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Flew on Sunday in non-stable conditions. David Pixton flew his Ventus
2b at approx. 800 lbs, and I flew my Ventus 2bx at 1150 lbs. Because conditions were turbulent, we were unable to do any smooth air testing, but during the course of 10 pull ups (entry 100 knots, exit 60 knots) we observed the following: Wing abreast with about 100 to 150 feet of separation, pull ups were either even or slightly better (10 to 20 feet) for the heavier glider. Because we were following a cloud street, we were unsure whether the apparent parity was actual or lift related. Dave was selecting the path, so it is possible that he was better centered in the lift street. I repositioned directly behind Dave (less than 100 feet). With each pull I was forced to maneuver to avoid him, and would generally gain between 10 to 30 feet. On one pull however, I gained more than 50 additional feet. In each case, I was forced to deploy spoilers to get back into position for the next pull. It appeared that the stronger the core we pulled in, the more advantage I got. On a few occasions, Dave pulled to less than 60 knots, and while this cut down on my advantage, I regained it immediately (and then some) as we returned to cruising speed. It is interesting to note that during these tailored pull ups and during subsequent street running with freeform pulls, Dave never gained on me. I found myself making S turns to keep from overtaking him. When at last I took the lead, the overall advantage to the heavier glider was apparent and substantial. We'll try this again in still air, but initial results indicate that there is a marked difference in climb during each pull up. Even at a conservative 15 feet per pull, a hundered such pulls during a task would account for 1500 extra feet, and this doesn't include the advantages water offers during the cruising phase of flight. So to answer the question, "is there a difference?" the answer is yes... in theory and in practice. Dave commented after the flight, "I need to get back into the habit of putting water in the wings." If I can muster Dave for some early moring flying, we'll get some more quantitative results. OC |
#2
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![]() "Chris OCallaghan" wrote in message om... Flew on Sunday in non-stable conditions. David Pixton flew his Ventus 2b at approx. 800 lbs, and I flew my Ventus 2bx at 1150 lbs. Because conditions were turbulent, we were unable to do any smooth air testing, but during the course of 10 pull ups (entry 100 knots, exit 60 knots) we observed the following: Wing abreast with about 100 to 150 feet of separation, pull ups were either even or slightly better (10 to 20 feet) for the heavier glider. Because we were following a cloud street, we were unsure whether the apparent parity was actual or lift related. Dave was selecting the path, so it is possible that he was better centered in the lift street. I repositioned directly behind Dave (less than 100 feet). With each pull I was forced to maneuver to avoid him, and would generally gain between 10 to 30 feet. On one pull however, I gained more than 50 additional feet. In each case, I was forced to deploy spoilers to get back into position for the next pull. It appeared that the stronger the core we pulled in, the more advantage I got. On a few occasions, Dave pulled to less than 60 knots, and while this cut down on my advantage, I regained it immediately (and then some) as we returned to cruising speed. It is interesting to note that during these tailored pull ups and during subsequent street running with freeform pulls, Dave never gained on me. I found myself making S turns to keep from overtaking him. When at last I took the lead, the overall advantage to the heavier glider was apparent and substantial. We'll try this again in still air, but initial results indicate that there is a marked difference in climb during each pull up. Even at a conservative 15 feet per pull, a hundered such pulls during a task would account for 1500 extra feet, and this doesn't include the advantages water offers during the cruising phase of flight. So to answer the question, "is there a difference?" the answer is yes... in theory and in practice. Dave commented after the flight, "I need to get back into the habit of putting water in the wings." If I can muster Dave for some early moring flying, we'll get some more quantitative results. OC Thanks for taking the time to do this.... Scott. |
#3
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Thanks for adding real, empirical data to the discussion
Chris. I think 20-50 feet is less difference than a lot of us would intuitively have thought initially, but pretty close to where the analysis has led us collectively (e.g. no difference in a kinetic energy-to-potential energy sense, a small difference [15-20 feet] in favor of the heavier glider due to differences in the unaccelerated [1G] polar, and an indeterminate difference due to the G-load losses from the pullup). Don't forget that in a series of pullups over time, the heavier glider should steadily gain on the lighter one just due to the middle effect (i.e. the difference in L/D at the same speed). Nice job in getting real data! 9B At 12:18 29 September 2003, Chris Ocallaghan wrote: Flew on Sunday in non-stable conditions. David Pixton flew his Ventus 2b at approx. 800 lbs, and I flew my Ventus 2bx at 1150 lbs. Because conditions were turbulent, we were unable to do any smooth air testing, but during the course of 10 pull ups (entry 100 knots, exit 60 knots) we observed the following: Wing abreast with about 100 to 150 feet of separation, pull ups were either even or slightly better (10 to 20 feet) for the heavier glider. Because we were following a cloud street, we were unsure whether the apparent parity was actual or lift related. Dave was selecting the path, so it is possible that he was better centered in the lift street. I repositioned directly behind Dave (less than 100 feet). With each pull I was forced to maneuver to avoid him, and would generally gain between 10 to 30 feet. On one pull however, I gained more than 50 additional feet. In each case, I was forced to deploy spoilers to get back into position for the next pull. It appeared that the stronger the core we pulled in, the more advantage I got. On a few occasions, Dave pulled to less than 60 knots, and while this cut down on my advantage, I regained it immediately (and then some) as we returned to cruising speed. It is interesting to note that during these tailored pull ups and during subsequent street running with freeform pulls, Dave never gained on me. I found myself making S turns to keep from overtaking him. When at last I took the lead, the overall advantage to the heavier glider was apparent and substantial. We'll try this again in still air, but initial results indicate that there is a marked difference in climb during each pull up. Even at a conservative 15 feet per pull, a hundered such pulls during a task would account for 1500 extra feet, and this doesn't include the advantages water offers during the cruising phase of flight. So to answer the question, 'is there a difference?' the answer is yes... in theory and in practice. Dave commented after the flight, 'I need to get back into the habit of putting water in the wings.' If I can muster Dave for some early moring flying, we'll get some more quantitative results. OC |
