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#41
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![]() "Roy Smith" wrote in message ... In article , "Tarver Engineering" wrote: "Roy Smith" wrote in message ... In article , (Andrew Sarangan) wrote: Carb icing is a totally different fish. What's going on inside a carburator is liquid gasoline is evaporating and turning into vapor. There's a phase change. It takes a huge amount of energy to effect a phase change. A phase change is involved in the discussion at hand, but the collapse of water's "hydrogen bridge" makes the energy involved in a gasoline phase change look like nothing. Not sure what you mean by "hydrogen bridge". I'm certainly familiar with hydrogen bonds, and heats of vaporization and fusion, and the energy involved in surface tension, but not the term "hydrogen bridge". Can you explain? Liquid water tends to have both hydrogen atoms on the same side of the molecule; 60 degress apart IIRC. The phase change from liquid to soild water causes the hydrogen attoms to be 180 degrees apart and the molecule to become larger. There is a specific amount of energy expelled for each molecule to go through this phase change and it is large. This quantum aspect of the liquid/solid phase change causes icing to be a statistical process and invalidates the wind tunnel data. |
#42
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If you say so John but you never present any evidence or reference to back
up your assertions. Small droplets are not a major icing hazard because they freeze right at the leading edge.. Mike MU-2 "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message ink.net... "Bob Gardner" wrote in message news:XKARb.132385$nt4.579289@attbi_s51... Any time air is accelerated, as it is when passing over a small-radius surface, its temperature drops...so it is entirely possible to accrete ice when the temp is above zero. first...OAT guage, struts, lower edge of windscreen where there is a lip rather than a flush surface, etc. That is also why tail feathers begin to accrete ice before the wing's leading edge does. Bob Gardner While small radius objects do collect ice better than larger redius objects, temperature drop has nothing to do with it. Small radius objects have a higher "collection efficiency" meaning more of the droplets in their path will impact the surface. They have a higher collection efficiency because they don't project a "bow wave" as far in front of them as larger. You NEED supercooled water for airframe icing. Not exactly. Small objects and small water lead to the best conditions, from a statistical standpoint, for gathering ice. |
#43
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![]() "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message nk.net... If you say so John but you never present any evidence or reference to back up your assertions. Small droplets are not a major icing hazard because they freeze right at the leading edge.. I'll take Brownlee's FAA flight test over you any day, Rapport. "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message ink.net... "Bob Gardner" wrote in message news:XKARb.132385$nt4.579289@attbi_s51... Any time air is accelerated, as it is when passing over a small-radius surface, its temperature drops...so it is entirely possible to accrete ice when the temp is above zero. first...OAT guage, struts, lower edge of windscreen where there is a lip rather than a flush surface, etc. That is also why tail feathers begin to accrete ice before the wing's leading edge does. Bob Gardner While small radius objects do collect ice better than larger redius objects, temperature drop has nothing to do with it. Small radius objects have a higher "collection efficiency" meaning more of the droplets in their path will impact the surface. They have a higher collection efficiency because they don't project a "bow wave" as far in front of them as larger. You NEED supercooled water for airframe icing. Not exactly. Small objects and small water lead to the best conditions, from a statistical standpoint, for gathering ice. |
#44
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Why don't you post some data from Mr. Brownlee then. Or even his opinion.
