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#1
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http://www.youngeagles.org/photos/gallery/Monoplanes/LancairLegacy2000.jpg
Look at the picture. It's easy to see why the Lancair is dangerous. The horizontal stabilizers appear to be on the too small side. This would result in their stalling before the wing. Then the aircraft would pitch up making the main wing stall. Ill-conceived, IMO. A good lawyer needs to get on this with respect to BadWaterBill's untimely demise. -- Gregory Hall |
#2
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![]() "Gregory Hall" wrote in message ... http://www.youngeagles.org/photos/gallery/Monoplanes/LancairLegacy2000.jpg A good lawyer needs to get on this with respect to BadWaterBill's untimely demise. With all due respect, that is a terrible idea. I think we already have too many lawyers involved in GA's affairs. The Lancair is a homebuilt, experimental aircraft; "You pays your money and you takes your chances" AKA, caveat emptor . Vaughn |
#3
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![]() "Gregory Hall" wrote in message ... http://www.youngeagles.org/photos/gallery/Monoplanes/LancairLegacy2000.jpg Look at the picture. It's easy to see why the Lancair is dangerous. The horizontal stabilizers appear to be on the too small side. This would result in their stalling before the wing. Then the aircraft would pitch up making the main wing stall. Ill-conceived, IMO. A good lawyer needs to get on this with respect to BadWaterBill's untimely demise. -- Gregory Hall Are you proposing a Lawyer for horizontal stabilizer design review? My guess is that if you have been able to do a review of the horizontal stab from a photo, that BwB would have a good idea of just what he was flying and as the PIC was responsible for the safe operation of the bird. What a Lawyer could add to this tragedy without creating a second tragedy is not clear. |
#4
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![]() "Bryan Martin" wrote in message ... That could only happen if the plane was loaded with the CG way aft of the limit. Otherwise, the plane would pitch DOWN if the stabilizer stalled because the stabilizer normally produces a down force to keep the nose up. If it worked that way it would be a built-in safety factor helping to forestall a stall of the main wing. But suppose the motor died and the aircraft was then a glider. One must glide nose down. The horizontal stabilizer forcing the nose down would then cause the pilot to pull back on the stick to counteract the forces for aft. If the stabilizer stalled in this attitude the nose is supposed to pitch down but would it? The tail might just continue to drop provided the main wing still gets traction??? CG is dependent upon both lifting both control surfaces as well as weight distribution. -- Gregory Hall In article , "Gregory Hall" wrote: http://www.youngeagles.org/photos/gallery/Monoplanes/LancairLegacy2000.jpg Look at the picture. It's easy to see why the Lancair is dangerous. The horizontal stabilizers appear to be on the too small side. This would result in their stalling before the wing. Then the aircraft would pitch up making the main wing stall. Ill-conceived, IMO. A good lawyer needs to get on this with respect to BadWaterBill's untimely demise. -- Gregory Hall -- Bryan Martin N61BM, CH 601 XL, Ram Subaru, Stratus redrive. |
#5
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In article ,
"Gregory Hall" wrote: "Bryan Martin" wrote in message ... That could only happen if the plane was loaded with the CG way aft of the limit. Otherwise, the plane would pitch DOWN if the stabilizer stalled because the stabilizer normally produces a down force to keep the nose up. If it worked that way it would be a built-in safety factor helping to forestall a stall of the main wing. But suppose the motor died and the aircraft was then a glider. One must glide nose down. The horizontal stabilizer forcing the nose down would then cause the pilot to pull back on the stick to counteract the forces for aft. If the stabilizer stalled in this attitude the nose is supposed to pitch down but would it? The tail might just continue to drop provided the main wing still gets traction??? CG is dependent upon both lifting both control surfaces as well as weight distribution. Sorry. But centre of *mass* (to use the correct term) is not in any way dependent on the lift from anything. The centre of mass is a parameter than is completely fixed by the distribution