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Common knowlege about Glider wing designs says that a high taper ratio will
lead to Wing tip stalls. However in our flights and research we have found that a straight or forward swept flying wing will not stall a wing tip despite the very narrow chord ( renolds numbers of 325,000) and lack of washout at the tip. I can attempt a stall in the Pioneer IId by bringing the stick slowly all the way back giving a CL of about 1.5 at 32 mph. We do have some separation at the root but there is no sudden wing tip stall despite no washout at the tips. The glider itself will not stall. In the gliders I also fly with tails, Grob 103 and 102 there is also a reluctance to not stall a wing tip but that is perhaps due to the washout at the tips. Does the wing tip stall suddenly in some of the high performance ships that may not have the amount of washout that the lower performing ships? What gliders if any do stall a wing tip easily? -mat |
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mat Redsell wrote:
Common knowlege about Glider wing designs says that a high taper ratio will lead to Wing tip stalls. However in our flights and research we have found that a straight or forward swept flying wing will not stall a wing tip despite the very narrow chord ( renolds numbers of 325,000) and lack of washout at the tip. I can attempt a stall in the Pioneer IId by bringing the stick slowly all the way back giving a CL of about 1.5 at 32 mph. We do have some separation at the root but there is no sudden wing tip stall despite no washout at the tips. The glider itself will not stall. The "modern" gliders don't have problems with tip stalls under the same straight ahead stalls, either. They might have some washout, but may instead use different airfoils at the root and tip. Winglets can also be used to prevent tip stalling, and many gliders now have swept back leading edges that probably reduce the tip stall likelihood. Taper ratio isn't a very useful predictor for this problem, and it is barely mentioned in Fundamentals of Sailplane Design. Turning stalls are the ones you need to study, because almost every glider can have a tip stall during a turn. In the gliders I also fly with tails, Grob 103 and 102 there is also a reluctance to not stall a wing tip but that is perhaps due to the washout at the tips. Does the wing tip stall suddenly in some of the high performance ships that may not have the amount of washout that the lower performing ships? What gliders if any do stall a wing tip easily? I don't think this is a problem in the "modern" high performance glider. The ones I've flown are generally quite benign in stalls, both straight ahead and turning. -- ----- change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#3
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On Wed, 10 Mar 2004 14:13:54 GMT, "mat Redsell"
wrote: Common knowlege about Glider wing designs says that a high taper ratio will lead to Wing tip stalls. Does it? According to my data stall depends on AoA, nothing else (at least as long as the wing is not swept). The advantage of a forward-swept weing is that its unstalled tip is not affected by the turbulence from a staled inner wing. Does the wing tip stall suddenly in some of the high performance ships that may not have the amount of washout that the lower performing ships? What gliders if any do stall a wing tip easily? Never heard of this. The consequence of a tip stall would be a really rapid snap roll, independent of CG - and I'm sure that any glider that shows such a behaviour would become (in)famous immediately. Bye Andreas |
#4
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![]() Does it? According to my data stall depends on AoA, nothing else (at least as long as the wing is not swept). The advantage of a forward-swept weing is that its unstalled tip is not affected by the turbulence from a staled inner wing. See "Fundamentals of Sailplane Design," page 42 in the English translation by Milgram. "Aspect ratio and wing taper have a pronounced effect on circulation and lift distribution.... Fig. 58 shows the influence of taper on lift distribution. The sharp increase in lift coefficient observed near the tip of a highly tapered wing indicates that the stall will develop first in this region. This is why highly tapered wings are often associated with poor stall characteristics. Rectangular and moderately tapered wings present less of a problem in this respect." As far as I can see, there's no explanation there for why this happens. Stinton, in "The Design of the Aeroplane," presents a graphical method for estimating lift coefficient on a non-constant-chord wing, but doesn't explain why taper affects lift coefficient distribution either. Sweep isn't discussed by Thomas, but Stinton says (p. 146) "Swept back wings have two disadvantages at increased angles of attack and reduced speeds: - Wing boundary layers tend to drift outboard, assisted by the spanwise component of flow in fig. 4.13a, which causes them to thicken and separate prematurely at the tips. - Sweep