Mike MU-2 "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message nk.net... If you say so John but you never present any evidence or reference to back up your assertions. Small droplets are not a major icing hazard because they freeze right at the leading edge.. I'll take Brownlee's FAA flight test over you any day, Rapport. "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message ink.net... "Bob Gardner" wrote in message news:XKARb.132385$nt4.579289@attbi_s51... Any time air is accelerated, as it is when passing over a small-radius surface, its temperature drops...so it is entirely possible to accrete ice when the temp is above zero. first...OAT guage, struts, lower edge of windscreen where there is a lip rather than a flush surface, etc. That is also why tail feathers begin to accrete ice before the wing's leading edge does. Bob Gardner While small radius objects do collect ice better than larger redius objects, temperature drop has nothing to do with it. Small radius objects have a higher "collection efficiency" meaning more of the droplets in their path will impact the surface. They have a higher collection efficiency because they don't project a "bow wave" as far in front of them as larger. You NEED supercooled water for airframe icing. Not exactly. Small objects and small water lead to the best conditions, from a statistical standpoint, for gathering ice. |
#45
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![]() "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message ink.net... Why don't you post some data from Mr. Brownlee then. Or even his opinion. Call Joe on the telephone and ask him yourself, Rapoport, he is one hell of a nice guy. |
#46
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So you really don't have anything that supports your position which
contradicts all published information from all sources. Mike MU-2 "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message ink.net... Why don't you post some data from Mr. Brownlee then. Or even his opinion. Call Joe on the telephone and ask him yourself, Rapoport, he is one hell of a nice guy. |
#47
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![]() "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message nk.net... So you really don't have anything that supports your position which contradicts all published information from all sources. All I have is my conversation with Brownlee and his flight test pilot staff. At the standrdization seminar's conclusion they all gathered around me while Joe made the small droplet statement and they wanted soemthing from me on probabilities. The FAA flight test pilot staff that flew the actual flights of the large droplet study were there. Their conclusion was that the original assumption of lthe large droplet icing study was completely wrong and I made the comment that perhaps they could get new funding to study small droplets; everyone laughed. I believe the results of the flight test are published, but I am not going to search it up for you. "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message ink.net... Why don't you post some data from Mr. Brownlee then. Or even his opinion. Call Joe on the telephone and ask him yourself, Rapoport, he is one hell of a nice guy. |
#48
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![]() "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message nk.net... So you really don't have anything that supports your position which contradicts all published information from all sources. All I have is my conversation with Brownlee and his flight test pilot staff. At the standrdization seminar's conclusion they all gathered around me while Joe made the small droplet statement and they wanted soemthing from me on probabilities. The FAA flight test pilot staff that flew the actual flights of the large droplet study were there. Their conclusion was that the original assumption of lthe large droplet icing study was completely wrong and I made the comment that perhaps they could get new funding to study small droplets; everyone laughed. I believe the results of the flight test are published, but I am not going to search it up for you. As an adendum: Keep in mind that aero engineers have a very difficult time dealing with their own data and equations being false. As an example, the Law of the Wall was removed as a regulatory hurdle, once it was pointed out that the Law is dimensionally without any basis in physical reality; yet some aero engineering schools still teach the Law of the Wall. |
#49
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Icebound wrote
Almost. Icing occurs when a below freezing aircraft encounters supercooled water. Supercooled water does not exist above 0C. True, but only partially correct. Above-freezing water will still freeze and cling to your below-freezing airframe. Not at any significant rate. The issue is heat transfer. If the water is not already at or below the freezing point, then it must shed excess heat and be cooled to the freezing point, or it will not freeze. Even if a droplet comes into contact with a subfreezing surface, most of it will be long gone before it can cool sufficiently. In fact, the preferred migration of liquid and of not-condensed water vapour is "from warm to cold". So moisture will migrate to the below-freezing airframe.... This makes no sense. you can even get a thin sheet of ice forming in absolutely clear air, simply from the condensation of the water vapour. (similar to your glasses fogging when you come inside from the cold) This is true, but wholly irrelevant. The accretion rate involved is so low as not to matter. Michael |
#50
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"Roy Smith" wrote in message
... When a gas undergoes adiabatic expansion, it gets cooler. There is no doubt that this happens at the leading edges of airfoils, but at the pressure drops we're talking about in any kind of airplane I'm likely to fly is very small. How small is very small? I'm not sure, but I can't imagine more than a degree or two. Yes, you in the back? What's that? Have you been sleeping in class *again* Dr Smith? :-) http://groups.google.com/groups?selm...erver.ntli.net (Actually Roy, you're correct.) The summary was: -- 1) I assert that airframe icing can only occur at points on the airframe where the static temperature is below freezing. 2) Since the pressure over the top surface of a wing is less than the freestream pressure, the associated reduction in temperature can cause the airframe to be cooler than the temperature indicated on an OAT probe. 3) I find that the difference in temperature between indicated OAT and the coolest part of the wing is proportional to the wing loading of the aircraft divided by the freestream pressure, and varies a little with AOA. 4) For light aircraft, the difference in temperature between indicated OAT and the coolest part of the wing is unlikely to exceed about 1 degC. For big jets, the difference in temperature is unlikely to exceed about 10 degC. -- Mike suggests (and I think he suggested in Dec 2002 when I wrote the article cited above) that the rate of cooling of water droplets is such that water droplets above 0 degC will not freeze on running back on a wing that has a part of it that is sub-zero. I haven't done that particular sum, so won't comment on that until I have. Julian Scarfe |
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