of the mass of the aircraft's components. Whether any surface is providing lift will not change it. So as long as the main wing is located aft of the centre of mass, the aircraft will pitch *down* when lift from the tail plane is lost. Period. -- Gregory Hall In article , "Gregory Hall" wrote: http://www.youngeagles.org/photos/ga...Legacy2000.jpg Look at the picture. It's easy to see why the Lancair is dangerous. The horizontal stabilizers appear to be on the too small side. This would result in their stalling before the wing. Then the aircraft would pitch up making the main wing stall. Ill-conceived, IMO. A good lawyer needs to get on this with respect to BadWaterBill's untimely demise. -- Gregory Hall -- Bryan Martin N61BM, CH 601 XL, Ram Subaru, Stratus redrive. -- Alan Baker Vancouver, British Columbia http://gallery.me.com/alangbaker/100008/DSCF0162/web.jpg |
#6
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If it worked that way it would be a built-in safety factor helping to
forestall a stall of the main wing. But suppose the motor died and the aircraft was then a glider. One must glide nose down. The horizontal stabilizer forcing the nose down would then cause the pilot to pull back on the stick to counteract the forces for aft. If the stabilizer stalled in this attitude the nose is supposed to pitch down but would it? The tail might just continue to drop provided the main wing still gets traction??? CG is dependent upon both lifting both control surfaces as well as weight distribution. -- Gregory Hall You seem to have the forces on the horizontal stabilizer backwards. The force on the horizontal is down, (NOT up as with the main wing) which is why an aircraft is stable in pitch unless improper loading places the CG too far aft. Of course, non of this applies to canard designs, which the Lancair is not. Rip |
#7
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Gregory Hall wrote:
http://www.youngeagles.org/photos/gallery/Monoplanes/LancairLegacy2000.jpg Look at the picture. It's easy to see why the Lancair is dangerous. The horizontal stabilizers appear to be on the too small side. This would result in their stalling before the wing. Then the aircraft would pitch up making the main wing stall. Ill-conceived, IMO. A good lawyer needs to get on this with respect to BadWaterBill's untimely demise. -- Gregory Hall Bill would cuss you out for saying that. And? What is the area ratio of stab/wing? Did you notice that the wing is tiny too? -- Richard (remove the X to email) |
#8
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![]() "cavelamb himself" wrote in message m... Gregory Hall wrote: http://www.youngeagles.org/photos/gallery/Monoplanes/LancairLegacy2000.jpg Look at the picture. It's easy to see why the Lancair is dangerous. The horizontal stabilizers appear to be on the too small side. This would result in their stalling before the wing. Then the aircraft would pitch up making the main wing stall. Ill-conceived, IMO. A good lawyer needs to get on this with respect to BadWaterBill's untimely demise. -- Gregory Hall Bill would cuss you out for saying that. And? What is the area ratio of stab/wing? Did you notice that the wing is tiny too? -- Richard (remove the X to email) He seems to have missed a great deal, in just a few words. Peter |
#9
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On Tue, 28 Oct 2008 15:41:35 -0400, Gregory Hall wrote:
http://www.youngeagles.org/photos/gallery/Monoplanes/LancairLegacy2000.jpg Look at the picture. It's easy to see why the Lancair is dangerous. The horizontal stabilizers appear to be on the too small side. This would result in their stalling before the wing. Then the aircraft would pitch up making the main wing stall. Ill-conceived, IMO. Greg, no design theorist here but just because the hor stab "appears to small" isn't much of an argument. The front wing of a canard compared to the main wings is very small but the combo works in a pusher config. it wouldn't appear to but it does. Not knowing the camber and other details including the airflow to the stabs makes the stalling prior argument unsubstantiated invho. |
#10
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On Tue, 28 Oct 2008 17:12:50 -0400, Gregory Hall wrote:
CG is dependent upon both lifting both control surfaces as well as weight distribution. Thankfully that isn't the case otherwise you would have horrendous times with energy management, for instance, with an ever evolving mass. |
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