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"Casey Wilson" wrote in message ...
(James L. Freeman) wrote in message . com... Can someone offer a non-mathematical EXPLANATION (as opposed to DESCRIPTION) of why the speed of headwind and crosswind components of a wind add up to more than the speed of the wind? Thanks. "Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message om... Because wind has speed and direction. You cannot just add the numbers to get the total. You have to do a vector sum (considering direction and speed). I don't think that's the answer. When I run a wind problem on my Whiz-Wheel, the resultant IS a vector solution and the crosswind is only a fraction of the wind velocity. Something makes me want to say it is the cosine of the angle off the wing. Where you do think the cosine comes from? It is a consequence of adding two vectors. A 10 knot wind from the northwest has a westerly component of 10cos(45) = 7knots and a northerly component of 10cos(45) = 7knots. Alternatively, if you have 7 knots from the west and 7 knots from the north, you wind up with a total of 10 knots from the northwest, not 14 knots. |
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