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#41
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![]() "Andreas Maurer" wrote in message ... 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. No, it's not. That will give you the glide made good over the ground, but it includes airmass movement. It's confusing, because glider pilots tend to use glide angle and L/D interchangeably. I would suggest "glide angle" for the glide relative to the ground, and "L/D" for the performance relative to the air. To show you what I mean: When I get into weak shear, my 1-26 may make a glide angle of 50:1. But its L/D is more like 20:1 Tim Ward Bye Andreas |
#42
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Andreas Maurer wrote:
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. GPS speed and pressure altitude are referenced to the earth, not the air mass, so they would determine a different L/D than airmass referenced instruments. In concept, a glider flying at constant speed through rising and falling air would have a constant L/D according to the laser airspeed sensors, but a widely varying one based on GPS speed and pressure altitude. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#43
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At 22:30 30 December 2004, 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. Would you need an inertial platform to resolve horizontal and vertical accurately enough or would eyeballing it be good enough? Also, the forward looking and downward looking lasers would be observing different air, so it's possible that would cause problems, depending on how far out they look. I think it might work - though at a hefty price I bet. 9B |
#44
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Andy Blackburn wrote:
At 22:30 30 December 2004, 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. Would you need an inertial platform to resolve horizontal and vertical accurately enough or would eyeballing it be good enough? Since the concept is to measure speed through the airmass, I don't think inertial systems would help any, as they are referenced to the aircraft, not the air. I don't know if any of the systems would actually give us the vertical speed accuracy we'd like. A major application seemed to be for helicopters, which can move very slowly (and even back up), so low speed sensing is certainly feasible. Speeds over 20-30 knots seemed to be easy to get with the units I glanced at. Also, the forward looking and downward looking lasers would be observing different air, so it's possible that would cause problems, depending on how far out they look. The distances available varied from a "a few feet" to hundreds of feet, I think. Very application dependent: helicopters couldn't use anything that sensed closer that the outer edge of the rotor downwash, for example. I'm guessing one for gliders could be set for, say, 100 feet to be far enough from the glider's influence on the airmass, and this still have both the forward and downward airmasses close enough to be the "same" airmass. Some of the sensors actually sensed at right angles to the sensor beam to measure crosswinds, and maybe one of these could be also be pointed straight down into the same airmass the vertical speed unit was looking at. I think it might work - though at a hefty price I bet. Yes, all the units I came across seemed to be high end or developmental, and rather large to stick into a glider. A careful search might have better luck. A mitigating factor for cost is gliders already have a pretty good forward airmass speed sensor - the ASI - so perhaps only a downward aimed laser sensor good for measuring 100 to 500 feet per minute at 2% accuracy would be satisfactory. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#45
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![]() "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... snip Some of the sensors actually sensed at right angles to the sensor beam to measure crosswinds, and maybe one of these could be also be pointed straight down into the same airmass the vertical speed unit was looking at. I think it might work - though at a hefty price I bet. Yes, all the units I came across seemed to be high end or developmental, and rather large to stick into a glider. A careful search might have better luck. The sensor I posted a link to was small enough to be mounted on a rifle as a sight. http://www.navysbir.brtrc.com/succes...navsea_p3.html That would seem to be a feasible size, weight and ruggedness for a glider I've sent an email with some questions I had, but haven't yet received an answer. Some of the applications they mention on that website -- Automotive, Collision Avoidance, Cruise Control, Parking Aid, would require the cost to be fairly reasonable (though the volume would be a lot more than sailplanes would ever give them.) A mitigating factor for cost is gliders already have a pretty good forward airmass speed sensor - the ASI - so perhaps only a downward aimed laser sensor good for measuring 100 to 500 feet per minute at 2% accuracy would be satisfactory. If the laser and optics can be made to "see" through the canopy, pointing it upward might make for an easier install. I've seen compasses mounted on top of the panel. OTOH, with it pointing downwards, it might give a good input to a gear warning device. If it can detect small particles, I'll bet it can detect a solid surface -- and that the signals are way different. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#46
