch card computer we used wasn't up to the task of analyzing all the data. Last I heard, the data were still being re-analyzed by each new generation of supercomputer. So, would your idea work? I proved it would but all that heavy gear will be pretty hard to get into a glider. Throwing out bits of toilet paper probably works better. Hmmm, Lets see.....what would a toilet paper dispensing machine look like... Bill Daniels |
#5
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This is not my idea but it sounds pretty good to me. "Doug" at Texas Soaring
Association (TSA) folds up TSA tow tickets so that they have two helicopter blades and a body. As kids, we used to do this and throw them in the air and watch them rotate and disappear in a thermal or rotate to the ground. When "Doug" finds a thermal he throws a few of these folded helicopter tow tickets out the vent window. They tend to go to the core of the thermal and he follows them up. Don't anyone report "Doug" for excessive use of TSA tow tickets or I will be in big trouble. Hoping to center the thermal, Bob Kibby "2BK" -- ---------------------------------------------------- This mailbox protected from junk email by Matador from MailFrontier, Inc. http://info.mailfrontier.com "John" wrote in message om... Here is a thought: Was in the back yard making thousands of soap bubbles (Mr. Bubbles) for the baby. Slight breeze. Clearly could tell the entire airflow pattern in the back yard....even a little ridge lift over the glider trailer! Wonder if you could add a soap bubble machine to a sailplane? Turn it on when you first hit a thermal and a trail of bubbles is created. After one circle, just fly toward the highest bubbles and that is where the thermal's core is. I could see the bubbles about 200 feet away, but might could add a color die to enhance visibility further. Any thoughts on this? |
#6
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![]() So, would your idea work? I proved it would but all that heavy gear will be pretty hard to get into a glider. Throwing out bits of toilet paper probably works better. Hmmm, Lets see.....what would a toilet paper dispensing machine look like... Bill Daniels Someone beat you to it. Ted Teach had a 1-26 with a toilet paper dispensing mechanism in the turtledeck. It was a little trapdoor with a cutting edge. Open the door and toilet paper unrolled into the slipstream. Close the door and it severed the paper. Repeatedly opening and closing the door supposedly dispensed tp chaff to be followed as a thermal marker. Teach's 1-26 also had a reprofiled nose and canopy and doors that enclosed the landing gear (retractable gear being against the rules in 1-26 racing. Mark Connor later had this 1-26 and was undoing all the "Teachisms" on it. People in this sport tend to be inventive. Wierd, but inventive... |
#7
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![]() "Bubbles, toliet paper, and bent tow tickets seem to center thermals by themselfs. Free flight model airplanes do a good job of centering thermals by themself. Ever consider what might happen if we just trimed out our sailplanes and kept our hands off of the controls? Duane |
#8
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Duane Eisenbeiss wrote:
"Bubbles, toliet paper, and bent tow tickets seem to center thermals by themselfs. Free flight model airplanes do a good job of centering thermals by themself. Ever consider what might happen if we just trimed out our sailplanes and kept our hands off of the controls? How do we know they are centered? All I knew is the model was going up, but I didn't know if it would do better in a different location. I know just flying steady circles with the least amount of adjustment needed to maintain attitude doesn't work well for me! -- ----- change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#9
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#10
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How about throwing dollar bills out the canopy sliding window? That would
be a more direct way of wasting money on soaring and would also attract non fliers to the sport. "John" wrote in message om... Here is a thought: Was in the back yard making thousands of soap bubbles (Mr. Bubbles) for the baby. Slight breeze. Clearly could tell the entire airflow pattern in the back yard....even a little ridge lift over the glider trailer! Wonder if you could add a soap bubble machine to a sailplane? Turn it on when you first hit a thermal and a trail of bubbles is created. After one circle, just fly toward the highest bubbles and that is where the thermal's core is. I could see the bubbles about 200 feet away, but might could add a color die to enhance visibility further. Any thoughts on this? |
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