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#1
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I have noticed that several articles on glider performance refer to
adding/modifying the wing root to get better performance. Can anyone refer me to further info on wing root fairing design and or mods to improve performance. Cheers, Don |
#2
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What type of glider?
At 15:18 27 October 2003, D.A.L wrote: I have noticed that several articles on glider performance refer to adding/modifying the wing root to get better performance. Can anyone refer me to further info on wing root fairing design and or mods to improve performance. Cheers, Don |
#3
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Earlier, D.A.L wrote:
I have noticed that several articles on glider performance refer to adding/modifying the wing root to get better performance. Can anyone refer me to further info on wing root fairing design and or mods to improve performance. Wing fuselage junction fillets are often a pretty troublesome aspect of glider design. The way I understand it, they are usually developed either empirically, using tuft testing, or using lots of CFD computing horsepower. On the other hand, it seems to be one of those aspects where you get some points just for trying. Dick Schreder developed the HP-18 side-of-body junction by eye, and seemed to have gotten it pretty close on the first try. The only thing I would have done differently would be to adjust the fillet trailing edge slightly so that it lines up at the -5 flap setting instead of 0. There are some references in Thomas' _Fundamentals of Sailplane Design_, but the book itself is pretty skimpy regarding developing junction fillets for existing sailplanes. Small radii near the leading edge, big radius at the bac, that sort of thing. One of the cites in Thomas is to a study by Mark Maughmer at Penn State. If you can get in touch with him, he might be able to give you some reasonable guidelines. Another cite is to Dick Johnson's 1979 compendium of flight test articles; you can get most of those off of the SSA Web server. Bob K. http://www.hpaircraft.com/hp-24 |
#4
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Bob Kuykendall wrote in message ...
Earlier, D.A.L wrote: I have noticed that several articles on glider performance refer to adding/modifying the wing root to get better performance. Can anyone refer me to further info on wing root fairing design and or mods to improve performance. Wing fuselage junction fillets are often a pretty troublesome aspect of glider design. The way I understand it, they are usually developed either empirically, using tuft testing, or using lots of CFD computing horsepower. On the other hand, it seems to be one of those aspects where you get some points just for trying. Dick Schreder developed the HP-18 side-of-body junction by eye, and seemed to have gotten it pretty close on the first try. The only thing I would have done differently would be to adjust the fillet trailing edge slightly so that it lines up at the -5 flap setting instead of 0. There are some references in Thomas' _Fundamentals of Sailplane Design_, but the book itself is pretty skimpy regarding developing junction fillets for existing sailplanes. Small radii near the leading edge, big radius at the bac, that sort of thing. One of the cites in Thomas is to a study by Mark Maughmer at Penn State. If you can get in touch with him, he might be able to give you some reasonable guidelines. Another cite is to Dick Johnson's 1979 compendium of flight test articles; you can get most of those off of the SSA Web server. Bob K. http://www.hpaircraft.com/hp-24 ************************************************** ****************************** For the sake of the discussion, why have an upper wing root fillet at all? The Caproni A 21 wing blends into the top of the fuselage. What are the advantages/disadvantages to this type of design? |
#5
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The Calif A21 has a pretty elaborate wing root fairing (I own one, so I
should know). -- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "Slingsby" a écrit dans le message de om... For the sake of the discussion, why have an upper wing root fillet at all? The Caproni A 21 wing blends into the top of the fuselage. What are the advantages/disadvantages to this type of design? |
#6
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Bob Kuykendall wrote in message ...
Earlier, D.A.L wrote: I have noticed that several articles on glider performance refer to adding/modifying the wing root to get better performance. Can anyone refer me to further info on wing root fairing design and or mods to improve performance. Wing fuselage junction fillets are often a pretty troublesome aspect of glider design. The way I understand it, they are usually developed either empirically, using tuft testing, or using lots of CFD computing horsepower. On the other hand, it seems to be one of those aspects where you get some points just for trying. Dick Schreder developed the HP-18 side-of-body junction by eye, and seemed to have gotten it pretty close on the first try. The only thing I would have done differently would be to adjust the fillet trailing edge slightly so that it lines up at the -5 flap setting instead of 0. There are some references in Thomas' _Fundamentals of Sailplane Design_, but the book itself is pretty skimpy regarding developing junction fillets for existing sailplanes. Small radii near the leading edge, big radius at the bac, that sort of thing. One of the cites in Thomas is to a study by Mark Maughmer at Penn State. If you can get in touch with him, he might be able to give you some reasonable guidelines. Another cite is to Dick Johnson's 1979 compendium of flight test articles; you can get most of those off of the SSA Web server. Bob K. http://www.hpaircraft.com/hp-24 Thanks for the info and references Bob! Don. |
#7
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The Root to fusleage junction is a source of separation in many gliders.
In our Marske Pioneer at extrmely slow speeds we discovered that a separation seems to start at this wing root/ fuselage junction. And a fillet may solve this. Tuft the wing and record the result on film with voice commentary for the differing speeds. When you have a newly constructed fillet record that too on film to see if you have improved the airflow. We will be adding a wingroot fillet on our Pioneer over the winter months. -mat Marske Flying Wings http://www.continuo.com/marske |
#8
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Bert Willing wrote:
The Calif A21 has a pretty elaborate wing root fairing (I own one, so I should know). -- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "Slingsby" a écrit dans le message de om... For the sake of the discussion, why have an upper wing root fillet at all? The Caproni A 21 wing blends into the top of the fuselage. What are the advantages/disadvantages to this type of design? A better example of a wing root without fillet is the LS1f. But the manufacturer added them to the LS4. Another example is the Janus B (just had a look on our Janus now disassembeld in the workshop). |
#9
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Several of us have added Vortex Generators (VG's) to the upper wing / fuselage
juncture area on the Genesis 2 and found very good results. As I understand it, the VG's, placed near the high camber location, cause the local flow to become turbulent, but the "turbulent" flow reattaches and prevents complete separation. Anyway, I am able to thermal 5 knots slower and no longer feel and hear flow separation. The VG's are 1" long X .25" high and .25" wide (base only) the vertical web is about 1/16" wide. We place them in pairs that are angled in about 30 degrees to each other. The hot set-up seems to be 3 sets on each side with 2 on the wing and 1 on the fuselage. I have seen similar things on a Nimbus 3 and wondered if they worked. I could play a tune on my Nimbus, by just moving the flaps up and down, so something bad was going on back there. The VG's work on the Genesis 2. JJ Sinclair |
#10
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![]() "Robert Ehrlich" wrote in message ... Bert Willing wrote: The Calif A21 has a pretty elaborate wing root fairing (I own one, so I should know). -- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "Slingsby" a écrit dans le message de om... For the sake of the discussion, why have an upper wing root fillet at all? The Caproni A 21 wing blends into the top of the fuselage. What are the advantages/disadvantages to this type of design? A better example of a wing root without fillet is the LS1f. But the manufacturer added them to the LS4. Another example is the Janus B (just had a look on our Janus now disassembeld in the workshop). Most common Grob models have no fillet and fly like it. Peter Masak had a small publication a few years ago on performance enhancements, including photos of ASW-20 fillets and mods and tufts in action. No clue if it's still available. Frank Whiteley |
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