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#1
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I do not believe my airspeed indicator is accurate. Is there a way to
verify/calibrate an airspeed indicator on the ground? Heino |
#2
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![]() Heino & Deanne Weisberg wrote: I do not believe my airspeed indicator is accurate. Is there a way to verify/calibrate an airspeed indicator on the ground? Heino What sort of ASI do you have? Have you looked to see if this is addressed in the manual? For what range of speeds do you want to check/calibrate it? In the air you can check it vs GPS. -- FF |
#3
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On Mon, 17 Oct 2005 07:07:56 -0500, "Heino & Deanne Weisberg"
wrote: I do not believe my airspeed indicator is accurate. Is there a way to verify/calibrate an airspeed indicator on the ground? It might be easier to calibrate in the air (that is unless your homebuilt is not flying!). You can determine true airspeed empirically through the use of a GPS while flying. Specifically, go to the following website, follow the instructions to capture the data and then use their 'true airspeed applet' to calculate true airspeed. http://www.reacomp.com/true_airspeed/ If you note temperature, pressure, you can work backwards to figure what the indicated airspeed should have been. -Nathan |
#4
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I don't think testing against GPS makes sense at all, as the ASI will
surely work properly if indicating wrong ground speed at headwind - so what information do you gain ? Kublai |
#5
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![]() T o d d P a t t i s t wrote: "Kublai" wrote: I don't think testing against GPS makes sense at all, as the ASI will surely work properly if indicating wrong ground speed at headwind - so what information do you gain ? This question is hard to understand, but GPS testing does make sense. If the aircraft is flown at a constant ASI indicated airspeed, and the GPS groundspeeds are recorded, the calculator will give true airspeed. From that you can determine if the ASI is off (with appropriate altitude/installation error corrections). I think his point is that flying into a headwind or with a tailwind will give you the same true and indicated airspeed but different groundspeeds as determined by GPS. You could fly at constant indicated airspeed and altitiude in a wide circle and note the headings at which the groundspeed (GPS) is maximum and minimum. For a steady wind, the true airspeed corresponding to that indicated airspeed should be the average of the two. The algorithim at the aformentioned webpage appears to do something a bitmore sophisticated than that by numerically solving for the wind. -- FF |
#6
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![]() T o d d P a t t i s t wrote: wrote: I think his point is that flying into a headwind or with a tailwind will give you the same true and indicated airspeed but different groundspeeds as determined by GPS. Your post isn't a model of clarity either, but I think the answer is "so what." I'll try to be clear. I think you're saying that wind does not affect true or indicated airspeed. That's true. (You might be saying that IAS=TAS in head and tailwinds, which is not true.) It's also true that the GPS groundspeed will be different from IAS and TAS in the presence of wind. (In specific situations, it could be the same) You are correct that is what I was thinking. I expect that OP was thinking the same thing too. So I come back to: "So what?" I mean isn't that the point? You use GPS to find out what the wind is, then get rid of the effect of wind to get the real TAS which equals what the GPS groundspeed would have been if there was no wind, then compare the real GPS derived, wind eliminated, TAS to what your suspect airspeed and suspect ASI was telling you. If the GPS derived TAS is 90 knots and your ASI said 100 knots, you've got a problem. Yes, you understand. However it would appear that OP did not understand that, so I suggested the Gedenkin below to help him understand. You could fly at constant indicated airspeed and altitiude in a wide circle and note the headings at which the groundspeed (GPS) is maximum and minimum. For a steady wind, the true airspeed corresponding to that indicated airspeed should be the average of the two. Here you are trying to solve for the wind to get TAS. Actually I was eliminating it from the result, without actually solving for it but you could also solve for it easily enough, it would be half the difference between the max and min ground speed. That's what the cited web page did - it solved the equations for you. Your circle method would work, but it requires you to spot the min/max, and the GPS has to respond quickly enough, and you have to do this in a turn. The better method is to fly straight lines and solve the equations. The web site just makes the "solve the equations" step easy. Agreed, the described method is more practical but less intuitive than the wide circle. The algorithim at the aformentioned webpage appears to do something a bitmore sophisticated than that by numerically solving for the wind. Exactly! Plainly we agree. Hopefully OP gets it too. A water manometer is still dead simple to make and use, but it won't help if you have a problem with the orientation of the pitot as for instance, at high AOA. Calibration with a manometer will not help you calibrate the low speed flight regime of a STOL aircraft, the GPS method could. -- FF |
#7
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GPS will show groundspeed only, so it would only be accurate in ZERO
wind conditions. However, I've read that you can compensate for wind by flying N, S, E and W by using a compass for pointing your plane. You point the nose in each direction and do NOT correct for wind drift (and do not use the track readout on your GPS). In other words, you point the nose for 90 degrees, even if your GROUND TRACK may be 98 degrees because of wind. Take the 4 readings you get and average them. This should get you in the ballpark. Scott wrote: Heino & Deanne Weisberg wrote: I do not believe my airspeed indicator is accurate. Is there a way to verify/calibrate an airspeed indicator on the ground? Heino In the air you can check it vs GPS. |
#8
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![]() "T o d d P a t t i s t" wrote Another method that I used in my experimental glider was to switch the ASI to a trailing probe. I don't have a clue what you mean by that. Clues accepted, gladly! g -- Jim in NC |
#9
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I do not know but if you found the answer please tell me.
regards |
#10
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I am ehsan ashrafi,student of aerospace eng.I would like to share my
experiences with you where do you live and what is your course regards |
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