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#31
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![]() "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message .. . In article , says... Robert wrote How do you know that your feeling and hearing comes from the stab and not the wing ? In the LS-8, I can feel it in the stick a good 5 knots above stall. I don't believe it is separated air coming from the wing, because the T-tail is just too high to allow that. I have felt the same thing about 3 knots above stall in a 301 libelle which has a low tail and it was *dirty air* coming from the wing. BTW, I only felt the nervous stick with a load of water and I wasn't trying to stall the ship, It happened when I was thermalling. JJ Sinclair If it happened while thermalling, this suggests it isn't the elevator stalling. Here's why: While circling, the elevator's angle of attack (AOA) is greater than the wing's AOA, because of the differing airflow directions. This greater AOA tends to increase the upward force on the elevator (or reduce it's downward force), which is why it is more difficult to stall a glider in a turn. Or, if we think of the elevator as an "upside down" wing that is producing lift downward (pushing the tail down), it's AOA is _reduced_. With a lower AOA, it's not going to stall in a turn if it can't do it in straight ahead flight. Question: with water, was the CG kept in the same place as without water, or did it move forward? -- !Replace DECIMAL.POINT in my e-mail address with just a . to reply directly Eric Greenwell Richland, WA (USA) Eric, I need to jump in here on JJ's side. I have experienced exactly what he is describing and interpreted it the same way. The horizontal tail (high or low mounted) is operating in the wings near field flow or, in this case the wings downwash. Even if the incidence of the wing and tail are the same, the tail will be at a larger negative angle of attack, relative to its local flow, than the wing is at a positive angle of attack. In the case of a "T" tail, the horizontal will not be in the turbulent wake of the wing since that turbulence is embedded in the wings downwash which tends to depart downwards and back from the wing. Since the low aspect ratio tail in not an efficient "wing", it must operate at a larger negative AOA to produce sufficient downforce to balance a forward CG. In a thermaling turn, the negative AOA of the tail must be increased still further to balance the centrifugal force acting on the CG while maintaining a low AS. It is not unreasonable to think that, at some point, the tail will reach its negative stalling AOA while the wing is still below its stalling AOA, resulting in the nose dropping and the AS increasing. (Obviously, as the CG is moved aft, the need for downforce diminishes.) JJ's "nervous" elevator is more likely to be the airflow separating and re-attaching to the lower surface of the tail than an effect of the turbulent wake of the wing. If, as suggested, adding turbulator tape to the underside of the horizontal tail allows it to develop greater downforce before stalling, the wing can be brought to a greater AOA and perhaps a wing stall. The counter argument that suggests that the horizontal tail is flying at a positive angle of attack when the glider is flown near minimum airspeed must assume that the pitching moment of the wing produces an nose-up pitching moment that exceeds the nose-down moment of the CG acting ahead of the wings center of lift - OR that the CG is placed aft of the center of lift. Both of these conditions would produce serious static pitch instability which would not pass JAR 22 certification standards. I must conclude that, for normal CG locations, the horizontal tail flies at a negative AOA relative to its local flow and that this negative AOA increases as the airspeed diminishes. Further, that the horizontal tail negative AOA can, and often does, reach its stalling AOA at the minimum sustainable airspeed while the wing flies just below its stalling AOA. This condition produces very benign "stall" characteristics. Bill Daniels |
#32
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JJ Sinclair wrote:
Robert wrote How do you know that your feeling and hearing comes from the stab and not the wing ? In the LS-8, I can feel it in the stick a good 5 knots above stall. I don't believe it is separated air coming from the wing, because the T-tail is just too high to allow that. I have felt the same thing about 3 knots above stall in a 301 libelle which has a low tail and it was *dirty air* coming from the wing. BTW, I only felt the nervous stick with a load of water and I wasn't trying to stall the ship, It happened when I was thermalling. JJ Sinclair Anyway I find easier to believe that the T-tail is in dirty air (not necessairly separarted, the wake of the wing and/or fuselage may be suffcient to cause this nervous stick) than to believe the tail plane is stalling at a negative angle of attack. Most airfoils reach their stalling angle near 18 degrees, as you are just above stall speed the angle of attack is just below this value, so the difference between the (positive) angle of attack of the wing and the (negative according to your views) angle of attack on the tail plane should be nearly the double, i.e. 36 degrees, which seems geometrically impossible. And this would imply that at this attitude you need a down force on the tail plane that is exceeding its maximum capabilities, which is in contradiction with the fact that, due to the instability of the main wing, you are at the attitude that needs the lowest down force, if even the force needed is downwards. Regarding this last point, I heard something interesting during the instructor course I attended during last