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#31
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On Thu, 30 Dec 2004 02:46:15 GMT, wrote:
The Zander flight computer performs a constant L/D calculations throughout a flight. The L/D is presented numerically on the screen. All you need to do is note the L/D, flap setting and speed at any particular time. .... and the EXACT airmass rise/fall. This is where the task becomes impossible with current technology. ![]() Bye Andreas |
#32
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At 15:30 30 December 2004, Andreas Maurer wrote:
On Thu, 30 Dec 2004 02:46:15 GMT, wrote: The Zander flight computer performs a constant L/D calculations throughout a flight. The L/D is presented numerically on the screen. All you need to do is note the L/D, flap setting and speed at any particular time. .... and the EXACT airmass rise/fall. This is where the task becomes impossible with current technology. ![]() Yup. I don't believe it is possible to distinguish sailplane vertical motion from the vertical motion of the airmass with any of the current instruments, since both GPS and barometric altimeters measure distance from the earth's surface (in different ways obviously). Therefore vertical motion measured from these instruments will always be relative to the ground rather than relative to the airmass. If you had a test boom mounted AOA vane and a good laser gyro, however.... 9B |
#33
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![]() "Andreas Maurer" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 30 Dec 2004 02:46:15 GMT, wrote: The Zander flight computer performs a constant L/D calculations throughout a flight. The L/D is presented numerically on the screen. All you need to do is note the L/D, flap setting and speed at any particular time. ... and the EXACT airmass rise/fall. This is where the task becomes impossible with current technology. ![]() Bye Andreas I found this laser sensor on the web: http://www.navysbir.brtrc.com/succes...navsea_p3.html Not many details. Assuming it's accurate enough, one could be used to get the glider's vertical speed through the airmass. Now you have both horizontal and vertical velocity measurements relative to the local airmass. That should simplify the problem. Also, it might give Bill Daniels his negative-lag variometer. (Thiotimoline being in such short supply these days) Unfortunately, the manufacturer's website is down for revamping. I haven't emailed the contact address. Tim Ward |
#34
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"Doug Haluza" writes:
I have tried using a $10,000 carrier phase GPS receiver with 0.1m precision (post-processed) for glide testing. The GPS data was so precise, you could clearly see the antenna move a few cm when the wing was raised for takeoff. Even when flying in the calmest conditions, with no discernable airmass movement, the vertical motions are significant. In analysing the data, I could not precisely fit a straight line to the data points from 1-2 min glides at constant airspeed, even after correcting for slight airspeed variations using total energy. Johnson does not have this problem because he only has two data points, one at the beginning and one at the end of each glide. When you have about a hundred data points, one every second, you can really see the problem. You need a lot more data points to average out the noise. Based on this, I doubt that you could get useful data from a less precise GPS, with a slower sampling interval, in uncontrolled conditions. There is just too much noise to get useful results without an impossibly huge data set. You do not have a problem with lots of data, that's just more compute. You will probably need another unit so you can do DGPS or RTK post processing of the data. More data, at a faster rate is in fact simpler. You do not have to worry about boundary conditions if your sample rate is WAY over the responce of the airframe. What you need to do is develop a set of Kalman filter parameters, to fit your data, then extract the polar from them. -- Paul Repacholi 1 Crescent Rd., +61 (08) 9257-1001 Kalamunda. West Australia 6076 comp.os.vms,- The Older, Grumpier Slashdot Raw, Cooked or Well-done, it's all half baked. EPIC, The Architecture of the future, always has been, always will be. |
#35
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Andy Blackburn writes:
There are two main challenges with using flight logs only: 1) There is no good source for IAS, so you have to try to estimate it from GPS ground speed. 2) Typical soaring flights don't involve adequately calm vertical airmass movement and probably not constant enough airspeed to trust even long glides of many tens of miles. You really need a different logger, that records raw GPS carrier phase, plus static, pitot and temp. And Alpha vane would also be a big help. Also you would want to run at 10 sample/sec or possible more. If you go to this much trouble, you may as well ues 3 sets of GPS and can then extract full position, attitude, and velocities as well. -- Paul Repacholi 1 Crescent Rd., +61 (08) 9257-1001 Kalamunda. West Australia 6076 comp.os.vms,- The Older, Grumpier Slashdot Raw, Cooked or Well-done, it's all half baked. EPIC, The Architecture of the future, always has been, always will be. |
#36
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Tim Ward wrote:
I found this laser sensor on the web: http://www.navysbir.brtrc.com/succes...navsea_p3.html Not many details. Assuming it's accurate enough, one could be used to get the glider's vertical speed through the airmass. Now you have both horizontal and vertical velocity measurements relative to the local airmass. That should simplify the problem. A Google search turned up laser airspeed sensors that, in concept, could be used to measure L/D directly from the glider. Some of them were good for the low speeds we need to measure sink rates. So, have one pointing forward, one pointing down, divide the forward speed by the sink rate, and ta-da! L/D. It wouldn't matter what the airmass was doing, since the measurements are relative to the airmass. Unfortunately, none of the units I saw seemed to be small, cheap, or readily available, as their audience appeared to be military types or rather expensive aircraft. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#37
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OK, here we go: Could devices like this not also be used to detect thermals?
