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#21
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Bill Daniels wrote:
Sailplanes are the key to understanding the advantages of composite structures. Current sailplane design is several decades ahead of composite airplane design in this area. Sailplane performance MUST come from aerodynamics and structures since there is no other way to get it. (You can't cover up a bad airframe design with more power) Composites are indeed heavier than metal but if carbon fiber is used, not that much heavier. The real payoff is in the extremely smooth surfaces that promote natural laminar flow. The payoff is huge across the entire speed spectrum but highest at the low speed end where the flow is less stable and more likely to separate if the wing surfaces are rough. The effect of weight and drag is easy to compute. Just divide the aircraft weight by L/D ratio to get the drag. Weight has an effect but L/D has a bigger effect. Slick, high aspect ratio wings are the future. The trouble is that a little bit of dirt, bugs or ice and you can lose a lot of lift in a hurry. This may not be a big deal for gliders, but for powered planes that fly in real weather a more tolerant airfoil isn't such a bad deal. Matt |
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On Mar 28, 4:35 pm, Alphonse Le Creur wrote:
"BobR" wrote roups.com: On Mar 28, 12:40 pm, Alphonse Le Creur wrote: "BobR" wrote in news:1175092590.355514.234030 @y80g2000hsf.googlegroups.com: On Mar 28, 8:51 am, Nathan Young wrote: I have a Cherokee 180, with the short hershey bar wing. While I love the plane, I always wish it could go a bit faster, or use a bit less fuel to get to my destination. I have followed the composite homebuilding movement for many years, and am amazed at the sleekness of a composite wing. The wings on most composites tend to be the complete opposite of a Hersey bar wing: high aspect ratio, low thickness, no rivets, no screws for fuel tanks,smooth curves faired into airframe, and streamlined landing gear structure. So my question: How much drag does a wing on a Hersey Bar Cherokee generate, and and hypothetically speaking, how much faster could the plane go if it was retooled with a sleek, composite wing? I can't remember if it was Kitplanes or SportAviation that had a recent article on a Piper knockoff being produced as a kitplane in South Africa. That might be a good starting point for the difference in performance between the different planes as well as a discussion of the differences in design and construction. Much of the difference has to do with better airfoil designs being used but also weight differences. Well, that airplane is "inspired" by the Commanche and it's really just comparing apples and oranges since there are so many other differences in the two airplanes, but having said that, it's better than comparing a cherokee to a Cozy, for instance.. In any case, the Ravin Commanche is herehttp://www.saravin.com/review.htm ALC- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - It's about as close a comparison as can be made. I am building the KIS Cruiser which uses a hershey bar style wing as well but the airfoil is different. The comparison from a performance standpoint is much faster than the Commanche for the same power (180 hp). The difference must be attributed to several differences beyond just the wing, weight being the most obvious. Well, the Ravin is actually a couple hundred pounds heavier than the original Commanche empty and has a higher gross. It also has a much smaller fuselage cross section. I'm certainly not saying that the Ravin is not a better airplane. It is. I'd sure like to have one! I'm just saying that while it is probably one of the better comparisons, no absolute conclusion may be made from it. There's too many other things going on there. The Commanche uses what was a then state of the art NACA 6 series laminar flow airfoil. It was streets ahead of what was on any lightplane of the time, but it's use was most probably not dictated by the material of which it was made. I have no idea what the Ravin is using for an airfoil. If Piper were to set out to make the same airplane again today using aluminum for the wing, they could still build a more efficient wing than they did in the fifties by simple virtue of the fact that fifty years later there's been quite a lot of innovation in airfoils, structures and what not. Again, I'm not saying that the Ravin isn't a better airplane, nor am I denying that composites might be a better way to build an airplane, just saying (at the risk of flogging the proverbial dead horse) that the comparison , while it is as good as you're going to get, is still flawed. ALC- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Agreed, you will always be dealing with differences that can skew the comparison including differing prop combinations. Another good comparison might be VANS RV-10 which does use a metal wing. The performance numbers on that plane are also better than the Commanchee. The RV-10 is probably a good comparison to the Ravin since both would probably be about the same weight, size, and use the same engine. The RV-10 with the O-360 combination might be a good comparison to the commanchee. |
#23
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"BobR" wrote in
