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#71
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http://www.allstar.fiu.edu/aero/airflylvl3.htm
Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP KSWI buttman wrote: I have always been under the impression that lift is the product of airspeed and angle of attack, and that lift is the measure of upward force acting on the plane at a given time. For instance, if you are doing slow flight, your wings are producing the same amount of life that you would be if you were cruising, GIVEN that you did not lose or gain any altitude during the maneuver. My instructor, which is a very knowledgable guy tried telling me that lift has nothing to do with airspeed. He said that lift is directly and soley related to AOA and AOA only. So if you are doing slow flight, you are producing more life than you are when you're cruising. I overheard a ATP guy who flies King Air's say that this huge 20 ton military plane he used to fly would fly approaches at 110 knots, and I heard him say "It is able to do this because it producing so much lift", which I took as him defining lift as my instructor does. So whats the deal here? Are we just thinking of two diffrent concepts? |
#72
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![]() I don't follow the point you are trying to make here. The increased lift does affect the RW. As the glider accelerates upwards, it begins to match the upward motion of the air, changing the RW back to the previous RW. I attribute the upward acceleration mostly to the increased lift and only partly to the increased drag. You claim that the vertical component of lift is unchanged. issued with the Curtis-Wright flyer) When the motion of an object is caused by lift it will never reduce the relative airflow that initially caused that motion it will increase the speed and change the direction of it. This is why wind powered vehicles can move faster than the wind they are powered by. When the motion of an object is caused by drag the faster it moves the less drag it generates because the less relative airflow it generates. It is impossible for the increased lift to do anything but increase the relative airflow if that object is allowed to move as a result of it (lift). If the glider accelerates upward and relative airflow decreases the only aerodynamic force that can cause that is drag. You claim that the increased lift does affect the RW but it actually will affect it the complete opposite way that you say it does if the upward acceleration were due to lift. Lets say you are holding a propeller in the wind. The relative airflow caused by the wind causes the propeller to tend to rotate. If the propeller were to be allowed to rotate as a result of this lift the relative airflow now influencing the prop is still all of the wind plus the relative airflow caused by its motion. The relative airflow is made up by the actual motion of the air (Wind) plus the motion of the propeller thru the wind. Objects that move as a result of drag don't move thru the air they move with the air. |
#73
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![]() T o d d P a t t i s t wrote: wrote: When the motion of an object is caused by lift it will never reduce the relative airflow that initially caused that motion it will increase the speed and change the direction of it. You're making the same argument here that you made before - you are separating the vector components of the new RW into two parts, the original RW and the new vector component of RW comprising a vertical RW due to rising air. Then you ignore the original component and make arguments about the other component in isolation. It's obviously true that if there were no wind other than the vertically rising air, then all the aircraft vertical acceleration would be due to drag from that rising air. That's not what's happening though. There is no wind other than the vertically rising air, the rest of the relative airflow is caused by the motion of the glider thru the still air. The difference between the two is that to move thru the air you must over come drag and to remain still in moving air you must overcome drag. This makes them easy to separate. The glider uses inertia to overcome drag from the lift (a meteorological term for rising air). I did not use the term vertical acceleration I said upward acceleration witch did not include the gliders downward deceleration from the thermal. I believe that when the gliders downward motion stops it is slightly less influenced by the downward motion thru the air. You said after the flight stabilizes to a steady climb at the original constant speed in the rising air The glider will continue in unaccelerated flight and the only difference will be that the glider is now in a steady unaccelerated climb instead of a steady unaccelerated descent. Here is another difference. The lift and drag go from resisting downward motion to causing upward motion among other things. The validity of your argument depends on the ability to separate the RW into two non-orthogonal vector components and attribute lift and drag separately to each, then add up the lift and drag from each component. That's what's wrong. You can't treat your vector components independently, as you are doing. So my argument is not valid due to the many and obvious shortcoming of mathematical formula. You cannot explain it mathematically so it's not true or does not exist or even more absurd metrological lift causes vertical aerodynamic lift. This does not make what I said true but sure is a good sign that it is. Save the math to balance your checkbook not to distort actual occurrences in the real world. This is not rocket science you simply have to apply a little common sense and logic. You know I am wrong but you do not know why. |
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