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a question for the aeronautical engineers among us



 
 
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Old November 3rd 07, 05:34 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Larry Dighera
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Default a question for the aeronautical engineers among us

On Fri, 02 Nov 2007 18:12:58 -0700, Tina wrote
in .com:

OK, so the center of gravity (except for some airplanes with really
smart computers) is going to be forward of the center of lift for
stall recovery reasons -- that makes sense. The question I have is,
for a typical GA flying machine -- take a complex single for example
-- what really is the download (I'm thinking of it as induced weight
with fuel burn consequences) supplied by the vertical stabilizer?


Of course you mean the horizontal stabilizer.

It has a reasonable moment arm hanging way back there, but is it as much
as say 100 pounds if the CG is near the forward limit?


I would estimate, for a C-172, sans cabin occupants, it takes about 50
lbs of down force on the horizontal stabilizer to lift the nose wheel
from the pavement.

I'm no engineer, and I know this is not the answer to you question,
but it gives you a feel for the force involved. You can try this
yourself the next time you're at the airport; just make sure you are
putting your hand over the spar on the inboard portion of the
horizontal stabilizer near the fuselage to prevent permanently
deforming any aluminum.

 




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