ups.com: On Mar 28, 4:35 pm, Alphonse Le Creur wrote: "BobR" wrote roups.com: On Mar 28, 12:40 pm, Alphonse Le Creur wrote: "BobR" wrote in news:1175092590.355514.234030 @y80g2000hsf.googlegroups.com: On Mar 28, 8:51 am, Nathan Young wrote: I have a Cherokee 180, with the short hershey bar wing. While I love the plane, I always wish it could go a bit faster, or use a bit less fuel to get to my destination. I have followed the composite homebuilding movement for many years, and am amazed at the sleekness of a composite wing. The wings on most composites tend to be the complete opposite of a Hersey bar wing: high aspect ratio, low thickness, no rivets, no screws for fuel tanks,smooth curves faired into airframe, and streamlined landing gear structure. So my question: How much drag does a wing on a Hersey Bar Cherokee generate, and and hypothetically speaking, how much faster could the plane go if it was retooled with a sleek, composite wing? I can't remember if it was Kitplanes or SportAviation that had a recent article on a Piper knockoff being produced as a kitplane in South Africa. That might be a good starting point for the difference in performance between the different planes as well as a discussion of the differences in design and construction. Much of the difference has to do with better airfoil designs being used but also weight differences. Well, that airplane is "inspired" by the Commanche and it's really just comparing apples and oranges since there are so many other differences in the two airplanes, but having said that, it's better than comparing a cherokee to a Cozy, for instance.. In any case, the Ravin Commanche is herehttp://www.saravin.com/review.htm ALC- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - It's about as close a comparison as can be made. I am building the KIS Cruiser which uses a hershey bar style wing as well but the airfoil is different. The comparison from a performance standpoint is much faster than the Commanche for the same power (180 hp). The difference must be attributed to several differences beyond just the wing, weight being the most obvious. Well, the Ravin is actually a couple hundred pounds heavier than the original Commanche empty and has a higher gross. It also has a much smaller fuselage cross section. I'm certainly not saying that the Ravin is not a better airplane. It is. I'd sure like to have one! I'm just saying that while it is probably one of the better comparisons, no absolute conclusion may be made from it. There's too many other things going on there. The Commanche uses what was a then state of the art NACA 6 series laminar flow airfoil. It was streets ahead of what was on any lightplane of the time, but it's use was most probably not dictated by the material of which it was made. I have no idea what the Ravin is using for an airfoil. If Piper were to set out to make the same airplane again today using aluminum for the wing, they could still build a more efficient wing than they did in the fifties by simple virtue of the fact that fifty years later there's been quite a lot of innovation in airfoils, structures and what not. Again, I'm not saying that the Ravin isn't a better airplane, nor am I denying that composites might be a better way to build an airplane, just saying (at the risk of flogging the proverbial dead horse) that the comparison , while it is as good as you're going to get, is still flawed. ALC- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Agreed, you will always be dealing with differences that can skew the comparison including differing prop combinations. Another good comparison might be VANS RV-10 which does use a metal wing. The performance numbers on that plane are also better than the Commanchee. The RV-10 is probably a good comparison to the Ravin since both would probably be about the same weight, size, and use the same engine. The RV-10 with the O-360 combination might be a good comparison to the commanchee. Well, a shopping comparison, maybe, but the Ravin has a bigger engine (unless you mean the baby Ravin with the fixed gear) so again it's apples and oranges. I don't know, structural engineering isn't my thing and I've never looked into the ins and outs of tupperware airplanes anyway. can't build 'em because I can't even stand to be in a room with the fumes and dust and I'm more of a biplane/round engine type anyway. I was just pointing out what I saw was kind of a dead end comparison. Still I wouldn't turn my nose up at one of those Ravins! ALC |
#24
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In article ,
"Montblack" wrote: ("Wayne Paul" wrote) It is much easier to build a laminar flow airfoil and complex shaped wing to fuselage transition using composite construction. These wing have a better lift to drag ratio. The decrease in drag aerodynamic drag of the wing and static drag decrease associated with the wing/fuselage transition allow faster speeds. Can you reword this (for some of us "Huh?" lurkers) especially the wing to fuselage transition part? How good/efficient are Cherokee, Ercoupe, Cessna (aluminum & rivet) wing root fairings vs. what could be achieved with complex composite shapes? Same question with the wing shape - to hold up the same plane, ALL else being equal? So ballpark - how much more efficient would the use of complex composite construction (wings and wing root transition areas) make these planes - ALL else being equal? Paul, Go to airliners.com or any other site that will have "new" and "old" airplanes. Pay particular attention to the wing-fuselage junction. On the old airplanes, the fuselage seems to be just stuck to the wing. On the new aiplanes, there are HUGE fillets fore and aft of the wing. This really became a design consideration in the mid-1980's. |