September, from the instructor that had my group in charge and who is a pilot with a huge experience of more than 10000 hours and a long experience in teaching to future instructors the way sailplanes are flying. He said that there is a very common believing that tail planes are always providing a down force, but this is not true, especially in recent high performance sailplanes (I am not sure to rememeber but I believe he cited LS). He said that one of the points where the manufacturers are trying to improve L/D, i.e. reduce drag is by trying to have a neutral tail plane near the best L/D speed and corresponding angle of attack, because this eliminates the induced drag due to the tailplane lift. This implies, due to the instability of the main wing, that the tailplane provides a down force at wing angles of attack lower than this (neutral) angle (and so at higher speeds) and an up force at higher angles of attack, i.e. at lower speeds. |
#33
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Bill Daniels wrote:
... The counter argument that suggests that the horizontal tail is flying at a positive angle of attack when the glider is flown near minimum airspeed must assume that the pitching moment of the wing produces an nose-up pitching moment that exceeds the nose-down moment of the CG acting ahead of the wings center of lift - OR that the CG is placed aft of the center of lift. Both of these conditions would produce serious static pitch instability which would not pass JAR 22 certification standards. ... Here is the point where I think there is a confusion. What do you call "center of lift" ? The pitch stability needs only that the neutral point is behind the CG, the neutral point is the location of the increment of lift provided by all surfaces (wing and tail plane) when there is an increment in AOA. If you call "center of lift" the point where you can reduce the lifting forces on the wing only to a single vector (this is implied by what you say concerning the pitching moment created by weight and lift) this is a different point which is moving forward when the AOA increases and may be ahead of the CG at high AOA, while the neutral point is always behind it. The confusion is both betweeen an incremental force and its actual value and by the force provided by the wing only and by wing + tail plane. |
#34
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![]() "Robert Ehrlich" wrote in message ... Bill Daniels wrote: ... The counter argument that suggests that the horizontal tail is flying at a positive angle of attack when the glider is flown near minimum airspeed must assume that the pitching moment of the wing produces an nose-up pitching moment that exceeds the nose-down moment of the CG acting ahead of the wings center of lift - OR that the CG is placed aft of the center of lift. Both of these conditions would produce serious static pitch instability which would not pass JAR 22 certification standards. ... Here is the point where I think there is a confusion. What do you call "center of lift" ? The pitch stability needs only that the neutral point is behind the CG, the neutral point is the location of the increment of lift provided by all surfaces (wing and tail plane) when there is an increment in AOA. If you call "center of lift" the point where you can reduce the lifting forces on the wing only to a single vector (this is implied by what you say concerning the pitching moment created by weight and lift) this is a different point which is moving forward when the AOA increases and may be ahead of the CG at high AOA, while the neutral point is always behind it. The confusion is both betweeen an incremental force and its actual value and by the force provided by the wing only and by wing + tail plane. You can approach the issue with the center of lift of the wing only and address the tail separately or deal with the aircraft as a whole and talk about neutral point. Both avenues will arrive at the same conclusions if done properly. Perhaps it's my very obsolete training, but I still prefer to deal with each surface separately. However, if the wings center of lift ever gets forward of the CG, you do not have positive static stability, regardless of any other factor. In this case any reduction in airspeed will require that the stick be moved forward to counter increasing tail heaviness - clearly an unacceptable situation. I agree that designers want to reduce trim drag to the minimum by trying to make the tail fly at a zero angle of attack. To do this, the CG must be moved aft and static stability sacrificed so there are limits to this approach. I would disagree that this should occur at L/D max. Gliders spend little time at L/D max and the best overall contribution to performance would be to have the tail at zero AOA at high speed. In fact, most gliders will exhibit lower pitch stability at high speed and some will even show a tendency to "tuck" (nose down) if the stick is released, indicating that the neutral point in the static stability curve occurs at high speed and suggesting that the tail is near a zero AOA. Any glider I have ever flown (with the exception of some deliberate aft CG flight tests) will have the stick positioned further aft at low speeds than at high speeds indicating that the tail moves toward greater negative AOA as the glider slows. (I've actually mounted protractors on the stick to prove this to myself.) For any given trim setting, back pressure on the stick is needed to reduce airspeed and forward pressure is needed to increase airspeed - which is essentially the definition of static stability. Bill Daniels |
#35
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#36
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Dave Martin wrote in message ...
