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#1
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I am not a glider pilot, although I have been up with friends a few
times in the past, but I know the basic instrumentation is pretty limited- and for good reason. However, would an AOA indicator increase the efficency of gliding enough at best L/D, min sink and other specific angles of attack enough to justify installing one? KIAS is only an approximation of a desired angle of attack for a given weight, so would a precise AOA indication be beneficial for glider pilots? In most jets, speed tapes, stall protection systems and pitch limit indicators are all based on AOA, and fight without them would be much less efficent and safe. If there were a device to accurately display the wings current AOA in flight and only cost around $100 would anyone be interested in installing such a device. Thanks for any input or opinions |
#2
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If there were a device to accurately display
the wings current AOA in flight and only cost around $100 would anyone be interested in installing such a device. Thanks for any input or opinions Some simply tape 'pitch strings' on the side of their canopy- much less than $100, while others may spring for this system offered by Safe Flight instruments: http://www.safeflight.com/mmain.php?...cs=109&css=223 much more than $100, Not pictured on their site is the rather nifty- but prone to ground damage if not careful- little rotating vane that attaches on the side of the fuselage that is at least easily removable to reduce the likelyhood such damage incidents. If you can improve on either of these options, there are indeed people that would be interested. It would be particularly useful in winching and other forms of ground launching more so than other aspects of glider flying I think, but those who regularly utilize widely varying wingloading would probably be into it as well. So if you think can come up with a a better system than the string and cheaper and more practical than the Safe Flight unit (one that does not add undue drag of course) please pursue this. -Paul PS. if you search AOA on this group you will find there has been much discussion already, so that would be a good place to start. PPS. START FLYING GLIDERS!! |
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#4
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On Jun 3, 1:10*pm, sisu1a wrote:
better link for Safe Flight AOA: *http://www.safeflight.com/mmain.php?...cs=109&css=223 -Paul oops.. he http://www.safeflight.com/imgs/photo...eet%20Hort.pdf |
#5
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On Jun 3, 1:34*pm, mooseknuckel1 wrote:
I am not a glider pilot, although I have been up with friends a few times in the past, but I know the basic instrumentation is pretty limited- and for good reason. However, would an AOA indicator increase the efficency of gliding enough at best L/D, min sink and other specific angles of attack enough to justify installing one? KIAS is only an approximation of a desired angle of attack for a given weight, so would a precise AOA indication be beneficial for glider pilots? In most jets, speed tapes, stall protection systems and pitch limit indicators are all based on AOA, and fight without them would be much less efficent and safe. If there were a device to accurately display the wings current AOA in flight and only cost around $100 would anyone be interested in installing such a device. Thanks for any input or opinions Yes to all that. Here's another option developed for military UAV's said to be quite accurate. http://www.cgmasi.com/aviation/index.html This probe is just three brass tubes soldered together. The center one is squared off and is the pitot tube. The top and bottom tubes are cut at a 45 degree angle and connected to a differential pressure transducer in an signal conditioning electronics package. I think one of these could easily be fitted to the nose of a glider. |
#6
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On Wed, 3 Jun 2009 12:34:08 -0700 (PDT), mooseknuckel1
wrote: However, would an AOA indicator increase the efficency of gliding enough at best L/D, min sink and other specific angles of attack enough to justify installing one? Mostly, it would (greatly) improve safety. For an unflapped glider, a string taped on the side of the canopy does the job sufficiently well. For flapped gliders, things are more complicated; I guess the electronic instrument cited by others, doesn't have an input for a "flap lever position sensor" as well. But it should have one. Aldo Cernezzi |
#7
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On Jun 4, 2:38*am, pigro wrote:
On Wed, 3 Jun 2009 12:34:08 -0700 (PDT), mooseknuckel1 wrote: However, would an AOA indicator increase the efficency of gliding enough at best L/D, min sink and other specific angles of attack enough to justify installing one? Mostly, it would (greatly) improve safety. For an unflapped glider, a string taped on the side of the canopy does the job sufficiently well. For flapped gliders, things are more complicated; I guess the electronic instrument cited by others, doesn't have an input for a "flap lever position sensor" as well. But it should have one. Aldo Cernezzi At $100 and below you are probably at a sufficiently low price for most. The other concerns will be power consumption (really should be below 50mA to not be a concern given all the other electricity-hungry stuff in a modern cockpit). Also configurability and readability will be key. I'd think you'd want to integrate it with the airspeed indicator (probably not practical), have an adjustment for flap position and have some audio warnings, etc. Unless you want to do a lot of flight testing work yourself, you'd probably need to allow the customer to set alarms themselves based on various configurations. Installation complexity could be an inhibitor as would anything that looks like it might add even a small amount of drag. 9B |