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#5
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Chris OCallaghan wrote:
Flew on Sunday in non-stable conditions. David Pixton flew his Ventus 2b at approx. 800 lbs, and I flew my Ventus 2bx at 1150 lbs. Because conditions were turbulent, we were unable to do any smooth air testing, but during the course of 10 pull ups (entry 100 knots, exit 60 knots) we observed the following: Wing abreast with about 100 to 150 feet of separation, pull ups were either even or slightly better (10 to 20 feet) for the heavier glider. So... a heavy glider has a better L/D ratio - what a news ;-) !!! what you have to find out is whether the advantage in the pull-up is the same - or higher, or lower - than the advantage the heavier glider has at cruise speed... -- Denis Private replies: remove "moncourrielest" from my e-mail address Pour me répondre utiliser l'adresse courriel figurant après moncourrielest" dans mon adresse courriel... |
#6
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2g to about 30 degrees nose up. Then a more gentle push (no less than
0.5g) to maintain 60 knots. (JJ Sinclair) wrote in message ... Good report, Chris. How hard were you pulling, in the pull-ups? I do gentle pulls and push-overs and one of my partners in the ASH-25, does wild-man, near vertical maneuvers every time he hits good lift. I obviously favor the gentle maneuvers, as I believe that any *G* loading will kill my airspeed in a heart-beat. JJ Sinclair |
#7
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Let's hear it for math! ('maths' for some of you outside
the US). 9B Here's what I posted earlier in this topic: Let's define the problem a little better - a pull up from 100KIAS to 50 KIAS, level flight in both cases. Pull to a flight trajectory of 30 degrees up relative to the horizon. This gives a vertical velocity of 50 knots immediately after the pullup. That 50 knots requires an extra 1 g for about about 2.5 seconds(some simplification and approximation here)or a suitable other combination of G load and time). At the high speed the extra induced drag is quite small for a short time so can be neglected to a first approximation. The pullup will take only a few seconds,10 so that difference in height gain is the difference in ballasted and unballasted sink rates for a few seconds. At the low end the sink rate difference is very small and at the high end the ballasted glider has lower sink rate. This difference might be as high as 200 feet/min but we are only talking for a small fraction of a minute so we get maybe 30 feet difference in favour of the heavy glider, maybe only 10 to 15 feet. Please note in the kinetic/potential energy equation the mass cancels out so to a really rough first approximation neglecting the effect of ballast on the polar the height gain is the same. It's nice when the experimental results match the theory. Note that all you are seeing in your flight test is the difference between the polars of two nearly identical gliders with different ballast loads at high speeds. (faster than best L/D) The pull up/pushover manoevering is largely irrelevant. Mike Borgelt |
#8
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Thank you for the tests.At last somebody get ou there and do the real
thing!!!Very interesting!!!and quite surprising for me, thinking this would be a tie. Now for the rest of us, we will have to check our maths!!!, may I ask what was the average gain from 100 to 60 knts ?? Again thanks a lot, and we hope to see some results in still air. BQ "Chris OCallaghan" a écrit dans le message de om... Flew on Sunday in non-stable conditions. David Pixton flew his Ventus 2b at approx. 800 lbs, and I flew my Ventus 2bx at 1150 lbs. Because conditions were turbulent, we were unable to do any smooth air testing, but during the course of 10 pull ups (entry 100 knots, exit 60 knots) we observed the following: Wing abreast with about 100 to 150 feet of separation, pull ups were either even or slightly better (10 to 20 feet) for the heavier glider. Because we were following a cloud street, we were unsure whether the apparent parity was actual or lift related. Dave was selecting the path, so it is possible that he was better centered in the lift street. I repositioned directly behind Dave (less than 100 feet). With each pull I was forced to maneuver to avoid him, and would generally gain between 10 to 30 feet. On one pull however, I gained more than 50 additional feet. In each case, I was forced to deploy spoilers to get back into position for the next pull. It appeared that the stronger the core we pulled in, the more advantage I got. On a few occasions, Dave pulled to less than 60 knots, and while this cut down on my advantage, I regained it immediately (and then some) as we returned to cruising speed. It is interesting to note that during these tailored pull ups and during subsequent street running with freeform pulls, Dave never gained on me. I found myself making S turns to keep from overtaking him. When at last I took the lead, the overall advantage to the heavier glider was apparent and substantial. We'll try this again in still air, but initial results indicate that there is a marked difference in climb during each pull up. Even at a conservative 15 feet per pull, a hundered such pulls during a task would account for 1500 extra feet, and this doesn't include the advantages water offers during the cruising phase of flight. So to answer the question, "is there a difference?" the answer is yes... in theory and in practice. Dave commented after the flight, "I need to get back into the habit of putting water in the wings." If I can muster Dave for some early moring flying, we'll get some more quantitative results. OC |
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