Kirk Stant wrote Meanwhile, the rest of you guys out there relax, I appreciate your concern but I haven't reached this ripe almost old age by doing really stupid things. Mildly stupid things, perhaps (like paying too much attention to RAS). Kirk 66 Point taken! Half the trouble is most gliding clubs have a box at the gate where many members leave their brains, spend a day on the airfield and then collect the brain on the way home. Sorting out .......those who know what they are doing from ... those who think they know what they are doing from ....those who know absolutely nothing but go on and do it anyway from....... those who can't do it but have seen somebody else do it so they will try it anyway All goes to provides a headache for the fun police, who can't do right for doing wrong....! Hope the turbulator tape works. Dave Hello all I have a Phoebus C with all-flying tail. It has a very thin profile. I had contakt with a german pilot that "had heard somewhere" that you could improve the plane by attaching turbulators on the elevator. Because the plane has some odd stall habbits ( compared to modern planes), I wouldn´t like to try it out whitout to here from somebody with experience with it. So my question is: do anyone of you know where I could get first hand information in the matter. Matts |
#37
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Bill Daniels wrote:
... However, if the wings center of lift ever gets forward of the CG, you do not have positive static stability, regardless of any other factor. In this case any reduction in airspeed will require that the stick be moved forward to counter increasing tail heaviness - clearly an unacceptable situation. ... Not necessarily. With a reduction in airspeed there is an increase in AOA of the wing, so necesarily an increase in AOA of the tail plane. If its surface and lever arm are sufficient, this will override the increased pitching (up) moment due to the forward move of the center of lift. This is the condition for stability and it can clearly be met by a sufficient high product of tail surface by lever arm. If this occurs, as the pitching down moment due to the tail override the pitching up moment due to the wing, in order to obtain this reduction in airspeed, you have to lower this tail moment by moving the stick back. This is what happens on all stable aircrafts. ... Any glider I have ever flown (with the exception of some deliberate aft CG flight tests) will have the stick positioned further aft at low speeds than at high speeds indicating that the tail moves toward greater negative AOA as the glider slows. (I've actually mounted protractors on the stick to prove this to myself.) For any given trim setting, back pressure on the stick is needed to reduce airspeed and forward pressure is needed to increase airspeed - which is essentially the definition of static stability. I completely agree that the stick moves aft when speed becomes lower and vice-versa, but this doesn't imply that the tail has a greater negative AOA. The change in AOA is due to both the stick action and the global change of attitude of the aircraft relativeley to the airstream due to the need of increasing the wing AOA. With the airfoils usually used in sailplanes, the second effect overrides the first one. Again I agree these moves of the stick associated with the changes in speed and AOA are essentially the definition of static stability, but this doen't imply that, assuming that the position of the CG is such that you start with a tailplane at negative AOA, slowing the glider needs a more negative AOA. If this were true, this would mean that in order to keep the wing at a higher AOA, you need a higher pitching up moment, i.e. the wing alone tends to revert to its previous AOA, i.e. is stable by itself. This is not the case with the cambered airfoils usually used in sailplanes. |
#38
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On Thu, 16 Oct 2003 16:31:46 +0000, Robert Ehrlich
wrote: He said that one of the points where the manufacturers are trying to improve L/D, i.e. reduce drag is by trying to have a neutral tail plane near the best L/D speed and corresponding angle of attack, because this eliminates the induced drag due to the tailplane lift. This implies, due to the instability of the main wing, that the tailplane provides a down force at wing angles of attack lower than this (neutral) angle (and so at higher speeds) and an up force at higher angles of attack, i.e. at lower speeds. This is common for all aircraft. You want to minimize drag at a certain point of the envelope (best L/D, optimum cruise speed), so you design your aircraft that the induced drag is 0 at this speed - and induced drag = 0 means Cl = 0. Bye Andreas |
#39
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On 16 Oct 2003 14:24:10 GMT, Ray Lovinggood
wrote: Where should I put turbulator tape on the all-flying stabilator on my LS-1d? Right now, there is a the head of a big 'ol hex-head bolt, safety pin, and peg (to anchor the safety pin) that sticks out in the breeze on the upper surface of the stabilator. (This is asked with tongue in cheek) By the way, when it stalls, just a very quick foreward movement on the stick gets it going again. No warning before it stalls. You probaly cannot get any warning before you stall an all-flying tail, because you cannot feel the airflow over the tail becoming turbulent before it separates. Stick forward lowers the AoA immediately, therefore stopping the stall immediately. The position of turbulator tape depends on the airfoil - if you know where the laminar airflow comes turbulent (measured in percent of airfoil depth), put it a little forward of this point ("a little" will need some experiments) if you want to gain a little performance - but I doubt that you will feel any difference. Bye Andreas |
#40
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On 17 Oct 2003 00:48:22 -0700, (Phoebus_810)
wrote: Hello all I have a Phoebus C with all-flying tail. It has a very thin profile. I had contakt with a german pilot that "had heard somewhere" that you could improve the plane by attaching turbulators on the elevator. Because the plane has some odd stall habbits ( compared to modern planes), I wouldn´t like to try it out whitout to here from somebody with experience with it. So my question is: do anyone of you know where I could get first hand information in the matter. Ask he Fiberglas-Technik Rudolf Lindner GmbH & Co. KG, Steige 3, D - 88487 Walpertshofen Tel: 07353/2243 Fax: 07353/3096 E-Mail: http://www.ltb-lindner.com/index.html They are the ones who are taking care of the Phoebus. The owner, Helmut Lindner, is the son of Rudi Lindner (who designed the Phoebus). Bye Andreas |
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