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At 23:00 31 December 2004, Eric Greenwell wrote:
Since the concept is to measure speed through the airmass, I don't think inertial systems would help any, as they are referenced to the aircraft, not the air. I menat an inertial platform for attitude, not velocity. If you the sensor isn't pointing horizontally/vertically or parallel/perpendicular to the flight path, you will likely get confounded results. 9B |
#47
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Tim Ward wrote:
Yes, all the units I came across seemed to be high end or developmental, and rather large to stick into a glider. A careful search might have better luck. The sensor I posted a link to was small enough to be mounted on a rifle as a sight. http://www.navysbir.brtrc.com/succes...navsea_p3.html I thought it was something telescope sized that sat next to the rifleman.I can see now it's about the size of a flashlite - much smaller than the airspeed units I saw. That would seem to be a feasible size, weight and ruggedness for a glider I've sent an email with some questions I had, but haven't yet received an answer. Let us know what they write. Some of the applications they mention on that website -- Automotive, Collision Avoidance, Cruise Control, Parking Aid, would require the cost to be fairly reasonable (though the volume would be a lot more than sailplanes would ever give them.) A mitigating factor for cost is gliders already have a pretty good forward airmass speed sensor - the ASI - so perhaps only a downward aimed laser sensor good for measuring 100 to 500 feet per minute at 2% accuracy would be satisfactory. If the laser and optics can be made to "see" through the canopy, pointing it upward might make for an easier install. I've seen compasses mounted on top of the panel. Maybe a mirror adapter to peek out the side window. If the beam is small enough, mounting it in the baggage compartment and pointing up through a 1/2" hole in the turtledeck wouldn't bother me. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#48
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Andy Blackburn wrote:
At 23:00 31 December 2004, Eric Greenwell wrote: Since the concept is to measure speed through the airmass, I don't think inertial systems would help any, as they are referenced to the aircraft, not the air. I menat an inertial platform for attitude, not velocity. If you the sensor isn't pointing horizontally/vertically or parallel/perpendicular to the flight path, you will likely get confounded results. I think the angle of attack range for an unflapped airfoil is about 10 degrees, which would suggest errors of 0 (at high speed, for example) increasing to 1.5% at low speed (or vice versa - depends on where you aim the sensor). This could be easily corrected using using the airfoil's Cl vs AOA chart. For a flapped airfoil, the fuselage AOA range is even smaller, and the errors could likely just be ignored. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#49
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At 07:00 01 January 2005, Eric Greenwell wrote:
I think the angle of attack range for an unflapped airfoil is about 10 degrees, which would suggest errors of 0 (at high speed, for example) increasing to 1.5% at low speed (or vice versa - depends on where you aim the sensor). This could be easily corrected using using the airfoil's Cl vs AOA chart. For a flapped airfoil, the fuselage AOA range is even smaller, and the errors could likely just be ignored. 50:1 is an angle of a degree and a bit so if you have your 'straight ahead' and 'straight down' sensors canted down/aft by just a degree from true horizontal/vertical, you'll get a pretty accurate airspeed, but the 'vertical' speed will likely show zero, I think, since it will be reading off dust particles that have zero velocity towards/away from the glider. 9B |
#50
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Andy Blackburn wrote:
At 07:00 01 January 2005, Eric Greenwell wrote: I think the angle of attack range for an unflapped airfoil is about 10 degrees, which would suggest errors of 0 (at high speed, for example) increasing to 1.5% at low speed (or vice versa - depends on where you aim the sensor). This could be easily corrected using using the airfoil's Cl vs AOA chart. For a flapped airfoil, the fuselage AOA range is even smaller, and the errors could likely just be ignored. 50:1 is an angle of a degree and a bit so if you have your 'straight ahead' and 'straight down' sensors canted down/aft by just a degree from true horizontal/vertical, you'll get a pretty accurate airspeed, but the 'vertical' speed will likely show zero, I think, since it will be reading off dust particles that have zero velocity towards/away from the glider. Think of the glider flying straight and steady in still air: it is descending (vertical motion) through the air at whatever it's sink rate is. So, at least in concept, a laser airspeed sensor pointed straight down will be able to measure this. Even if the sensor is aimed a few degrees one way or the other from perpendicular, the error would be very small, equal to sine of the angle off of perpendicular. If the airmass is moving, the measurement would be the same, of course, since the speed measured is the air motion relative to the glider - it's just easier to visualize what's happening with still air. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
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