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![]() Another aerodynamic bone to toss around and chew on: Instead of carefully crafted, expensive winglets, wouldn't straightforward flat end plates serve nearly as well in reducing wingtip vortices and improve performance. Have they ever been tried, and with what results ? CV |
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![]() "CV" wrote in message ... Another aerodynamic bone to toss around and chew on: Instead of carefully crafted, expensive winglets, wouldn't straightforward flat end plates serve nearly as well in reducing wingtip vortices and improve performance. Have they ever been tried, and with what results ? CV Wing end plates were a big fad in the early 1950's. It was found that the same or better improvement could be obtained by simply adding the same area to the wingtip as additional wingspan. Messing with wingtips has a long and somewhat eccentric history. They have been bent up and down, swept forward and back, made wider and narrower, sliced off at an angle or square, slots added and removed. Until Whitcomb developed winglets, everything else people tried had a huge drag penalty. Airflow around the wingtip is complicated. You really have to understand it to extract any gain. Winglets produce a real gain especially if the glider must remain within a span-limited competition class. They have the advantage of increasing the lift inboard of the winglet without increasing the bending force on the wing as much as additional span would. They also convert some of the energy in the wingtip vortex into thrust which is seen as a general drag reduction in the wingtip area. Think of the winglet as a sailboat sail that catches some of the inward flow on the upper surface and converts it into thrust. Bill Daniels |
#3
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Here is an article about the successful addition of wing tip stall fences:
http://www.soaridaho.com/Schreder/HP...ng_Fences.html Wayne http://www.soaridaho.com/ "CV" wrote in message ... Another aerodynamic bone to toss around and chew on: Instead of carefully crafted, expensive winglets, wouldn't straightforward flat end plates serve nearly as well in reducing wingtip vortices and improve performance. Have they ever been tried, and with what results ? CV |
#4
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Earlier, Cv wrote:
...Instead of carefully crafted, expensive winglets, wouldn't straightforward flat end plates serve nearly as well in reducing wingtip vortices and improve performance. Have they ever been tried, and with what results ? Dick Schreder tried some fairly simple endplate type winglets on the HP-18. They didn't work very well. Winglets must be carefully designed and executed, otherwise they are more likely to reduce performance than improve it. The flows in the tip vortex call for carefully optimized planform and twist distribution. Based on the winglet design that Steve Smith did for my HP-24 wing, I think that it is generally possible to develop winglets that are fairly simple in geometry and construction, and that are not very expensive in terms of materials. However, they would still have to be carefully made, and that's usually where the money goes. Thanks, and best regards to all Bob K. http://www.hpaircraft.com/hp-24 |
#5
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Has anyone tried this? http://www.minix.fr/
Bob Salvo "Bill Daniels" wrote in message news:zTPfd.321990$3l3.156113@attbi_s03... "CV" wrote in message ... Another aerodynamic bone to toss around and chew on: Instead of carefully crafted, expensive winglets, wouldn't straightforward flat end plates serve nearly as well in reducing wingtip vortices and improve performance. Have they ever been tried, and with what results ? CV Wing end plates were a big fad in the early 1950's. It was found that the same or better improvement could be obtained by simply adding the same area to the wingtip as additional wingspan. Messing with wingtips has a long and somewhat eccentric history. They have been bent up and down, swept forward and back, made wider and narrower, sliced off at an angle or square, slots added and removed. Until Whitcomb developed winglets, everything else people tried had a huge drag penalty. Airflow around the wingtip is complicated. You really have to understand it to extract any gain. Winglets produce a real gain especially if the glider must remain within a span-limited competition class. They have the advantage of increasing the lift inboard of the winglet without increasing the bending force on the wing as much as additional span would. They also convert some of the energy in the wingtip vortex into thrust which is seen as a general drag reduction in the wingtip area. Think of the winglet as a sailboat sail that catches some of the inward flow on the upper surface and converts it into thrust. Bill Daniels |
#6
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Like I said, wingtips are a magnet for eccentric aerodynamics (and
