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"Dave Whiley" wrote in message
... Have a look at the wing leading edge. I always thought it was a smooth curve, but it's actually several staight lines. |
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Alan Erskine wrote:
Have a look at the wing leading edge. I always thought it was a smooth curve, but it's actually several staight lines. Yes, it's especially noticeable in that shot. Last November, I went to a lecture by one of the team involved in preserving a different Vulcan in fast-taxi condition. One thing he said was that the original design was for an absolutely straight leading edge, but there were compressibility problems that almost led to the project being cancelled. Changing the leading edge shape cured the problem. I would guess that compressibility still happens, but over a different, shorter section of wing at various different speeds. I'd also guess that putting a couple of corners in the leading edge was easier to implement than redesigning the wing to a fully curved shape in Concorde style. On the other hand, those guesses could be a long way off the mark! -- Dave not-me should be djw001 and there's no need for any wossname |
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"Dave Whiley" wrote in message
... Last November, I went to a lecture by one of the team involved in preserving a different Vulcan in fast-taxi condition. One thing he said was that the original design was for an absolutely straight leading edge, but there were compressibility problems that almost led to the project being cancelled. Changing the leading edge shape cured the problem. I was wondering what it did to the RCS. |
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Alan Erskine wrote:
"Dave Whiley" wrote in message ... Last November, I went to a lecture by one of the team involved in preserving a different Vulcan in fast-taxi condition. One thing he said was that the original design was for an absolutely straight leading edge, but there were compressibility problems that almost led to the project being cancelled. Changing the leading edge shape cured the problem. I was wondering what it did to the RCS. Something else I've been told (on a visit to see XH558 about five years ago, when she was up on jacks and stripped down for restoration) was that the shape of the Vulcan had many "stealthy" characteristics, albeit by luck rather than any particular design intent. That enormous fin would take away much of the benefit, though. -- Dave not-me should be djw001 and there's no need for any wossname |
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