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#41
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David, the issue for me was 1 g down, into the seat. In a steady state
climb one experiences one G, but if the nose is 5 degrees up that force is 5 degrees aft of down. My understanding of the question (and it could not be an accurate understanding) was, can one somehow roll an airplane without having it experience anything other than 1 g "down". I think it's been shown the airplane can be rotated 360 degrees on its axis with the pilot always experiencing 1 g down into the seat. At that point though the airplane is going downward pretty fast, and the weight vector would shift forward of straight down. |
#42
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On Thu, 30 Jun 2005 at 18:35:25 in message
.com, Tony wrote: David, the issue for me was 1 g down, into the seat. In a steady state climb one experiences one G, but if the nose is 5 degrees up that force is 5 degrees aft of down. My understanding of the question (and it could not be an accurate understanding) was, can one somehow roll an airplane without having it experience anything other than 1 g "down". I think it's been shown the airplane can be rotated 360 degrees on its axis with the pilot always experiencing 1 g down into the seat. At that point though the airplane is going downward pretty fast, and the weight vector would shift forward of straight down. Tony, I see where you are. I would say that if that is what you using as a datum then the 'g' down axis will vary from a few degrees at high speed in level flight to up to around 12 degrees or more at touchdown in level flight without any aerobatics at all.. But in your definition it would be impossible to have a flight that included take off and landing and a modest climb and descent at a strict '1g' down. I was assuming a steady one 'g' at right angles to the free stream airflow! -- David CL Francis |
#43
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In article ,
David CL Francis wrote: David, the issue for me was 1 g down, into the seat. In a steady state Tony, I see where you are. But in your definition it would be impossible to have a flight that included take off and landing and a modest climb and descent at a strict '1g' down. I'm still struggling to think this whole problem through from the viewpoint of someone who likes to solve "simple" physics problems, but is absolutely not a pilot. Let's just take the part of the flight that involves climbing at a constant upward rate and then leveling off. Seems as if you will never be able to convert to level flight without reducing the upward velocity vector, ergo some (negative) vertical acceleration has to occur. But what if you roll the plane, slowly and gently, about a longitudinal axis that passes through the bathroom scales, simultaneously applying control forces so that the plane begins turning right. If you can roll slowly enough so you neglect the rotational inertia of the pilot about this axis and simultaneously turn right at the correct rate, during this time the seat will push the pilot (who's a point mass, of course) up with *less* vertical force than previously, while pushing (and accelerating) the pilot to the right with a small horizontal component of force. If you do this just right, you ought to be able to keep the total force pushing from the seat into the pilot equal to the pilot's weight. Do this carefully enough, keep it up for a while, then roll back to level, and you ought to be able to bleed the vertical velocity down to zero and thus be leveled off -- though with a different compass heading -- while keeping the bathroom scales reading a constant value equal to the pilot's weight. Does this make sense? --"The other Tony" P.S. -- Takeoff and landing is more easily solvable. You just need a long enough taxiway that can be curved but eventually feeds straight into a (potentially very short) runway, with both of these at the point where they join having exactly the same upward slope as the slope that you want to climb at after takeoff, and with the runway ending at the edge of a cliff. So, all you have to do is accelerate up to full flying speed while you're still on the taxiway -- which of course doesn't count since you're still only taxiing -- until you get on the runway part and just keep going. Landing is obviously the same thing reversed. |
#44
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About taking off and landing: If you take as the goal 1 g downward --
that's an integer, not 1.0000 plus or minus a little bit, you can't do it. There is acceleration. The same thing is true for a loop, there just are not enough degrees of freedom to allow the pilot to see the horizon drop down as he climbs, then reappear inverted at the top of the loop, without experiencing some incremental (even if small) g forces. I think a roll adds the additional variables one might need. Consider, for example, a plane about 45 degrees into a roll. At that moment, in coordinated (pilot talk for keeping the pilot's weight centered on the seat) level flight there's a g toward the center of the earth, and another along the radius of the turn. The pilot experiences 1.414 gs into his seat. If, however, the airplane is also pitched down 45 degrees accelerating, and coordinated, you could choose numbers that'll resolve to 1 g into the seat. Take now a bank of 90 degrees. If the airplane is pointed straight down and accelerating at 1 G, that is, in free fall vertically, there'd be no fore and aft weight component. The pilot would, however, have to be pulling back on the yoke hard enough to accelerate in the nose up direction at 1 G. At inverted if level he'd be experiencing 1 g "up", so he'd have to have the yoke back far enough to accelerate in the nose up direction 2 gs worth. You can, at each point point in the "roll", calculate how the airplane must be accelerating in the nose up direction and what direction the nose must be pointing for the pilot to experience 1 g down. I don't know if it's a realizable manouver -- it'll take some serious elevator "authority" to provide the nose up accelerations that are needed. Some insightful person in this thread made the observation that if the airplane was during the roll just accelerating downward at 1 G -- in free fall, if you will, one need not worry about the gravity effects and the pilot would just have to pull back on the yoke hard enough to keep the nose accelerating up at 1 g. It's an interesting problem. I think the airplane, as seen from outside, would look like it was in a death sprial. The pilot, however, would see the horizon rotate through 360 degrees, so he'd say he rolled the airplane. At the end of the roll the airplane would be in a serious nose down attitude, and going pretty fast. I don't think you can get from there to straight and level while keeping a local 1 g down weight component. |
