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Here's another question for you engineers out there. Traditional
airplane design has the tail pressing down, so the tail is fighting the work that the main wing is doing. A tandem-wing airplane in which both front and rear wings are lifting upward is a more efficient design, which is one reason Bert Rutan chose the canard configuration for so many of his designs. But in the canard configuration, the front wing is smaller than the rear wing. This is what I don't understand. It seems to me that a design in which the front wing was larger and the rear wing was smaller would be more stable in pitch. The smaller rear wing would automatically damp pitch excursions like the fins of an arrow. So why is the canard the most successful tandem- wing design flying? |
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On Feb 2, 1:59*pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Well, it isn't a tandem wing, for one thing. It's a canard. It's front "wing" is called a canard and not a wing. You could say it's a tomato tomato thing, but that's the definition. A Bleriot could also be called a tandem wing aircraft if you used the same standard. It's tail lifts. So do most free flight models. These airplanes have very large stabs (or wings, if you prefer), and very far aft CGs as compared to a a "conventional" aircraft and usually very long fuselages. Aircraft like the Bleriot were not very stable in pitch, and RC conversions of old time free flight airplanes with the original FF CG are very twitchy in pitch if elevator is used. *The basic principle is that more of the horizontal surface ( multiplied by it's arm) has to be behind the CG to get the thing going in the direction you want it to. Think horizontal weather vane. That's pretty simplistic, but basically it's the way it works. The horizontal weather vane principle also explains why conventional aircraft get nasty when their CG is moved aft. Never mind any rubbish Jepeson might tell you about the elevators making lift the wrong way. . I'm not exactly sure what the definition of a tandem wing is, percentage wise, but basically if it looks like one then it is one. That is, the wings should be in the neighborhood of each other area wise. The Flying Flea would be a good example. Bertie OK. But why on the canards flying these days is the little wing in front of the CG, and the big wing behind it. It seems like it would be more stable in pitch if the little wing was behind the CG. Putting the little wing in front of the CG seems like it would make the airplane inherently unstable in pitch. Looking at Rutan's designs, it looks like he countered this by using a swept main wing. But that would have been unnecessary if he had put the smaller wing in back. The only reason I can think of to put the smaller wing out front would be for pilot visibility, so maybe that's the explanation? Phil |
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On Feb 2, 2:21 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
So, tu summarise, if you put the "smaller wing" (sic) in the back, it';s a tail unless it;s lifting. If it's lifting it needs to be fairly large to be useful. make it large enough and you have problems with handling, one solutuion for this problem is to reduce the sizre of the forward wing and move the CG aft. Voila! you have a canard! Bertie Seems to me that lifting tails are, and have been, illegal for long time. The regs call for the aircraft to automatically settle into a glide if the power should fail, to prevent stalling. A lifting tail just won't do this. As the airplane slows it will drop, raising the nose, and the airplane will stall, and almost certainly enter an unrecoverable spin. If the pilot does manage to establish a glide, the nose will drop further as glide speed increases, opposite to what we know in our airplanes, and totally unstable. Some early airplanes were built this way, and after they'd killed enough pilots the designers decided to make things differently. See FAR 23 (U.S.) or CAR 523 (Canadian) for the details. Dan |
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![]() "Phil J" wrote in message ... OK. But why on the canards flying these days is the little wing in front of the CG, and the big wing behind it. It seems like it would be more stable in pitch if the little wing was behind the CG. Putting the little wing in front of the CG seems like it would make the airplane inherently unstable in pitch. Looking at Rutan's designs, it looks like he countered this by using a swept main wing. But that would have been unnecessary if he had put the smaller wing in back. The only reason I can think of to put the smaller wing out front would be for pilot visibility, so maybe that's the explanation? Phil The pitch and yaw stability of an aircraft have to do with the relationship of the center of gravity and the center of pressure. The farther ahead of the CP the CG is, the more stable an aircraft will be. The swept wing on rutan designs serves 2 purposes. First, it moves the center of lift (and center of pressure) aft in order to accomodate the aft CG caused by the rear mounted engine. Second, sweeping the wing places the vertical surfaces farther aft, giving them more authority. KB |
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Seems to me that lifting tails are, and have been, illegal for