The description in the link below about how the laser "sees" minute dust particles in the air seems to be well suited to thermals. Happy New Year to all, Lars Peder -- Lars P. Hansen "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... Tim Ward wrote: I found this laser sensor on the web: http://www.navysbir.brtrc.com/succes...navsea_p3.html Not many details. Assuming it's accurate enough, one could be used to get the glider's vertical speed through the airmass. Now you have both horizontal and vertical velocity measurements relative to the local airmass. That should simplify the problem. A Google search turned up laser airspeed sensors that, in concept, could be used to measure L/D directly from the glider. Some of them were good for the low speeds we need to measure sink rates. So, have one pointing forward, one pointing down, divide the forward speed by the sink rate, and ta-da! L/D. It wouldn't matter what the airmass was doing, since the measurements are relative to the airmass. Unfortunately, none of the units I saw seemed to be small, cheap, or readily available, as their audience appeared to be military types or rather expensive aircraft. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#38
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![]() "Lars P. Hansen" wrote in message k... OK, here we go: Could devices like this not also be used to detect thermals? The description in the link below about how the laser "sees" minute dust particles in the air seems to be well suited to thermals. Happy New Year to all, Lars Peder Probably. It also talks about the ability to show a 3-D representation of the airmass movement around the aircraft. Since it's eye-safe, it probably has a fairly short range. This ties back to Bill Daniels' wish for a variometer with a negative delay -- to be able to see what the airmass is doing a few seconds in front of the glider. It's unlikely that it's as inexpensive or will be as inexpensive as handheld GPS, but if you were serious about performance measurement, it might be able to pay for itself in a reduced number of tows to characterize a given aircraft or configuration. So it might make sense for a university department or a manufacturer. At least it's light enough and rugged enough to consider mounting it on a sailplane. Still, some of the civilian applications (shooting, sailboats) were in more-or-less recreational areas, so perhaps they expect to be able to keep the cost down. Tim Ward Lars P. Hansen "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... Tim Ward wrote: I found this laser sensor on the web: http://www.navysbir.brtrc.com/succes...navsea_p3.html Not many details. Assuming it's accurate enough, one could be used to get the glider's vertical speed through the airmass. Now you have both horizontal and vertical velocity measurements relative to the local airmass. That should simplify the problem. A Google search turned up laser airspeed sensors that, in concept, could be used to measure L/D directly from the glider. Some of them were good for the low speeds we need to measure sink rates. So, have one pointing forward, one pointing down, divide the forward speed by the sink rate, and ta-da! L/D. It wouldn't matter what the airmass was doing, since the measurements are relative to the airmass. Unfortunately, none of the units I saw seemed to be small, cheap, or readily available, as their audience appeared to be military types or rather expensive aircraft. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#39
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On Thu, 30 Dec 2004 13:36:59 -0800, Eric Greenwell
wrote: A Google search turned up laser airspeed sensors that, in concept, could be used to measure L/D directly from the glider. Some of them were good for the low speeds we need to measure sink rates. So, have one pointing forward, one pointing down, divide the forward speed by the sink rate, and ta-da! L/D. It wouldn't matter what the airmass was doing, since the measurements are relative to the airmass. This is exactly what is accomplished by today's L/D calculators that use GPS speed and barometrical measured height loss over a given time. Bye Andreas |
#40
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Andy Blackburn wrote:
...since both GPS and barometric altimeters measure distance from the earth's surface (in different ways obviously). Therefore vertical motion measured from these instruments will always be relative to the ground rather than relative to the airmass. The way I see it, a barometric measurement will not be relative to the ground at all: might even be related to the airmass, if only to a pressure level. Relating a barometric measurement to the ground is pretty arbitrary, though I hear some folks are willing to do it down to 200' and 1/2 mile, on dark and stormy nights. Some things you just have to take on faith. -- Jack ---- "It is possible to fly without motors, but not without knowledge and skill." -- Wilbur Wright |
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