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#81
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Robert Ehrlich wrote:
After this discussion we are far from the original question, i.e. can we infer anything about the polar of a glider just from GPS fligth logs of this glider? ... solution proposed ... After a bit thinking about that my conclusion is that the above solution doesn't work. Even if the system I was talking about is overdetermined, there is always an undetermination on the couple vertical speed of airmass/sink speed of glider relatively to airmass, any combination of both with the same sum satisfies in the same way the equations, so no valuable information on the polar of the glider can be obtained unless we add some information on the airmass, either by some other data, or by some further modelling (e.g. assuming the total vertical movement of the airmass is zero, which is not realistic, or that it is some given percentage of the average lift, or anything we may think about it) |
#82
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Robert Ehrlich wrote:
After a bit thinking about that my conclusion is that the above solution doesn't work. Even if the system I was talking about is overdetermined, there is always an undetermination on the couple vertical speed of airmass/sink speed of glider relatively to airmass, any combination of both with the same sum satisfies in the same way the equations, so no valuable information on the polar of the glider can be obtained unless we add some information on the airmass, either by some other data, or by some further modelling (e.g. assuming the total vertical movement of the airmass is zero, which is not realistic, or that it is some given percentage of the average lift, or anything we may think about it) Maybe the laser airspeed devices could be applied to flight testing, but by having them on the ground instead of in the glider. Pointing up, they could be used to determine how much the atmosphere is moving during a conventional, Johnson-style, flight test. The data could then be corrected with this measurement of the actual air mass movement. It would take units designed for long range measurements (meteorological instruments, likely), of course, not ones really designed for airspeed indicators. Or, perhaps the laser unit could be used to determine when the airmass is steady enough to make flight testing worthwhile, even it if can't measure the vertical velocity sufficiently accurately to make corrections useful. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#83
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Eric Greenwell wrote:
Robert Ehrlich wrote: After a bit thinking about that my conclusion is that the above solution doesn't work. Even if the system I was talking about is overdetermined, there is always an undetermination on the couple vertical speed of airmass/sink speed of glider relatively to airmass, any combination of both with the same sum satisfies in the same way the equations, so no valuable information on the polar of the glider can be obtained unless we add some information on the airmass, either by some other data, or by some further modelling (e.g. assuming the total vertical movement of the airmass is zero, which is not realistic, or that it is some given percentage of the average lift, or anything we may think about it) Maybe the laser airspeed devices could be applied to flight testing, but by having them on the ground instead of in the glider. Pointing up, they could be used to determine how much the atmosphere is moving during a conventional, Johnson-style, flight test. The data could then be corrected with this measurement of the actual air mass movement. It would take units designed for long range measurements (meteorological instruments, likely), of course, not ones really designed for airspeed indicators. Or, perhaps the laser unit could be used to determine when the airmass is steady enough to make flight testing worthwhile, even it if can't measure the vertical velocity sufficiently accurately to make corrections useful. OK, but this is far from the original question. Making Johnson-style flight tests is one thing, using flight logs for polar analysis in another one. A flight log provides some information about the polar as long a we have or can assume some information about the airmass. We have here a huge quantity of data it would be intersting to use. We could get some information not found in flight test, like how far various gliders of the same model are from the tested one, how performance degrades with time, ... |
#84
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Robert Ehrlich wrote:
Or, perhaps the laser unit could be used to determine when the airmass is steady enough to make flight testing worthwhile, even it if can't measure the vertical velocity sufficiently accurately to make corrections useful. OK, but this is far from the original question. Making Johnson-style flight tests is one thing, using flight logs for polar analysis in another one. A flight log provides some information about the polar as long a we have or can assume some information about the airmass. We have here a huge quantity of data it would be intersting to use. We could get some information not found in flight test, like how far various gliders of the same model are from the tested one, how performance degrades with time, ... I think the thread drifted from the original question because no one could think of how to account for the airmass movement in any useful way, so people began thinking of what the next best thing might be. A new proposal on how to achieve a polar from flight logs would bring the thread back to the original subject, I think. Here's another way that flight logs might used: Comparison flights using GPS logs to determine the difference between gliders would be useful, but that requires at least two gliders to fly together at the same airspeed; again, useful, but as you point out, not an answer to the original question. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#85
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Wouldn't it be sufficient if the other glider was calibrated?
