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#1
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On an aircraft like the ventus there are several sections of control surface
along the T/E of the wing resulting in several 'breaks' in the trailing edge. My question is - Are the breaks or corners of a deflected control surface the source of their own little vortices and therefore additional ( very small) drag? I know that the inboard end of flaps is an area that causes a lot of problems, my ventus has fences fitted there and some people fit fences to the aileron joints. Just how much drag difference do aileron fences make given that they increase the wetted area by several square inches themselves? Ian |
#2
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"tango4" wrote in message ...
On an aircraft like the ventus there are several sections of control surface along the T/E of the wing resulting in several 'breaks' in the trailing edge. My question is - Are the breaks or corners of a deflected control surface the source of their own little vortices and therefore additional ( very small) drag? I know that the inboard end of flaps is an area that causes a lot of problems, my ventus has fences fitted there and some people fit fences to the aileron joints. Just how much drag difference do aileron fences make given that they increase the wetted area by several square inches themselves? Ian The outboard end of a deflected flap can produce a very strong vortex. You can see this from the ground (or the back of the cabin) when alomst any transport category aircraft is on approach to land on a humid day. As you correctly point out, the addition of a fence is a tradeoff. Since the flap is not always deflected, there is an additional duty cycle tradeoff, because the fence is always in the flow. There is also a safety tradeoff, since the fence can fail and jam the control surface. A jammed flap is manageable, but a jammed aileron is not. My general understanding is that aileron fences are usually added to enhance aileron authority, not to reduce drag directly. There may be an incidental reduction in drag by using a smaller control surface with fences, however. |
#3
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if I remember correctly... fences are added to reduce the propagation of the
stall from wing root outward over the ailerons, keeping the ailerons flying just a bit longer in stall regimes.. normally found on STOL equipped aircraft. BT "Doug Haluza" wrote in message om... "tango4" wrote in message ... On an aircraft like the ventus there are several sections of control surface along the T/E of the wing resulting in several 'breaks' in the trailing edge. My question is - Are the breaks or corners of a deflected control surface the source of their own little vortices and therefore additional ( very small) drag? I know that the inboard end of flaps is an area that causes a lot of problems, my ventus has fences fitted there and some people fit fences to the aileron joints. Just how much drag difference do aileron fences make given that they increase the wetted area by several square inches themselves? Ian The outboard end of a deflected flap can produce a very strong vortex. You can see this from the ground (or the back of the cabin) when alomst any transport category aircraft is on approach to land on a humid day. As you correctly point out, the addition of a fence is a tradeoff. Since the flap is not always deflected, there is an additional duty cycle tradeoff, because the fence is always in the flow. There is also a safety tradeoff, since the fence can fail and jam the control surface. A jammed flap is manageable, but a jammed aileron is not. My general understanding is that aileron fences are usually added to enhance aileron authority, not to reduce drag directly. There may be an incidental reduction in drag by using a smaller control surface with fences, however. |
#4
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tango4 writes:
Just how much drag difference do aileron fences make given that they increase the wetted area by several square inches themselves? I had the fences on the root ends of the flaps of my ASW-20 until recently when I discovered by accident that they were like little parachutes on my wings. A discarded pee bag (yes I toss them, so what) burst on the wing LE and left telltale dried evidence that the local airflow in the region of the flap fence was out of alignment with the fence by about 20 degrees, most likely creating a large vortex with more drag that the resulting little gap once the fence was removed. - Mark Navarre ASW-20 OD California, USA - |
#5
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There are different types of fences. Boundary layer fences usually
start near the leading edge, and can be used to control the spanwise flow component (normal airflow is chordwise). They can control the propagation of the stall, are often placed inboard of the ailerons to keep them working at high angles of attack. Aileron and flap fences close the gap between the movable surface and the fixed trailing edge of the wing. They are used to prevent higher pressure air from below the wing sneaking through the gap to the lower pressure above. "BTIZ" wrote in message news:yFRob.119670$La.49811@fed1read02... if I remember correctly... fences are added to reduce the propagation of the stall from wing root outward over the ailerons, keeping the ailerons flying just a bit longer in stall regimes.. normally found on STOL equipped aircraft. BT "Doug Haluza" wrote in message om... "tango4" wrote in message ... On an aircraft like the ventus there are several sections of control surface along the T/E of the wing resulting in several 'breaks' in the trailing edge. My question is - Are the breaks or corners of a deflected control