![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
http://www.winggrid.ch/do%20and%20do%20not.htm
(Do's and Dont's designing winggrids) Bottom of page - yellow Japanese design. Shrouded pusher ...with winggrids. What is it? Has anyone seen this plane in magazines? I'm guessing it flies. http://www.winggrid.ch/index.htm It comes from this site - Winggrids. "WINGGRID -THE SUBSTITUTE FOR SPAN The ultimate solution for aerodynamic drag reduction and wingtip stall resistance" Montblack |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hoo-yeah! I love the smell of snake oil in the morning!
Bob K. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bob Kuykendall wrote:
Hoo-yeah! I love the smell of snake oil in the morning! Bob K. Nothing new here. A Sport Aviation article, in the late 80s if I recall, breathlessly told the story of a C-150 with identical wing tips, back during days when Jack Cox's articles were uniformly uncritical puff pieces (not sure if this particular article was written by Cox, it was just that SA never reported real criticism of homebuilts back then). I remember it had a fancy stars and stripes paint job. This C-150 had those venetian blind thingys on the tips plus VGs and fences and was supposedly capable of impossibly low stall speeds, which to the extent that stall was reduced would have been a function of the VGs mainly. The tip 'blinds" just looked ridiculous and speed limiting. The problem with fancy wingtips is this: If they do anything to extract benefit from tip vortices, they only do so when the wing is working hard, at max L/D. So such a device MAY improve rate of climb or sink rate. It won't have all that much effect on stall speed. At higher speeds with low AOA they are just drag makers. Who is willing to give up 15kts of cruise just to get an extra hundred FPM of climb? Thus such things never appear in the real world in any great quantity. Note that the only wingtip devices that actually do anything useful are winglets, which generate some thrust from tip circulation that is more than their drag, and this only when the wing is at max LD. As a result, they are only used on two types of a/c in general; gliders and high altitude cruisers like airliners and bizjets. Both do their thing at close to max LD, the glider for obvious reasons and the airliner because at 36000 ft it is operating at cruise effectively in the same indicated speed regime and AOA as the glider at max LD. In both cases the winglets are only there because their benefit is available at the aircraft's intended cruising speed range. Same applies to any other wing tip device that proposes to use tip vortice energy. JohnK |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Take a look at some of the papers on the site -
http://www.winggrid.ch/AIAA-2004-2120.pdf http://www.winggrid.ch/AIAA-2004-2120.pdf Since they aren't selling anything, and they are doing both real world experiments and academic papers with plenty of data collection, I wouldn't call them snake oil. The effect is real. It may be too mechanically complex to be economic, but it's more than vaporware. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote ...
Take a look at some of the papers on the site - http://www.winggrid.ch/AIAA-2004-2120.pdf http://www.winggrid.ch/AIAA-2004-2120.pdf Since they aren't selling anything, and they are doing both real world experiments and academic papers with plenty of data collection, I wouldn't call them snake oil. Snake oil is far too nice a term for what they're peddling. Did you read the paper? In the first sentence they throw out a hundred years of aerodynamics and replace it with their own. Why? Because the old stuff doesn't give the answers they want. They don't justified it further than that. They then go on to claim span efficiency factors of 1.5 with their system. If you understand anything at all about wing aerodynamics you would know that's an absurdity. Sometimes people want to believe things so badly that they can't see that they're leading themselves astray. Rich |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bob Kuykendall wrote:
Earlier, wrote: Take a look at some of the papers on the site... I did. I also chatted about them with one of the aero engineers whose work is cited in them. We agree that it's a bunch of hokum. It looks almost like it was designed to spawn a bunch of conspiracy theories like the ones about GM suppressing the 200 mpg carburator. As regards the topic of winglets raised by another poster, they're great for span-limited and bending-moment-limited situations, which is why they're popular on sailplanes and airliners. L/D-wise it's more effective to just make the wing longer - that is, a 2-foot span extension usually increases the performance more than a 2-foot tall winglet. But of course, extra span drives the wing bending moment up more, so there are many cases where you can have a winglet but not the equivalent span extension. That feathered tip is about the exact opposite of Steve Wittman's tiny tip trapezoid approach. (for the newbies) Some early NACA reports indicated that the outer one-chord-length of wing span was disturbed by the tip vortex. (That vained thing might show some promise in this respect, but the drag of it - just due to increased surface area alone - and all ALL speeds???) Anyway, If the tip chord were reduced, what would happen to the total wing tip vortex? The story goes Steve decided to test this eye-dia by modifying one wing tip. He took off and tip-toed around the pattern holding near full aileron to hold near level. Landed, rolled it back into the hanger and fixed the OTHER tip. Steve's tip modification did indeed reduce the sink rate for any given speed. Ergo... Richard May you always have a Tailwind... |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article et,
Richard Lamb wrote: The story goes Steve decided to test this eye-dia by modifying one wing tip. He took off and tip-toed around the pattern holding near full aileron to hold near level. Landed, rolled it back into the hanger and fixed the OTHER tip. Steve's tip modification did indeed reduce the sink rate for any given speed. Ergo... Richard May you always have a Tailwind... Is there someplace on the web with information on the Witman wing tip design? I'd love to have a write up with the particulars without having to buy a set of Tailwind plans. I've looked all over the web and haven't found it. I have a little wood wing homebuilt that would dearly love to have those wingtips. Thanks Wallace |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Richard Isakson" wrote in
: wrote ... Take a look at some of the papers on the site - http://www.winggrid.ch/AIAA-2004-2120.pdf http://www.winggrid.ch/AIAA-2004-2120.pdf Since they aren't selling anything, and they are doing both real world experiments and academic papers with plenty of data collection, I wouldn't call them snake oil. Snake oil is far too nice a term for what they're peddling. Did you read the paper? In the first sentence they throw out a hundred years of aerodynamics and replace it with their own. Why? Because the old stuff doesn't give the answers they want. This Doonesbury is appropriate: http://www.uclick.com/client/wpc/db/.../05/index.html Brian -- http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism Seismic FAQ: http://www.skywise711.com/SeismicFAQ/SeismicFAQ.html Quake "predictions": http://www.skywise711.com/quakes/EQDB/index.html Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
OK.
How are they getting an increase in L/D while decreasing span and adding drag? (And before the serious flames begin, neither I nor they are selling anything.) |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
rec.aviation.aerobatics FAQ | Dr. Guenther Eichhorn | Aerobatics | 0 | December 1st 03 06:27 AM |
rec.aviation.aerobatics FAQ | Dr. Guenther Eichhorn | Aerobatics | 0 | November 1st 03 06:27 AM |
rec.aviation.aerobatics FAQ | Dr. Guenther Eichhorn | Aerobatics | 0 | October 1st 03 07:27 AM |
rec.aviation.aerobatics FAQ | Dr. Guenther Eichhorn | Aerobatics | 0 | September 1st 03 07:27 AM |
rec.aviation.aerobatics FAQ | Dr. Guenther Eichhorn | Aerobatics | 0 | August 1st 03 07:27 AM |