aerodynamisysts). One I particularly liked was a ram air turbine that popped out of the wingtip when needed. It spun like a pinwheel in the tip vortex. The inventor claimed it generated electricity from energy that would have been wasted. At about the same time as the red smoke photo shown on the minix site was taken, I was working on a similar project to get some good air velocity measurements in a wingtip vortex. Our idea was to fly an airplane through a cloud of small helium balloons and track their 3D motion with an array of 35mm film cameras known as cine-theodolites. As expected, the balloons became entrained within the vortex flow. What we didn't expect was that the balloons spiraled inward to the vortex center in a plane at right angles to the vortex axis. (The lighter than air balloons were moving up the air density gradient.) When they reached the vortex core, they raced away after the airplane in two parallel streams. The balloons were moving at more than half the speed of the airplane. It was fascinating to watch and we got some good data. Bill Daniels "Bob Salvo" wrote in message news ![]() Has anyone tried this? http://www.minix.fr/ Bob Salvo "Bill Daniels" wrote in message news:zTPfd.321990$3l3.156113@attbi_s03... "CV" wrote in message ... Another aerodynamic bone to toss around and chew on: Instead of carefully crafted, expensive winglets, wouldn't straightforward flat end plates serve nearly as well in reducing wingtip vortices and improve performance. Have they ever been tried, and with what results ? CV Wing end plates were a big fad in the early 1950's. It was found that the same or better improvement could be obtained by simply adding the same area to the wingtip as additional wingspan. Messing with wingtips has a long and somewhat eccentric history. They have been bent up and down, swept forward and back, made wider and narrower, sliced off at an angle or square, slots added and removed. Until Whitcomb developed winglets, everything else people tried had a huge drag penalty. Airflow around the wingtip is complicated. You really have to understand it to extract any gain. Winglets produce a real gain especially if the glider must remain within a span-limited competition class. They have the advantage of increasing the lift inboard of the winglet without increasing the bending force on the wing as much as additional span would. They also convert some of the energy in the wingtip vortex into thrust which is seen as a general drag reduction in the wingtip area. Think of the winglet as a sailboat sail that catches some of the inward flow on the upper surface and converts it into thrust. Bill Daniels |
#7
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I have seen a couple of versions of those things kicking
around the web...if us colonials can get over the 'freedom fries' syndrome and overcome the lack of sexiness with them...they apparently will do the same thing as winglets. At 00:54 28 October 2004, Bob Salvo wrote: Has anyone tried this? http://www.minix.fr/ Bob Salvo 'Bill Daniels' wrote in message news:zTPfd.321990$3l3.156113@attbi_s03... 'CV' wrote in message ... Another aerodynamic bone to toss around and chew on: Instead of carefully crafted, expensive winglets, wouldn't straightforward flat end plates serve nearly as well in reducing wingtip vortices and improve performance. Have they ever been tried, and with what results ? CV Wing end plates were a big fad in the early 1950's. It was found that the same or better improvement could be obtained by simply adding the same area to the wingtip as additional wingspan. Messing with wingtips has a long and somewhat eccentric history. They have been bent up and down, swept forward and back, made wider and narrower, sliced off at an angle or square, slots added and removed. Until Whitcomb developed winglets, everything else people tried had a huge drag penalty. Airflow around the wingtip is complicated. You really have to understand it to extract any gain. Winglets produce a real gain especially if the glider must remain within a span-limited competition class. They have the advantage of increasing the lift inboard of the winglet without increasing the bending force on the wing as much as additional span would. They also convert some of the energy in the wingtip vortex into thrust which is seen as a general drag reduction in the wingtip area. Think of the winglet as a sailboat sail that catches some of the inward flow on the upper surface and converts it into thrust. Bill Daniels |
#8
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![]() Bob Salvo wrote: Has anyone tried this? http://www.minix.fr/ Yes, all I can see is the following text: Cet espace de 20mo a été acheté sur ovh.com Ce fichier s'appelle index.html CV |
#9
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Stewart Kissel wrote:
I have seen a couple of versions of those things kicking around the web...if us colonials can get over the 'freedom fries' syndrome and overcome the lack of sexiness with them...they apparently will do the same thing as winglets. I don't think so. On the web site they are shown applied only on airplanes with low aspect ratio, where anything would anyway provide a higher improvement than on a high aspect ratio wing as on a glider. And glider have to otimize both climb and cruise. The minix doesn't seem to be well suited to the wide range of angles of attack implied by this. An improvement for climb, where induced drag is the most important, will probably payed by an increased drag in cruise. And I am not biased by the 'freedom fries' syndrome! |
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