surface the source of their own little vortices and therefore additional ( very small) drag? I know that the inboard end of flaps is an area that causes a lot of problems, my ventus has fences fitted there and some people fit fences to the aileron joints. Just how much drag difference do aileron fences make given that they increase the wetted area by several square inches themselves? Ian The outboard end of a deflected flap can produce a very strong vortex. You can see this from the ground (or the back of the cabin) when alomst any transport category aircraft is on approach to land on a humid day. As you correctly point out, the addition of a fence is a tradeoff. Since the flap is not always deflected, there is an additional duty cycle tradeoff, because the fence is always in the flow. There is also a safety tradeoff, since the fence can fail and jam the control surface. A jammed flap is manageable, but a jammed aileron is not. My general understanding is that aileron fences are usually added to enhance aileron authority, not to reduce drag directly. There may be an incidental reduction in drag by using a smaller control surface with fences, however. |
#6
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![]() "Todd Pattist" wrote in message ... "tango4" wrote: On an aircraft like the ventus there are several sections of control surface along the T/E of the wing resulting in several 'breaks' in the trailing edge. My Ventus C has those breaks covered with flexible semi-permanent tape. Todd Pattist - "WH" Ventus C (Remove DONTSPAMME from address to email reply.) I'm not a Ventus owner but a Nimbus 2C owner and I'm following this closely. Todd, are you talking about the flap and aileron hinge gaps? I think the question was about the end to end gaps between the each flap section and between the outer flap and aileron when the flaps are deflected. Bill Daniels |
#7
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Hi Todd
So does mine, I was thinking more of the breaks between flaps and ailerons where there is a differential between the surfaces or between the wing and the aileron since, at least when I'm flying, they are rarely lined up for more than a second or two and must be creating a small drag bucket all the time. Ian "Todd Pattist" wrote in message ... "tango4" wrote: On an aircraft like the ventus there are several sections of control surface along the T/E of the wing resulting in several 'breaks' in the trailing edge. My Ventus C has those breaks covered with flexible semi-permanent tape. Todd Pattist - "WH" Ventus C (Remove DONTSPAMME from address to email reply.) |
#8
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Hi Bill
The Ventus has one break in the aileron where the trailing edge taper changes and there is a different hingeline. The chordwise gap betweeen the two aileron sections is closed off with fabric type tape. The two 'ailerons' move at the same rate but its made in two pieces I think because of its length and the differing hingelines. Ian "Bill Daniels" wrote in message ink.net... "Todd Pattist" wrote in message ... "tango4" wrote: On an aircraft like the ventus there are several sections of control surface along the T/E of the wing resulting in several 'breaks' in the trailing edge. My Ventus C has those breaks covered with flexible semi-permanent tape. Todd Pattist - "WH" Ventus C (Remove DONTSPAMME from address to email reply.) I'm not a Ventus owner but a Nimbus 2C owner and I'm following this closely. Todd, are you talking about the flap and aileron hinge gaps? I think the question was about the end to end gaps between the each flap section and between the outer flap and aileron when the flaps are deflected. Bill Daniels |
#9
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![]() "tango4" wrote in message ... Hi Bill The Ventus has one break in the aileron where the trailing edge taper changes and there is a different hingeline. The chordwise gap betweeen the two aileron sections is closed off with fabric type tape. The two 'ailerons' move at the same rate but its made in two pieces I think because of its length and the differing hingelines. Ian Ah... OK. Thanks, Ian. I was thinking of the Nimbus wing where the flap sections and ailerons all move down, but at different rates. That leaves places along the TE where vortices can form as air escapes between the ends of the flap/aileron sections. I can't think of anything to do about that. Bill Daniels |
#10
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Here's the basics of my idea.
Looking down on the wing in planform. Imagine an aileron inboard end was cut at an angle of about 30 degrees to the chord rather than the traditional 90 and the wing box ( or adjacent flap ) was cut back at an opposite 30 degrees. The view from above would be of a trailing edge with a 60 degree trianglular 'bite' missing. Now take a triangular piece of aileron section that fills the 'bite' and at its apex install a ball joint. Into the rear of the aileron spar mount a ball socket to match the one on the triangle. Now you have a triangle section filling the gap and free to rotate long the ships longitudinal axis. ( gee a picture would work wonders here !) By installing a mylar seal along the ( almost chordwise ) edges of the aileron and wing (or adacent flap ) such that a sliding seal is made with the triangular piece you might get an aileron / flap joint that doesn't kick off that vortex. This might be advantageous at the flap root end helping to clean up the flow at the root training edge. It all sounds rather complex but perhaps the .01 % difference it might make would be worth it. Any thoughts on this? Ian PS: There is a variation on the triangular piece that is more elegant but is almost impossible to visualise without a drawing! |
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