long time. The regs call for the aircraft to automatically settle into a glide if the power should fail, to prevent stalling. A lifting tail just won't do this. As the airplane slows it will drop, raising the nose, and the airplane will stall, and almost certainly enter an unrecoverable spin. If the pilot does manage to establish a glide, the nose will drop further as glide speed increases, opposite to what we know in our airplanes, and totally unstable. A good reference for this subject is "See How it Flies". It's not true that a tail with positive lift will necessarily lead to instability: "The biggest contribution to angle of attack stability is decalage. The thing in back flies at a lower angle of attack than the thing in front. The thing in back may, but need not, fly at a negative angle of attack." http://www.av8n.com/how/htm/aoastab....oastab-summary The pitch stability discussion is at: http://www.av8n.com/how/htm/aoastab....ch-equilibrium |
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Phil J wrote:
Here's another question for you engineers out there. Traditional airplane design has the tail pressing down, so the tail is fighting the work that the main wing is doing. A tandem-wing airplane in which both front and rear wings are lifting upward is a more efficient design, which is one reason Bert Rutan chose the canard configuration for so many of his designs. But in the canard configuration, the front wing is smaller than the rear wing. This is what I don't understand. It seems to me that a design in which the front wing was larger and the rear wing was smaller would be more stable in pitch. The smaller rear wing would automatically damp pitch excursions like the fins of an arrow. So why is the canard the most successful tandem- wing design flying? There are a couple of "tandem wing" designs I can think of: 1) Samuel Pierpont Langley's "Aerodrome" http://home.att.net/~dannysoar2/Langley.htm 2) The Mignet Pou du Ciel (Flying Flea) http://www.flyingflea.org/ The Aerodrome was made to fly briefly after heavy modification by Glen Curtiss. The Pou du Ciel, which is now a generic term covering a family of designs using similar configuration, has been flying since the 1930s. I'm not an aeronautical engineer (I wish!) but from my reading of your post you are implying that the canard configuration is less stable in pitch. The way I figure it is that while having a lifting surface ahead of the CG is dynamically unstable (movement away from a stable "neutral" configuration will produce forces which accelerate the movement away from neutral) there is still the main wing behind the CG which will produce a much greater force and return the aircraft to the neutral position. This sentence: "The smaller rear wing would automatically damp pitch excursions like the fins of an arrow" applies to a normal "downward-pushing" elevator too. However I don't think you can just make a blanket statement along the lines of "this is less efficient because it's working against the wing". I suspect other considerations such as stability and control come into play here. One only has to look at the design of modern airliners to see that those other considerations override the potential efficiency gains of eliminating the downward-pushing elevator. |
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On Feb 2, 11:59*am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Phil J wrote in news:e5efb14f-c2c5-41c7-a127- : Here's another question for you engineers out there. *Traditional airplane design has the tail pressing down, so the tail is fighting the work that the main wing is doing. *A tandem-wing airplane in which both front and rear wings are lifting upward is a more efficient design, which is one reason Bert Rutan chose the canard configuration for so many of his designs. *But in the canard configuration, the front wing is smaller than the rear wing. *This is what I don't understand. *It seems to me that a design in which the front wing was larger and the rear wing was smaller would be more stable in pitch. The smaller rear wing would automatically damp pitch excursions like the fins of an arrow. *So why is the canard the most successful tandem- wing design flying? Well, it isn't a tandem wing, for one thing. It's a canard. It's front "wing" is called a canard and not a wing. You could say it's a tomato tomato thing, but that's the definition. A Bleriot could also be called a tandem wing aircraft if you used the same standard. It's tail lifts. So do most free flight models. These airplanes have very large stabs (or wings, if you prefer), and very far aft CGs as compared to a a "conventional" aircraft and usually very long fuselages. Aircraft like the Bleriot were not very stable in pitch, and RC conversions of old time free flight airplanes with the original FF CG are very twitchy in pitch if elevator is used. *The basic principle is that more of the horizontal surface ( multiplied by it's arm) has to be behind the CG to get the thing going in the direction you want it to. Think horizontal weather vane. That's pretty simplistic, but basically it's the way it works. The horizontal weather vane principle also explains why conventional aircraft get nasty when their CG is moved aft. Never mind any rubbish Jepeson might tell you about the elevators making lift the wrong way. . I'm not exactly sure what the definition of a tandem wing is, percentage wise, but basically if it looks like one then it is one. That is, the wings should be in the neighborhood of each other area wise. The Flying Flea would be a good example. Bertie I was gonna mention the Flea. The Frogs seam to like the Fleas. Wil |
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