#25
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On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 13:51:57 GMT, Nathan Young
wrote: I have a Cherokee 180, with the short hershey bar wing. While I love the plane, I always wish it could go a bit faster, or use a bit less fuel to get to my destination. With about 375 hours in a Cherokee 180 and about 1200 in a straight tail Beechcraft (Debonair) my take it this. I like the 180 better than the Archer even though the Archer lookes nicer with that taper wing and is a bit faster. That constant cord, thick wing makes the 180 one of the most docile airplanes you will find and it still has pretty good performance. Very good climb and tremendous at getting into short fields with the steep descent. I can't see as a gallon or two over the range of the Cherokee, or Archer is going to be worth worrying about....although we did have one guy land ours with 1/2 gallon of fuel on board (all in one tank). He'd flown the same trip (St Louis Mo to Midland, MI) so many times he never paid any attention to the time and this time coming home he had one bodatios head wind. (and a LOT OF LUCK! Having flown Both the 180 and the Deb in torrential rain I can say I'd much prefer a thicker windsheild to prettier wings. It was deafening! As to fuel, we flew the 180 down to Muncie IN to pick up the Deb. My friend took off well ahead of me, but I passed him before we reached Ft Wayne. I was back in Midland, had the Deb put away in the hangar and was having a cup of coffee in the terminal building when I head him call in. When they filled the Cherokee up, I found I had used less than one gallon more to cover the same route at close to 190 MPH. I had to ferry the Deb up to HTL to have some work done on the gear which meant leaving it down. Now that's using gas. The speed was about the same as the Cherokee but burning about 14 1/2 GPH. I have followed the composite homebuilding movement for many years, and am amazed at the sleekness of a composite wing. The wings on most composites tend to be the complete opposite of a Hersey bar wing: high aspect ratio, low thickness, no rivets, no screws for fuel I'm glad you said most. I'm building a Glasair III and a high aspect ratio it doesn't have. Wing span is a tad over 23' with a 4' wide fuselage in the middle so that makes each wing about 9 1/2 feet long. It also has almost 30# per square foot of wing loading on that tiny wing but it sure does go. Built like a tank too. If you think the 180 has a steep descent you should fly a G-III once. :-)) Normal is about 2000 fpm power off. tanks,smooth curves faired into airframe, and streamlined landing gear structure. So my question: How much drag does a wing on a Hersey Bar Cherokee generate, and and hypothetically speaking, how much faster could the plane go if it was retooled with a sleek, composite wing? That's a diffiuclt question to answer because there are so many variables. You could easily end up with a wing that could travel far faster than the rest of the structure could handle. On the Cherokee the landing gear presents a lot of drag. To maintain at least the handleing characteristics of the Archer you probably ould not get much faster than an Archer. To simply replace the wing with a composit one of the same design would most likely make little difference. All airplanes are a group of compromises. The 180 is the only plane I've ever flown where I could put it into a full stall, hold the elevator full up and still use the ailerons in turns. (with careful application) Almost any changes are going to result in a plane that is less forgiving. It's very difficult to hold the Deb in a stall without having it drop a wing. It's like balancing on a tight rope and if you touch an aileron to raise a wing, that wing will instead go down (abruptly) and you will most likely roll into a spin. Speed comes at a price. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#26
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("john smith" wrote)
On the new aiplanes, there are HUGE fillets fore and aft of the wing. This really became a design consideration in the mid-1980's. Wheel pants, gap seals, ....and HUGE new fiberglass fillets (fore and aft). Are they part of everyday speed-mod packages? If so, what is the "anecdotal" gain, after installing (just) them? I've read reports on wheel pants, on gap seals, and on Power Flow exhaust systems, but not on aftermarket fillets for the GA fleet. http://www.powerflowsystems.com/ Montblack airliners ...net? :-) |
#27
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Hi,
