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#41
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Well, the relationship of flutter to IAS and TAS is certainly a
puzzle to me. Somewhere I got the understanding that IAS, in a sense, indicates the impact rate (pressure) of molecules on the aircraft, and thus in thinner air an aircraft will "actually" (TAS) be flying faster to receive the same air molecule impact rate (pressure). TAS, on the other hand, indicates, in a sense, indicates the speed at which the air molecules are moving past the aircraft - something quite independent of just how MANY air molecules are passing by the aircraft in a given amount of time. Further, I have had the impression that flutter is a consequence of the speed of the aircraft through the air (molecules) (TAS) rather than the number of air molecules that happen to be impacting the aircraft in a given amount of time (IAS). So, I have always considered it prudent to view VNE due to FLUTTER to be a TAS airspeed, not an IAS airspeed. Have I been wrong about this? |
#42
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![]() "Jim" wrote in message ... Well, the relationship of flutter to IAS and TAS is certainly a puzzle to me. Somewhere I got the understanding that IAS, in a sense, indicates the impact rate (pressure) of molecules on the aircraft, and thus in thinner air an aircraft will "actually" (TAS) be flying faster to receive the same air molecule impact rate (pressure). True AFAIK, and the effectiveness of controls responds to this pressure. Control flutter limitations are a function of IAS. Some sailplanes have been designed with and even retrofitted with dampers. Bear in mind that age, wear, repair, compromised mass balances, and paint can impact this. (Not mutually exclusive changes) TAS, on the other hand, indicates, in a sense, indicates the speed at which the air molecules are moving past the aircraft - something quite independent of just how MANY air molecules are passing by the aircraft in a given amount of time. Yes, and the center of pressure that generates lift shifts as a result and may twist (maybe better un-twist) the wing. IIRC, the FL500 Grob had an extra lamination or two of glass in the wings so it could fly faster than stall speed at extreme altitude. In my DG-100 at speeds 120kts under 3000m, the amount of downward deflection at the tips was really impressive and a bit unnerving. I don't recall similar deflection at 8500m at similar TAS, but, like most everyone else, I have little empirical evidence. Further, I have had the impression that flutter is a consequence of the speed of the aircraft through the air (molecules) (TAS) rather than the number of air molecules that happen to be impacting the aircraft in a given amount of time (IAS). Flutter in an elastic mode and is dependent on wing design. As I understand it, a Lear Jet's Vne is based on IAS with Mach limits. The wings are quite short and stiff compared to a sailplane, and have greater torsional resistence by design. The twist in glider wings is there to provide more benign handling, however, as in the OSTIV paper I've referenced previously, sailplane design is a compromise of performance and engineering. The elastic mode may be the limiting factor and engineering a sailplane to perform at altitude as a Lear Jet would increase both weight and cost unacceptably (unless your name is Fossett maybe). Since the sailplane spends 99% of it's service life 6000m and a Lear Jet spends 90% of its service life 8000m, each is designed appropriately. So, I have always considered it prudent to view VNE due to FLUTTER to be a TAS airspeed, not an IAS airspeed. Perfectly safe as a conservative view. Have I been wrong about this? The conjecture in the OSTIV paper was that (IAS+TAS)/2 was safe and that this envelope might extend to 0.8 * TAS. However, there are a couple of Nimbus 4 incidents that might suggest adoption of the prudent view. There are also some 15m designs with little twist and stiff wings that might be real rocket rides. I have a little time in a Jantar Std 2 and found it nimble, a bit stiff, and honest in performance. I also found that things like the aileron hinges wear a bit more quickly than some other gliders, so pressure effects might be of interest. Too many factors and not enough evidence to say who's right or wrong or taking unacceptable risks. The third mode of flutter is pilot induced. Control inputs at high altitude and speed could potentially induce either of the other two modes, I suppose. Anyway, that's my take, Frank Whiteley Colorado |
#43
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Jim wrote:
So, I have always considered it prudent to view VNE due to FLUTTER to be a TAS airspeed, not an IAS airspeed. Have I been wrong about this? No, it is prudent, but as several have pointed out, it may be unnecessarily conservative. That's because the flutter usually occurs somewhere between IAS and TAS, and not strictly by TAS. Personally, I'd use TAS on "older" (designed/certified 20+ years ago) gliders, and the glider's handbook for "newer" (designed/certified within the last 10 or so years, unless I knew specifically what the older glider was designed and tested to. My reasoning is the older certifications were not as stringent in this area as they are now. -- ----- change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#44
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It is a TAS, this is the reason it occurs at a lower IAS as the altitude
increases. Without some sort of sophisticated computations it is very difficult to determine TAS. IAS is easy to see and use. |
#45
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H. Miranda World Record technique:
1. Fill wings with water The Jantar that Horacio flight, DIDN'T HAVE WATER!!!!! They flew using the 1 and 2 wave of cordillera del viento starting at 5000 meters (16666 ft) climb to 6000 m (20000 ft) and finish at 4400 meters (14666 ft). His maximum ground speed was 413 km/h (223 kts). I have the IGC file for this record. I can e-mail you if you wish. The jantar VNE is 275 kph (148 kts) at sea level. Last year I flew with Horacio in the same triangle in a IS-28B2. Our maximum ground speed was 330 kph (178kts) flying always at 160 kpn (86 kts) IAS, that is a little less that the IAS VNE for this altitude. The VNE at sea level for the IS is 220 kph (118 kts) Best regars, Luis Briones |
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