![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
None of this, however, takes away from your nice way of presenting in a
simplified way, why it is that the air speeds up over the top of a wing. I'm probably driving everyone who understands this crazy by now, but I'm still not getting it. Every time I think I am, I challenge myself to explain it to myself, and I fall down at the same point. And the point is ~still~ why the air speeds up over the wing at a positive angle of attack, and gets faster as the angle of attack gets greater. I grasp the concept that higher speed leads to lower pressure. That is settled. What is eluding me is the reason why the pressure is lower above the wing. I answer it by saying "the air is faster", but that brings me back to the question: "why does a wing oriented at an angle of attack make the air go faster?". Obviously I can't answer it with "because it lowers the pressure", because that would just cause me to ask "why does it lower the pressure?" which we would be answered by "because the air is going faster", which gets me back to the start. This is the short-circuit in my understanding at the moment. Roger's description here seems to make sense to me:- http://www.avweb.com/news/airman/183261-1.html "Since the wing is at an angle, its movement also tries to sweep out a space behind the top. The inertia of the air that goes over the top of the wing tries to keep it moving in a straight line, while the pressure of the atmosphere tries to push it down towards the wing's surface. The inertia prevents the atmospheric pressure from packing the space as firmly as it would if the wing were standing still. The result is a low-pressure region above the wing. Air rushes from high- to low-pressure regions, from the high-pressure area ahead of and below the wing into the low-pressure space being swept out above and behind it." ...... as does this:- http://www.allstar.fiu.edu/aero/airflylvl3.htm "So how does a thin wing divert so much air? When the air is bent around the top of the wing, it pulls on the air above it accelerating that air down, otherwise there would be voids in the air left above the wing. Air is pulled from above to prevent voids. This pulling causes the pressure to become lower above the wing. It is the acceleration of the air above the wing in the downward direction that gives lift." Are these enough to rely on to give a broad overview of what is going on above the wing? I actually think I do understand a fair bit of the stuff "downstream" of this point. I'm pretty sure that once the above concept clicks into place. Thanks in advance. I hope I'm not making anyone head butt their keyboards in frustration. |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The problem is that you are beating your self up with
which-came-first-the-chicken-or-the-egg type thinking. The answer to that conundrum lies in being able to step back and look at the larger picture of evolution. You can't figure this out going "ta duh tee dee da dum" either. All the aspects of flow adjust simultaneously to satisfy the requirement for energy conservation. Whenever the idea of "cause" intrudes into your thinking squash it. Instead look for the symmetries that create the balance that conserves energy and follow the energy flow. You can't have a change in flow with out changes in pressure. You can't have pressure differentials without flow (in an open system). All of these things being discussed are just aspects of what happens when a flow is set up in such a way that energy conservation requires an upwards force (lift) equal to the downward pull of gravity. None of them are "causing" any of the others. They are all caused by need for energy to be conserved. It is very simple and elegant once you can free your mind up from plodding point to point and can just see the whole picture. Why does the air speed up on top of an airfoil? Because none of the other requirements for lift to be produced could be happening together unless it was. -- Roger Long |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Here's a little experiment that will be eye opening. Drive at 60 mph,
hold your hand out the window as though you were hand signaling for a left turn (in the US, at least) with your palm facing downward. OK, now the leading (thumb) edge up. What do you feel? Is your hand being sucked upward, is the skin on the back of your hand being bowed outward? Or, are you feeling air ram into the palm of your hand, pushing it upward? If it feels as though it's sucked upward, the 'low pressure on top of the wing' model makes a lot of sense. If it feels like it's being pushed upward, you might consider conservation of momentum models, where the stream of air is being diverted downward by your hand, and that old saw about for ever action there's an equal but opposite reaction comes into play. OK, your hand doesn't have the contour of a wing. What do you think you'd feel if you made the leading edge take on a wing like curve? I'd bet, the same thing. Finally, think about how some airplanes with 'correctly' shaped wings fly upside down, and ask you that could be. But mainly, remember your hand being pushed up, not being sucked up, when you put it in a fast moving airstream. |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
