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The use of spoilers as roll control on a sailplane has two major drawbacks
compared to ailerons with adverse yaw. These comments are based on flight test of a roll spoiler equipped flying wing glider. First, the relationship of drag to reduction in lift produced by the roll spoiler changes dramatically with airspeed. There is only one airspeed where the drag and roll produce a perfectly coordinated turn entry. (Remember that drag increases with the square of airspeed.) At airspeeds above the coordinated airspeed, the spoiler will produce too much drag and the turn entry will skid unless outside rudder is used. This is called proverse yaw. At airspeeds below the coordinated airspeed, the roll spoiler will not produce enough drag and the turn entry will be a slip unless into-the-turn rudder is applied. (Adverse yaw) The second major problem with roll spoilers is during a steady turn where one would normally use top aileron to oppose overbanking. If the pilot attempts to oppose overbanking with roll spoilers, the drag of the spoiler will cause the glider to yaw away from the turn. The pilot will then use into-the-turn rudder to center the yaw string which will cause the overbanking to resume unless still more top spoiler is used. This will quickly progress to the point where full top spoiler and full into-the-turn rudder is applied. This is hardly conducive to a low sink rate. The lession here is that adverse yaw is actually needed for steady state turns. In a turn the airspeed and angle of attack varies across the full span. This results in the outside wing having more drag and lift than the inside wing causing overbanking. Top aileron restores spanwise symmetry of lift and drag neatly taming the overbanking. Adverse yaw is also useful for crosswind landings. Into the wind aileron produces a down wind yaw that helps align the fuselage with the direction of flight. Another way to look at it is that differential spoilers produce a control response that is not unlike the rudder. If the glider is equipped with both rudder and roll spoilers it has, in effect, two rudder systems and therefore lacks true 3-axis controls. That said, differential spoilers actuated through the rudder control curcuit can significantly augment a weak rudder. Bill Daniels |
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