![]() |
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 |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Have they tried dimples on radio controlled aircraft? The size and
speed could designed around the magic Reynolds number = 100,000 where the coefficient of drag drops precipitously. Dimpling could vastly extent the range of large and slow as well as small and fast radio controlled aircraft. A competitive cyclist is the right size and speed for Nre = 100,000 so dimple suits can work. Same for golf balls. Nre = 100,000 for widebodies going 0.5 knots so dimples won't work except on the runway. From fluid mechanics the Reynolds number is the ratio of inertial forces/viscous forces. N re = Diameter X velocity X density of fluid/viscosity of fluid. Bret Cahill |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Bret Cahill" wrote in message ... Have they tried dimples on radio controlled aircraft? The size and speed could designed around the magic Reynolds number = 100,000 where the coefficient of drag drops precipitously. Dimpling could vastly extent the range of large and slow as well as small and fast radio controlled aircraft. A competitive cyclist is the right size and speed for Nre = 100,000 so dimple suits can work. Same for golf balls. Nre = 100,000 for widebodies going 0.5 knots so dimples won't work except on the runway. From fluid mechanics the Reynolds number is the ratio of inertial forces/viscous forces. N re = Diameter X velocity X density of fluid/viscosity of fluid. Bret Cahill We competitive cyclists use dimples already on our disk wheels. And some skinsuits incorporate them. But they don't look like the dimples on a golf ball. They are shaped differently and they are shallow. Check out Zipp disk wheel dimples he http://www.zipp.com/wheels/detail.php?ID=33 Over a 40K ITT this rear wheel can give you a 30-40 second advantage over smooth disk wheels. -- Gregory Hall |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Have they tried dimples on radio controlled aircraft? � The size and
speed could designed around the magic Reynolds number = 100,000 where the coefficient of drag drops precipitously. Dimpling could vastly extent the range of large and slow as well as small and fast radio controlled aircraft. A competitive cyclist is the right size and speed for Nre = 100,000 so dimple suits can work. �Same for golf balls. Nre = 100,000 for widebodies going 0.5 knots so dimples won't work except on the runway. From fluid mechanics the Reynolds number is the ratio of inertial forces/viscous forces. N re = Diameter X velocity X density of fluid/viscosity of fluid. Bret Cahill We competitive cyclists use dimples already on our disk wheels. And some skinsuits incorporate them. But they don't look like the dimples on a golf ball. They are shaped differently and they are shallow. Check out Zipp disk wheel dimples hehttp://www.zipp.com/wheels/detail.php?ID=33 Over a 40K ITT this rear wheel can give you a 30-40 second advantage over smooth disk wheels. A model plane about the size of a cyclist would benefit most from dimples if it only went cycling speeds, 20 - 25 knots. Smaller aircraft would need to be designed to go faster inverse with size. A golf ball sized aircraft would have to go 200 mph for dimples to work. Bret Cahill |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ... Have they tried dimples on radio controlled aircraft? ? The size and speed could designed around the magic Reynolds number = 100,000 where the coefficient of drag drops precipitously. Dimpling could vastly extent the range of large and slow as well as small and fast radio controlled aircraft. A competitive cyclist is the right size and speed for Nre = 100,000 so dimple suits can work. ?Same for golf balls. Nre = 100,000 for widebodies going 0.5 knots so dimples won't work except on the runway. From fluid mechanics the Reynolds number is the ratio of inertial forces/viscous forces. N re = Diameter X velocity X density of fluid/viscosity of fluid. Bret Cahill We competitive cyclists use dimples already on our disk wheels. And some skinsuits incorporate them. But they don't look like the dimples on a golf ball. They are shaped differently and they are shallow. Check out Zipp disk wheel dimples hehttp://www.zipp.com/wheels/detail.php?ID=33 Over a 40K ITT this rear wheel can give you a 30-40 second advantage over smooth disk wheels. \ A model plane about the size of a cyclist would benefit most from \ dimples if it only went cycling speeds, 20 - 25 knots. \ \ Smaller aircraft would need to be designed to go faster inverse with \ size. \ \ A golf ball sized aircraft would have to go 200 mph for dimples to \ work. I wonder if anybody has thought of putting the appropriate dimples on the surface of propellers? Seems like reducing drag there would increase RPM and reduce HP required. A bicycle wheel spins much faster than 20-25 knots apparent to the air it interfaces with. At 30 knots, for example, the surface of the wheel might be moving closer to 100 knots apparent to the wind. -- Gregory Hall |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Have they tried dimples on radio controlled aircraft? ? The size and
speed could designed around the magic Reynolds number = 100,000 where the coefficient of drag drops precipitously. Dimpling could vastly extent the range of large and slow as well as small and fast radio controlled aircraft. A competitive cyclist is the right size and speed for Nre = 100,000 so dimple suits can work. ?Same for golf balls. Nre = 100,000 for widebodies going 0.5 knots so dimples won't work except on the runway. From fluid mechanics the Reynolds number is the ratio of inertial forces/viscous forces. N re = Diameter X velocity X density of fluid/viscosity of fluid. Bret Cahill We competitive cyclists use dimples already on our disk wheels. And some skinsuits incorporate them. But they don't look like the dimples on a golf ball. They are shaped differently and they are shallow. Check out Zipp disk wheel dimples hehttp://www.zipp.com/wheels/detail.php?ID=33 Over a 40K ITT this rear wheel can give you a 30-40 second advantage over smooth disk wheels. \ A model plane about the size of a cyclist would benefit most from \ dimples if it only went cycling speeds, 20 - 25 knots. \ \ Smaller aircraft would need to be designed to go faster inverse with \ size. \ \ A golf ball sized aircraft would have to go 200 mph for dimples to \ work. I wonder if anybody has thought of putting the appropriate dimples on the surface of propellers? Seems like reducing drag there would increase RPM and reduce HP required. I'm not certain dimples would make much difference in a well designed airfoil wing or prop or fusalage. Maybe something that had an awkward shape, i. e., a strut, would benefit the most. I may recant. A golf ball goes 4 times further with dimples but a golf ball isn't aerodynamic in the first place. A bicycle wheel spins much faster than 20-25 knots apparent to the air it interfaces with. At 30 knots, for example, the surface of the wheel might be moving closer to 100 knots apparent to the wind. It's just double the speed of the hub. Bret Cahill |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In rec.aviation.marketplace Gregory Hall wrote:
