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#142
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#143
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Jim, you don't have to do the physics for a 1 g roll. click on
stanford.edu/~sigman/one_g_roll.html for a really neat analysis. Page down toward the end of sigman's article to see the actual flight paths that it takes. It's a neat read. Oh, for the nonbelievers in Newton and vector analysis and such (Mx whatever comes to mind) don't bother. |
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OPPS, It's www.stanford.edu/~siegman/one_g_roll.html
On Jun 14, 7:19 pm, wrote: Jim, you don't have to do the physics for a 1 g roll. click on stanford.edu/~sigman/one_g_roll.html for a really neat analysis. Page down toward the end of sigman's article to see the actual flight paths that it takes. It's a neat read. Oh, for the nonbelievers in Newton and vector analysis and such (Mx whatever comes to mind) don't bother. |
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On Jun 15, 10:29 am, Jim Stewart wrote:
wrote: Hang on, let's keep things simple: 1. If I enter a coordinated turn, I experience an increase in Gs. 2. If I enter a descent, I experience a decrease in Gs. If I do these two things at the same time, it is possible to enter a descending turn without any change in Gs. Just as long as I continously feed in enough down elevator to offset the increasing Gs from the turn, the force on the airframe and me, the pilot, will stay at 1 G. Isn't there some sinister name for this when it happens to a non-IFR pilot in a cloud? Graveyard spiral dive |
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Wasn't the demonstration of the ignorance of physics by some of the
posters fun? I don't think a GA airplane has the control authority to do one of these 'rolls' but maybe. But you could start the thing with a coordinated turn and forward yoke, and maybe get to 45 degrees bank and a lot of downward pitch maintaining 1 G before getting back to straight and level, His first model with 10 seconds total time means 320 fps downward velocity, about 200 kts down at its end. He pointed out the total altitude loss from start to finish was 1600 feet or so, but then comes pull out from lots of vertical speed. Moral: start high and pull out smoothly or turn the airplane into a kit. On Jun 14, 8:47 pm, Jim Logajan wrote: wrote: Jim, you don't have to do the physics for a 1 g roll. click on stanford.edu/~sigman/one_g_roll.html for a really neat analysis. Page down toward the end of sigman's article to see the actual flight paths that it takes. It's a neat read. Oh, for the nonbelievers in Newton and vector analysis and such (Mx whatever comes to mind) don't bother. OPPS, It'swww.stanford.edu/~siegman/one_g_roll.html Fascinating - thanks for finding that! Amusing to note that a physicist of that caliber was motivated to explore the situation due to an older thread on the same subject on the same Usenet newsgroup! I considered setting up the same situation using Mathcad 2000 (it can generate animations, so I think I could have set up appropriate parametric equations and created a 3D movie). But I just don't have the time at the moment to do that. At least I feel better that my physical intuition didn't fail me. The nit pickers may (reasonably) argue that the trajectories don't yield the "barrel roll" spiral they might insist on, but such is life. I should have titled this thread "Myth: 1 G rolls are impossible," and dispensed with the word "barrel." |
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Dudley Henriques wrote:
There is a special case where you can unload the airplane in roll to increase the roll rate. It's done in fighters all the time in ACM. You can experience it in your everyday light aerobatic airplane by doing an aileron roll from a nose high roll set position, then as the airplane goes past the first knife edge position, go forward on the pole to unload the wings but not enough to go negative. Keeping the aileron in hard while you do this increases the roll rate and as a side effect flattens the roll in pitch at the same time making it prettier :-) Why does this work? Matt |
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tbaker27705 opined
Jim, you don't have to do the physics for a 1 g roll. click on stanford.edu/~sigman/one_g_roll.html for a really neat analysis. Page down toward the end of sigman's article to see the actual flight paths that it takes. It's a neat read. Oh, for the nonbelievers in Newton and vector analysis and such (Mx whatever comes to mind) don't bother. It's http://www.stanford.edu/~siegman/one_g_roll.html -ash Cthulhu in 2007! Why wait for nature? |
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