#45
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"Tony" wrote:
At the end of the roll the airplane would be in a serious nose down attitude, and going pretty fast. I don't think you can get from there to straight and level while keeping a local 1 g down weight component. Of course not. I think the only reasonable interpretation of the "aileron roll is a 1-g maneuver" claim is that the maneuver itself will be at one g, while setup and recovery can be at g-loads normally experienced in non-aerobatic flight. E.g, enter a 15-degree nose-up climb (requiring more than 1-g), do the roll at 1-g, then recover from the resulting 15-degree nose-down dive (requiring more than one g). -- Alex -- Replace "nospam" with "mail" to reply by email. Checked infrequently. |
#46
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On Fri, 1 Jul 2005 at 18:35:50 in message
, AES wrote: In article , David CL Francis wrote: David, the issue for me was 1 g down, into the seat. In a steady state Tony, I see where you are. But in your definition it would be impossible to have a flight that included take off and landing and a modest climb and descent at a strict '1g' down. I'm still struggling to think this whole problem through from the viewpoint of someone who likes to solve "simple" physics problems, but is absolutely not a pilot. It would help if you give a picture of what you mean by simple physics: e.g. are you comfortable with Newton's basic mass and force equations? Do you have any knowledge of vectors as applied to forces? Are you able to calculate the forces required for a level banked turn of a given angle? Do you have any knowledge of the simple calculations of drag and lift? There could be others but it is difficult to answer without knowing something more about your starting point. You may not believe this, but I have been caught up in discussions with people, trying to help them when their sole object was to stir things up. I am not a pilot either although I have, many years ago, flown solo. Now I am an elderly ex-aerospace engineer whose powers have faded somewhat! Let's just take the part of the flight that involves climbing at a constant upward rate and then leveling off. Seems as if you will never be able to convert to level flight without reducing the upward velocity vector, ergo some (negative) vertical acceleration has to occur. Correct, but in some cases it may be quite a small effect. But what if you roll the plane, slowly and gently, about a longitudinal axis that passes through the bathroom scales, simultaneously applying control forces so that the plane begins turning right. You lost me there! If you can roll slowly enough so you neglect the rotational inertia of the pilot about this axis and simultaneously turn right at the correct rate, during this time the seat will push the pilot (who's a point mass, of course) up with *less* vertical force than previously, while pushing (and accelerating) the pilot to the right with a small horizontal component of force. If you do this just right, you ought to be able to keep the total force pushing from the seat into the pilot equal to the pilot's weight. If by 'correct rate', you mean a properly balanced turn then you are wrong. In a balanced turn the pilot will always detect slightly more 'g'. Remember what the pilot feels is the vector sum of any accelerations. Do this carefully enough, keep it up for a while, then roll back to level, and you ought to be able to bleed the vertical velocity down to zero and thus be leveled off -- though with a different compass heading -- while keeping the bathroom scales reading a constant value equal to the pilot's weight. Does this make sense? Not to me. Are your bathroom scales fixed to the aircraft and under the pilot's seat? --"The other Tony" P.S. -- Takeoff and landing is more easily solvable. You just need a long enough taxiway that can be curved but eventually feeds straight into a (potentially very short) runway, with both of these at the point where they join having exactly the same upward slope as the slope that you want to climb at after takeoff, and with the runway ending at the edge of a cliff. You have lost me again. So, all you have to do is accelerate up to full flying speed while you're still on the taxiway -- which of course doesn't count since you're still only taxiing -- until you get on the runway part and just keep going. Only a vague idea what you might be trying to get at here. If you are referring obliquely to a 'ski jump' then the only difference is that the slight acceleration required is provided a forced rotation on a curved slope than the result is the same except the force is in the original case is provided by lift (and thrust) and in the second by the change of momentum caused by being forced around a curve. You feel it just the same. Keep up the search for enlightenment! -- David CL Francis |
#47
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David, first of all I'm the Tony who thinks I can take my Mooney into a
coordinated bank and accelerate downward enough to keep 1 g into the seat. Mooney ain't made for rolling, although one could argue if my model is correct the damned thing would never know it rolled, although the AH would complain, wouldn't it? You mentioned you're retired out of aerospace. I'd appreciate talking with you about a different matter but your email address is obscured. Have you an available IM address or the like? |
#48
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On Sun, 3 Jul 2005 at 09:01:15 in message
.com, Tony wrote: David, first of all I'm the Tony who thinks I can take my Mooney into a coordinated bank and accelerate downward enough to keep 1 g into the seat. Mooney ain't made for rolling, although one could argue if my model is correct the damned thing would never know it rolled, although the AH would complain, wouldn't it? You mentioned you're retired out of aerospace. I'd appreciate talking with you about a different matter but your email address is obscured. Have you an available IM address or the like? Tony, Just reply to my message as mail and I should get it. A working reply email address is in there! David -- David CL Francis |
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