I wonder if anybody has thought of putting the appropriate dimples on the surface of propellers? Seems like reducing drag there would increase RPM and reduce HP required. While reducing drag would be a goal, fixed propeller systems are designed to keep the tip velocity under mach 1. For constant speed props, the RPM is whatever you set it to, again under mach 1. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Nov 4, 9:04*pm, Bret Cahill wrote:
Have they tried dimples on radio controlled aircraft? * The size and speed could designed around the magic Reynolds number = 100,000 where the coefficient of drag drops precipitously. Dimpling could vastly extent the range of large and slow as well as small and fast radio controlled aircraft. A competitive cyclist is the right size and speed for Nre = 100,000 so dimple suits can work. *Same for golf balls. Nre = 100,000 for widebodies going 0.5 knots so dimples won't work except on the runway. From fluid mechanics the Reynolds number is the ratio of inertial forces/viscous forces. N re = Diameter X velocity X density of fluid/viscosity of fluid. Bret Cahill You have a fundamental misunderstanding of aerodynamics. There are several mechanics that produce drag, and the two involved here are pressure drag due to seperated flow and skin friction drag. First, on a bluff body, such as a golf ball (and a cyclist for that matter), the majority of the drag is pressure drag due to the flow seperating as it cannot negotiate the steep adverse pressure gradient towards the rear of the object. Pressure drag is much higher - sometimes one or more orders of magnitude - than skin friction drag. Skin friction drag comes from the shear inside the boundary layer, where the airspeed drops from approximately the free-stream velocity outside the boundary layer to zero where it actually touches the surface. This comes in two forms - laminar and turbulent. The skin friction drag due to a laminar boundary layer is once again much lower than that due to a turbulent boundary layer. The reason dimples work on a golf ball is due to the fact that a turbulent boundary layer, although having more drag than a laminar boundary layer, tends to stay attached through much steeper adverse pressure gradients than laminar boundary layers. The dimples force the flow to transition from laminar to turbulent, which means it stays attached for longer and you therefore end up reducing the pressure drag as a smaller region of flow eventually seperates. The drag savings therefore is because there is less seperated flow, not because a dimpled surface causes less skin friction than a smooth one. Many bluff bodies can benefit from this. When it comes to streamlined bodies, such as an airplane wing, the situation is very different. When an airfoil is well designed (I'll get back to low Reynolds number airfoils on which I have done quite a bit of work over the years) the flow is almost completely attached at the typical local angle of attack that the wing sees at speeds between loiter and maximum speed, which is of course where the low drag matters. Since there is virtually no seperated flow (there is usually a tiny bit right at the trailing edge), there is no extra benefit to be had from dimpling. In fact, if you dimple the whole wing you are going to transition to a turbulent boundary layer early and you are actually goint to increase the total drag. Low Reynolds number airfoils are slightly different. The Reynolds numbers of interest for small - not micro - UAVs is typically between about 40,000 on tail surfaces to about 500,000 on the wing. At these Reynolds numbers you sometimes get what is called a "seperation bubble". While still laminar, the flow seperates, but then it transitions to turbulent off the surface and then re-attach as a turbulent boundary layer that remains attached all the way to the trailing edge if properly designed. These seperation bubbles are sometimes unavoidable, but good airfoil design can minimize their size and therefore their drag. In some instances, a small strip can be used to force the boundary layer to transition to turbulent just ahead of the point where the flow would have seperated, to prevent the formation of the seperation bubble. If well designed and placed, you end up with a nice low drag laminar boundary layer over the forward part of the airfoil, and then a higher drag turbulent boundary layer towards the rear but without the seperation bubble. The overall drag is usually only reduced over a small part of the flight envelope and only if designed and placed properly - and it only really works at Reynolds numbers below about 200,000. Again dimples would be too crude to lead to an overall improvement, as you will once again end up with a fully turbulent boundary layer while you could have benefitted from keeping some of the flow laminar. Finally, your equation: N re = Diameter X velocity X density of fluid/viscosity of fluid. That 100,000 you used is for Reynolds number based on diameter as in your equation above, which is indeed valid for a sphere or cylinder. However, a wing's Reynolds number is based on the local chord (it changes along the span if the wing is tapered): Re = chord X velocity X density of fluid / viscosity of fluid. Because we are talking about a completely different situation on a streamlined body such as a wing, that magic Reynolds number of 100,000 that you quoted for a sphere is simply not relevant. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
F-2A Buffalo Model Aircraft | [email protected] | Piloting | 0 | February 21st 08 02:45 AM |
C-5A/B Galaxy Model Aircraft | [email protected] | Piloting | 0 | February 4th 08 05:41 AM |
SR-71A Blackbird Model Aircraft | [email protected] | Piloting | 0 | January 28th 08 03:03 AM |
Why don't wings have dimples? | Dancing Fingers | Home Built | 56 | June 17th 06 11:54 PM |
Antigua, U.S. Extend Air Force Base Lease | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | August 25th 04 05:02 AM |