mg Eric Greenwell wrote: Robert Ehrlich wrote: Or, perhaps the laser unit could be used to determine when the airmass is steady enough to make flight testing worthwhile, even it if can't measure the vertical velocity sufficiently accurately to make corrections useful. OK, but this is far from the original question. Making Johnson-style flight tests is one thing, using flight logs for polar analysis in another one. A flight log provides some information about the polar as long a we have or can assume some information about the airmass. We have here a huge quantity of data it would be intersting to use. We could get some information not found in flight test, like how far various gliders of the same model are from the tested one, how performance degrades with time, ... I think the thread drifted from the original question because no one could think of how to account for the airmass movement in any useful way, so people began thinking of what the next best thing might be. A new proposal on how to achieve a polar from flight logs would bring the thread back to the original subject, I think. Here's another way that flight logs might used: Comparison flights using GPS logs to determine the difference between gliders would be useful, but that requires at least two gliders to fly together at the same airspeed; again, useful, but as you point out, not an answer to the original question. |
#86
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Wouldn't it be sufficient if the other glider was calibrated?
mg Eric Greenwell wrote: Robert Ehrlich wrote: Or, perhaps the laser unit could be used to determine when the airmass is steady enough to make flight testing worthwhile, even it if can't measure the vertical velocity sufficiently accurately to make corrections useful. OK, but this is far from the original question. Making Johnson-style flight tests is one thing, using flight logs for polar analysis in another one. A flight log provides some information about the polar as long a we have or can assume some information about the airmass. We have here a huge quantity of data it would be intersting to use. We could get some information not found in flight test, like how far various gliders of the same model are from the tested one, how performance degrades with time, ... I think the thread drifted from the original question because no one could think of how to account for the airmass movement in any useful way, so people began thinking of what the next best thing might be. A new proposal on how to achieve a polar from flight logs would bring the thread back to the original subject, I think. Here's another way that flight logs might used: Comparison flights using GPS logs to determine the difference between gliders would be useful, but that requires at least two gliders to fly together at the same airspeed; again, useful, but as you point out, not an answer to the original question. |
#87
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Wouldn't it be sufficient if the other glider was calibrated?
mg Eric Greenwell wrote: Robert Ehrlich wrote: Or, perhaps the laser unit could be used to determine when the airmass is steady enough to make flight testing worthwhile, even it if can't measure the vertical velocity sufficiently accurately to make corrections useful. OK, but this is far from the original question. Making Johnson-style flight tests is one thing, using flight logs for polar analysis in another one. A flight log provides some information about the polar as long a we have or can assume some information about the airmass. We have here a huge quantity of data it would be intersting to use. We could get some information not found in flight test, like how far various gliders of the same model are from the tested one, how performance degrades with time, ... I think the thread drifted from the original question because no one could think of how to account for the airmass movement in any useful way, so people began thinking of what the next best thing might be. A new proposal on how to achieve a polar from flight logs would bring the thread back to the original subject, I think. Here's another way that flight logs might used: Comparison flights using GPS logs to determine the difference between gliders would be useful, but that requires at least two gliders to fly together at the same airspeed; again, useful, but as you point out, not an answer to the original question. |
#88
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Mike I Green wrote:
Wouldn't it be sufficient if the other glider was calibrated? mg I'm not sure what you mean by sufficient, but in any case, using a comparison sailplane (calibrated or not), was not what the original poster had in mind. The advantage of a using a calibrated sailplane for the comparison is you could actually calculate a polar, rather than just a relative performance curve. Perhaps that was what you meant? Eric Greenwell wrote: Here's another way that flight logs might used: Comparison flights using GPS logs to determine the difference between gliders would be useful, but that requires at least two gliders to fly together at the same airspeed; again, useful, but as you point out, not an answer to the original question. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
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