If it feels as though it's sucked upward, the 'low pressure on top
of the wing' model makes a lot of sense. If it feels like it's being pushed upward, you might consider conservation of momentum models, where the stream of air is being diverted downward by your hand, and that old saw about for ever action there's an equal but opposite reaction comes into play. Hogwash warning. The contribution of the top of the wing to airflow deflection (which is considerable) is subject to conservation of momentum (energy, whatever) just as is diversion by the bottom. EVERYTHING and every diversion of flow is subject to conservation of energy. There is NOT a low pressure Bernoulli model for what is taking place on top of the wing and Newton related equal and opposite reaction model for what is happening on the bottom. There is NO controversy, except in the minds of the uninformed in places like newsgroups, as to which model better describes lift. There is only an overall flow pattern set up around the airfoil, every aspect of which is governed by conservation of energy. Newton's laws and Bernoulli's theorems are each just tools for explaining and predicting various aspects of what is happening. The endless Newton vs Bernoulli threads are as pointless as arguing about whether hammers or saws are more important to the construction of a house. -- Roger Long |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Not quite. The stall warning simply is reporting that the stagnation
line has moved below the stall tab installation point. It's at some greater angle of attack that most of the wing stalls. Otherwise, you wouldn't need the warning, the stall would be warning enough. |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Tony" wrote in message
ups.com... Not quite. The stall warning simply is reporting that the stagnation line has moved below the stall tab installation point. It's at some greater angle of attack that most of the wing stalls. Otherwise, you wouldn't need the warning, the stall would be warning enough. How is this different from what Roger posted? |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Roger said
At high angles of attack, it can get far enough back that air does flow forward across the wing. indicating that is what lifts the stall warning tab. That's pretty deep into a stall. In airplanes I've flown the tab lifts at high angles of attack, but I doubt very much the wing is very much stalled. The horn sounds well ahead, and at lower angles of attack, a stalled wing. For sure, though, the stagnation line had moved below the tab, lifting it. |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Tony" wrote in message
oups.com... Roger said At high angles of attack, it can get far enough back that air does flow forward across the wing. indicating that is what lifts the stall warning tab. I must be missing something. I read Roger's post simply to mean that as the stagnation line moves back and down, the flow above the stagnation line heads away from the stagnation line, toward the stall warning tab, causing it to move and turn on the stall warning device (buzzer, light...whatever). I also read your post to say the same exact thing. I'm not getting where you and Roger disagree. Inasmuch as the tab is mounted slightly below the leading edge of the wing, the air has to be moving from a position behind the stall warning tab, toward the leading edge of the wing. It seems to me that this is what Roger wrote, and is also what you wrote (essentially). I suppose Roger could jump in and clarify the disagreement. ![]() Pete |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I said that air moves forward across the wing which was clumsy wording
since it could easily be misinterpreted. Air near the wing surface above the stagnation line moves from front to back so, if the stagnation line has moved back under the leading edge, there can actually be a small bit of flow with a forward motion relative to the wing. This is very localized and only occurs very near the wing and only at high angles of attack. A stall warning tab could sense the stagnation line in one of two ways. It can be blown up and forward by the reversed flow or it can simply be spring loaded so that the switch is engaged when air flow drops below a certain point as the stagnation line approaches. I'll confess that I haven't looked at one closely enough to know which way they are set up. They may even be different on different aircraft. When I sail, (which seems to be more than I fly now) I have lengths of yarn taped near the leading edge of the jib. If I get to too high an AOA, the one on the "bottom" of the sail will start to point straight up and even forward. Even though the sail is still pulling hard, the stagnation line has moved well around to the windward side. There is a slight drop in efficiency but no dramatic stall. Pop quiz class: Sails don't stall and suddenly lose their lift causing the sailboat's heel to suddenly decrease. Can anybody tell us why? (Hint: Assuming you had long enough landing gear to get to stall AOA while rolling along the ground, you couldn't create the same kind of sudden loss of lift that you experience in the air.) -- Roger Long |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