staggers the vortices shed across the span, so that those shed inboard are ahead of those shed further out. This causes increased upwash ahead of the tip, with a corresponding increase in tip angle of attack, accompanied by premature peaking of the lift coefficient. The overall result is that swept back wing tips stall before the root... Forward sweep avoids premature tip stall, because the root stalls first. However, forward sweep has an adverse effect upon directional stability, and larger fin area is needed than with sweepback." If you look at a beginner's hang glider on the launch ramp, sighting along the leading edge while the wing is developing lift in the wind, you'll see enormous amounts of wing twist, with the tip clearly at a negative angle of incidence to the flow but still developing lift! This is the clearest visualization I've come across of the way that the "tip" vortices shed inboard result in a higher local AOA on the outboard portions of a swept wing: the tip is at a negative incidence, but a positive AOA. With forward sweep, the reverse could happen: the center section might have a negative angle of incidence but a positive AOA. Mat seems to be seeing the two effects offsetting each other: the forward sweep of his wing (looks like a straight leading edge, forward swept trailing edge, which is a forward swept wing) tends to make the root stall first, while the taper ratio would tend to make the tip stall first. It looks like the sweep is winning. However, I agree that taper ratio and sweep alone don't seem to be enough to predict tip-stall behavior, which will also depend on wing twist and the airfoil used at the root vs tip. I clearly need to fly more and spend less time with these books! |
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thanks for your fine reply on wing tip stalls,
I tend to concentrate on the flying and building... and leave the book work for late at night. I have produced a number of DVD's on the Pioneer which to me is a most interesting glider that needs a lot more study. As to the root stalling first -yes that is as we found it but it is very gentle. Dave Wells tufted the wing root and yes it progressed from the root to the tip. In my movie it readily shows that when the one attempts a stall the Pioneer stays at a certain angle of attack but it can slowly go off to one side but it can be controlled by the rudder. If you would like to view this for yourself I will send you a DVD of a cross country flight with a save from 700 ft agl and include a number of attempt stalls and a high speed run to 95 mph. I would like your input. In a turn the Pioneer will not drop a wing tip... I think this needs further investigation and the new Pioneer III with a modern arifoil, that should fly this year, will be another glider to study. -mat |
#6
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Consider also that it is partially irrelevant whether the taper results in a
forward or backward sweep. As the wing chord reduces so the Reynolds number changes (for any given speed), and the behavior with it for any given airfoil. The lower Reynolds number at the narrow chord will result in more tetchy behavior for the laminar profiles preferred for the overall wing. I assume that this is one of the reasons the aerodynamics types make quite substantial airfoil changes on the tapered sections of the wings. This is probably a larger factor in design than the minimal degree of sweep forward or back possible in a high aspect ratio sailplane wing. Depending on what you want from your airplane it may be a desirable compromise to live with the more interesting high AOA behavior of a compound taper wing. For the performance improvements possible it is presumably worth the effort for high performance XC ships. Presumably this is one reason why the Piper Cherokee has it's "hershey bar" wing. Only washout effects, so easier to predict behavior. The other reason to go with simple wing planforms is the cost involved... Bruce mat Redsell wrote: thanks for your fine reply on wing tip stalls, I tend to concentrate on the flying and building... and leave the book work for late at night. I have produced a number of DVD's on the Pioneer which to me is a most interesting glider that needs a lot more study. As to the root stalling first -yes that is as we found it but it is very gentle. Dave Wells tufted the wing root and yes it progressed from the root to the tip. In my movie it readily shows that when the one attempts a stall the Pioneer stays at a certain angle of attack but it can slowly go off to one side but it can be controlled by the rudder. If you would like to view this for yourself I will send you a DVD of a cross country flight with a save from 700 ft agl and include a number of attempt stalls and a high speed run to 95 mph. I would like your input. In a turn the Pioneer will not drop a wing tip... I think this needs further investigation and the new Pioneer III with a modern arifoil, that should fly this year, will be another glider to study. -mat |
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