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#21
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Sriram Narayan wrote:
It doesn't look that linear to me. I found a website with a similar graph and it appears that at sea level and at 10000ft the slope of the curve is at least 2x different. Your curve is quite a bit more linear (maybe 20% increase in slope at 10k). There must some sort of mechanical compensation involved otherwise altimeters would be off quite a bit even at 10k (even with your curve). Isn't it something like 75ft accuracy requirement for altimeters? http://www.atmosphere.mpg.de/enid/16h.html His graph has more curvature than mine does because his covers a much greater vertical distance (11000 meters is around 36000 feet). Mine only goes to 18000 feet. But I agree that a linear assumption will result in a worst-case error of several hundred feet. Not good enough, so the nonlinearity must be built into altimeters even if the're only good to 20000 ft. Jim Rosinski |
#22
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Do altimeters for higher altitudes have some kind of clever
mechanism to deal with the non-linearity of pressure at higher altitudes. NACA (precursor to NASA) from about 1917 on, did a lot of the early research on this kind of thing. Here's a link with a great explanation of how they came up with a clever altimeter mechanism: http://naca.larc.nasa.gov/reports/1930/naca-report-310/ |
#23
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![]() "jim rosinski" wrote in message ups.com... Sriram Narayan wrote: It doesn't look that linear to me. I found a website with a similar graph and it appears that at sea level and at 10000ft the slope of the curve is at least 2x different. Your curve is quite a bit more linear (maybe 20% increase in slope at 10k). There must some sort of mechanical compensation involved otherwise altimeters would be off quite a bit even at 10k (even with your curve). Isn't it something like 75ft accuracy requirement for altimeters? http://www.atmosphere.mpg.de/enid/16h.html His graph has more curvature than mine does because his covers a much greater vertical distance (11000 meters is around 36000 feet). Mine only goes to 18000 feet. But I agree that a linear assumption will result in a worst-case error of several hundred feet. Not good enough, so the nonlinearity must be built into altimeters even if the're only good to 20000 ft. Oops, thanks for pointing that out. Didn't check the Y-scale carefully. |
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