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On Feb 5, 8:56*am, "Brent" wrote:
Sounds like an airboat hovercraft or some other type of propeller driven ground effect vehicle Actually it sounds closer to something like a skateboard with as prop motor and a user on it. you are missing a huge amount of variables and for props, pitch, density altitude, motors, and at speeds that slow your in the wrong group because very few things, If Any, in any of these groups fly at that speed. And aircraft move slow taxiing because they are not meant to be ground vehicles they usually have very narrow stances and high centers of gravity compared to a ground vehicle as soon as they have any kind of airspeed they want to fly. Look up an RC or Aeronautical engineering group on usenet or elsewhere. you need to find design people not pilots "Flaps_50!" wrote in message ... On Feb 4, 11:55 am, John Doe wrote: Is there such a calculation/formula? How can you tell what propeller to use, how fast it should rotate, and how much weight it can push along the ground? Specifically... I would like to tell what sort and size of propeller rotating at what speed, in calm air to push 100 or 200 pounds on smooth and level pavement with zero rolling resistance to about 20 mph. 20 mph is too fast for taxying. What are you asking about -zero rolling resistance???? Cheers To add a little to this: zero rolling resistance means all that has to be overcome is aerodynamic drag, and one needs to know something about the shape of what is being moved. Air weighs about 0.08 pounds a cubic foot, you simply have to decide how long you want to take to get to whatever speed, that will tell you the force you need. F still equals mass times accelerations, so then for any diameter prop there is a certain rotation speed that'll throw aft the required mass of air. The lower limit on prop diameter will have to do with keeping the tip speeds sub sonic, the upper limit is related to mechanical factors. I seem to remember props in general are about 30% efficient, if that guess is true and you need 1 horsepower delivered you'll need an engine that produces something over 3. Why do I feel I'm answering someone's homework question? |
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