I don't see why a composite should be heavier: For carbon composite, the Young's modulus is ~70GPa for a density of 1.3 g/cm3. Al has the same Young's modulus but twice the density (2.7 g/cm3). For glass the strength is about half but again the weight is halved too -so it's not a gain over Al. I think the composites excel in their lack of rivets and joining pieces tho... Cheers MC Composites are indeed heavier than metal but if carbon fiber is used, not that much heavier. The real payoff is in the extremely smooth surfaces that promote natural laminar flow. The payoff is huge across the entire speed spectrum but highest at the low speed end where the flow is less stable and more likely to separate if the wing surfaces are rough.. Bill Daniels "Wayne Paul" wrote in message ... I have helped rig many sailplanes, both composite and conventional aluminum construction. In almost every case the metal wing are lighter then the composite. (1-35 and HP-18 aluminum wings are lighter then ASW-20, ASW-27, and LS-6 composite wings.) It is much easier to build a laminar flow airfoil and complex shaped wing to fuselage transition using composite construction. These wing have a better lift to drag ratio. The decrease in drag aerodynamic drag of the wing and static drag decrease associated with the wing/fuselage transition allow faster speeds. Wayne http://www.soaridaho.com/ "cavelamb himself" wrote in message news ![]() At these speeds I suspect surface condition is a small part of the overall drag. However! If the new wing were a couple hundred pounds lighter, then you'd see some inprovement in speed. It takes power to stay aloft. The heavier the plane, the more power is required just to stay up. Lighter is mo' betta! Richard ------------ And now a word from our sponsor --------------------- For a secure high performance FTP using SSL/TLS encryption upgrade to SurgeFTP ---- See http://netwinsite.com/sponsor/sponsor_surgeftp.htm ---- |
#28
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On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 23:11:29 -0500, "Montblack"
wrote: ("john smith" wrote) On the new aiplanes, there are HUGE fillets fore and aft of the wing. This really became a design consideration in the mid-1980's. Wheel pants, gap seals, ....and HUGE new fiberglass fillets (fore and aft). Are they part of everyday speed-mod packages? If so, what is the "anecdotal" gain, after installing (just) them? I've read reports on wheel pants, on gap seals, and on Power Flow exhaust systems, but not on aftermarket fillets for the GA fleet. http://www.powerflowsystems.com/ Knots2U sells a wing/fuselage fairing. http://knots2u.com/28WR.htm I have it on my Cherokee, but cannot discern the exact performance gain as it was added in conjunction with a number of other mods. |
#29
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On Mar 29, 2:10 am, DR wrote:
Hi, I don't see why a composite should be heavier: For carbon composite, the Young's modulus is ~70GPa for a density of 1.3 g/cm3. Al has the same Young's modulus but twice the density (2.7 g/cm3). For glass the strength is about half but again the weight is halved too -so it's not a gain over Al. I think the composites excel in their lack of rivets and joining pieces tho... Cheers MC Composites are indeed heavier than metal but if carbon fiber is used, not that much heavier. The real payoff is in the extremely smooth surfaces that promote natural laminar flow. The payoff is huge across the entire speed spectrum but highest at the low speed end where the flow is less stable and more likely to separate if the wing surfaces are rough.. Bill Daniels "Wayne Paul" wrote in message ... I have helped rig many sailplanes, both composite and conventional aluminum construction. In almost every case the metal wing are lighter then the composite. (1-35 and HP-18 aluminum wings are lighter then ASW-20, ASW-27, and LS-6 composite wings.) It is much easier to build a laminar flow airfoil and complex shaped wing to fuselage transition using composite construction. These wing have a better lift to drag ratio. The decrease in drag aerodynamic drag of the wing and static drag decrease associated with the wing/fuselage transition allow faster speeds. Wayne http://www.soaridaho.com/ "cavelamb himself" wrote in message news ![]() overall drag. However! If the new wing were a couple hundred pounds lighter, then you'd see some inprovement in speed. It takes power to stay aloft. The heavier the plane, the more power is required just to stay up. Lighter is mo' betta! Richard ------------ And now a word from our sponsor --------------------- For a secure high performance FTP using SSL/TLS encryption upgrade to SurgeFTP ---- Seehttp://netwinsite.com/sponsor/sponsor_surgeftp.htm ----- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - From wha I have read in the past, the major reason for lack of weight reduction in composite structures results from differences in the design standards. The design standard for metal wings is based on a 1.5 times specification. Thus, a wing rated for 3g's is designed for 4.5 g's. The standard used for composite wings has been set at 2 times specification. The composite wing rated for 3g's is designed for 6g's and as a result any weight savings is lost to the extra strength. The difference in the standards was ment to compensate for perceived quality variations in composite contstruction techniques. |
#30
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![]() The composite construction makes a big difference in making possible the use of supercritical airfoils. These airfoils need a slick surface, so much so that flying in rain degrades their performance to the point that they can become dangerous. You'd never build a wing like that using sheet metal and rivets. Just the lap joints or any waviness in the aluminum would cause trouble. Composite looks nice, but I became allergic to some of that stuff way back in the '70s. And in the cold winters here I've seen it crack and delaminate. My preference is for something more resistant to everyday life. Kinda like my old truck. Dan |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
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