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On Jun 3, 4:02*pm, bildan wrote:
On Jun 3, 1:34*pm, mooseknuckel1 wrote: I am not a glider pilot, although I have been up with friends a few times in the past, but I know the basic instrumentation is pretty limited- and for good reason. However, would an AOA indicator increase the efficency of gliding enough at best L/D, min sink and other specific angles of attack enough to justify installing one? KIAS is only an approximation of a desired angle of attack for a given weight, so would a precise AOA indication be beneficial for glider pilots? In most jets, speed tapes, stall protection systems and pitch limit indicators are all based on AOA, and fight without them would be much less efficent and safe. If there were a device to accurately display the wings current AOA in flight and only cost around $100 would anyone be interested in installing such a device. Thanks for any input or opinions Yes to all that. *Here's another option developed for military UAV's said to be quite accurate. *http://www.cgmasi.com/aviation/index.html This probe is just three brass tubes soldered together. *The center one is squared off and is the pitot tube. *The top and bottom tubes are cut at a 45 degree angle and connected to a differential pressure transducer in an signal conditioning electronics package. I think one of these could easily be fitted to the nose of a glider. Adding a thought. I think the nose cone of most gliders would serve as the probe. Just add a pair of air pressure ports top and bottom a few inches aft of the nose and feed that pressure differential to the signal conditioning electronics box. |
#9
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On Jun 4, 7:48*am, bildan wrote:
On Jun 3, 4:02*pm, bildan wrote: On Jun 3, 1:34*pm, mooseknuckel1 wrote: I am not a glider pilot, although I have been up with friends a few times in the past, but I know the basic instrumentation is pretty limited- and for good reason. However, would an AOA indicator increase the efficency of gliding enough at best L/D, min sink and other specific angles of attack enough to justify installing one? KIAS is only an approximation of a desired angle of attack for a given weight, so would a precise AOA indication be beneficial for glider pilots? In most jets, speed tapes, stall protection systems and pitch limit indicators are all based on AOA, and fight without them would be much less efficent and safe. If there were a device to accurately display the wings current AOA in flight and only cost around $100 would anyone be interested in installing such a device. Thanks for any input or opinions Yes to all that. *Here's another option developed for military UAV's said to be quite accurate. *http://www.cgmasi.com/aviation/index.html This probe is just three brass tubes soldered together. *The center one is squared off and is the pitot tube. *The top and bottom tubes are cut at a 45 degree angle and connected to a differential pressure transducer in an signal conditioning electronics package. I think one of these could easily be fitted to the nose of a glider. Adding a thought. *I think the nose cone of most gliders would serve as the probe. *Just add a pair of air pressure ports top and bottom a few inches aft of the nose and feed that pressure differential to the signal conditioning electronics box.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You might find the DYNON AOA probe interesting: http://www.dynonavionics.com/docs/D180_Feature_AOA.html |
#10
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This has all been hashed out before (some interesting threads, those!)
but here is my 2 cents: AOA can be derived from pressure differential, best way would be to have sensor ports in both wings (enough to be redundant and avoid yaw problems. Nose might also work, but it's the wing you care about, really. AOA is really only needed at high angles: Stall, Min Sink, L/D max, recommended approach speed. Since these speeds vary with weight and bank angle, AOA is better than airspeed. So to keep it simple, with gear up show min sink (for thermalling) tied to flap setting, and maybe have an index at L/D max (not really used that often). Gear down, show desired approach speed, with warning approaching stall. I think the military chevrons and doughnut indicator would work just fine: On-speed (desired AOA) when center g(green) circle is lit. Slightly slow when circle and lower up (red) chevron are both lit. Slow when only red up chevron is lit, slightly fast when circle and upper down (yellow) chevron is lit, and fast when only down chevron is lit. Electronics would need input from gear and flaps, if present, of course. Easy to see if on top of panel. Kirk |
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