![]() xerj wrote: None of this, however, takes away from your nice way of presenting in a simplified way, why it is that the air speeds up over the top of a wing. What is eluding me is the reason why the pressure is lower above the wing. I answer it by saying "the air is faster", but that brings me back to the question: "why does a wing oriented at an angle of attack make the air go faster?". There are three types of air pressure. Total pressure is the total force exerted by all the air molecules in all directions. It is measured by a barometer. Dynamic pressure is the force exerted by molecules that have been accelerated in a particular direction. Blow air against your hand and you will feel dynamic pressure. Dynamic pressure is measured by a pitot tube. Static pressure is measured by the Bernoulli principle. It is the pressure of the remaining molecules that have not been accelerated in a particular direction. Static pressure is measured by your static port. Total pressure at any altitude must remain constant and it must equal the total of dynamic pressure plus static pressure. If you increase dynamic pressure in one direction by moving air over a wing, blowing it through a tube, against your hand, whatever, then static pressure must be reduced in order to keep total pressure constant. A wing increases dynamic pressure from front to back over the top, so static pressure is reduced. At the same time, the positive angle of attack on the bottom of the wing reduces dynamic pressure from front to back, so static pressure on the bottom is increased. This increase in pressure differential is not enough to account for total lift, however. The reduced static pressure above the wing also causes air to move down toward the wing, much as the reduced static pressure of water flowing through the nozzle of a garden hose sprayer forces fluid up and out of the bottle and into the nozzle. This air is caught up in the flow of the boundary layer and is also forced off the trailing edge of the wing and down. This actually generates most of the lift -- as air is forced down toward the wing and then down off the trailing edge, there must be an opposite and equal reaction and the wing is forced upward. You can see the air is forced down by the wing by watching an airplane fly over a cloud or smoke, or low over water. The downward moving air creates a canyon in the cloud or ripples on the water almost directly under the airplane. Air is accelerated over the top of the wing because the top is curved. Air molecules are forced upward by the leading edge, but because air is slightly sticky (viscous), it sticks to the wing rather than just continuing up. It is like holding a water glass sideways under a faucet; the water instead of just dropping straight down off the side of a glass instead follows the glass all the way around to the bottom and then falls off. Really, an airplane is nothing more than a fan blade. Instead of whirling around, it moves straight through the air. Air is drawn from above the wing and forced down behind it, just like a fan blade forces air through it. People get a little confused by watching wind tunnel streams, because in a wind tunnel the air is moving and the wing is stationary, so instead of moving down off the trailing edge the air in a wind tunnel is blown straight behind the wing. Instructors like to demonstrate the Bernoulli principle by blowing over the top of a sheet of paper. The paper rises, demonstrating lift. What instructors don't usually do, though, is blow under the paper. The paper still rises, demonstrating lift. As the angle of attack increases the boundary layer begins to separate from the wing, causing turbulence instead of lift, but lift continues to increase because of the greater lift coming from the area towards the leading edge. At some point, though, the angle of attack becomes so great that there is not enough lift to overcome the turbulence from the separating boundary layer and the wing stalls. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Thanks to all: Jim Weir's - October 2000 (Understanding LED lamp indicators) | dwbauer | Home Built | 5 | June 17th 05 06:00 PM |
Jim Weir's - October 2000 (Understanding LED lamp indicators - Part II) | dwbauer | Home Built | 4 | June 9th 05 11:09 PM |
About Acellerated Courses for Private | Dudley Henriques | Piloting | 137 | July 22nd 04 04:21 AM |
Help understanding how to work with prepreg | Chris | Home Built | 4 | April 1st 04 02:13 PM |
"Understanding Aircraft Composite Construction" | Ernest Christley | Home Built | 2 | July 23rd 03 03:18 AM |