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#1
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What is lost without them? One point of glide? What about sink rate?
Is this just for racers? My glider does not have them. Does anyone have any facts on this? Thanks. |
#2
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On Wednesday, May 22, 2013 12:20:54 PM UTC-5, soartech wrote:
What is lost without them? One point of glide? What about sink rate? Is this just for racers? My glider does not have them. Does anyone have any facts on this? Thanks. sealing the ailerons on my Cherokee provided a marked improvement in roll rate. |
#3
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On Wednesday, May 22, 2013 1:20:54 PM UTC-4, soartech wrote:
What is lost without them? One point of glide? What about sink rate? Is this just for racers? My glider does not have them. Does anyone have any facts on this? Thanks. Depends on the type of glider... |
#4
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I have a friend who flew a DG-606 with internal gap seals. One day he went into a brutal, uncharacteristic spin that allmost killed him. He got out of the spin at very low level. The glider was thoroughly checked to try to understand why it had reacted that way. It appeared that the internal aileron gap seals had failed. After replacement, the glider went back to its usual benign flight characteristics...
Now, everything will depend on the type of glider and the type of ailerons. Some older gliders had ailerons with a gap, by design. |
#5
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On Wednesday, May 22, 2013 3:49:32 PM UTC-4, wrote:
I have a friend who flew a DG-606 with internal gap seals. One day he went into a brutal, uncharacteristic spin that almost killed him. He got out of the spin at very low level. The glider was thoroughly checked to try to understand why it had reacted that way. It appeared that the internal aileron gap seals had failed. After replacement, the glider went back to its usual benign flight characteristics... Now, everything will depend on the type of glider and the type of ailerons. Some older gliders had ailerons with a gap, by design. Why would failure of a gap seal cause a spin? |
#6
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Le vendredi 24 mai 2013 02:00:05 UTC+2, son_of_flubber a écrit*:
Why would failure of a gap seal cause a spin? It probably didn't really cause the spin on the DG-606, but the spin happened in a situation (speed, inclination, etc.) where it normally shouldn't have happened, and it probably hampered recovery. Airflow over the ailerons would be severely affected. |
#7
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On 5/22/2013 11:20 AM, soartech wrote:
What is lost without them? For the truly anal, mostly sleep! :-) - - - - - - One point of glide? It depends...! - - - - - - What about sink rate? It depends...! - - - - - - Is this just for racers? My glider does not have them. Does anyone have any facts on this? Facts?!? Now you've done gone and changed a relatively simple question to a genuinely complex one! If you're OK with conclusions drawn via observational extrapolation and the application of "common sense" (of which the development of airplanes - including sailplanes - has a long and rich history), gap seals are obviously not *required* for effective aerodynamic 3-axis control. What they *are* good for is aerodynamic efficiency and improving control effectiveness, most commonly detectable at lower-end speeds. True for gliders and powerplanes. This was well known in the powerplane (e.g. racing) field by the mid 1930s. Sealing control gaps tends to make the sealed controls act more like a part of the larger appendage (e.g. main wing, horizontal stabilizer/elevator, vertical stabilizer/rudder), than a separate, trailing, appendage, by reducing (eliminating?) "cross-talk" between the higher-to-lower pressure side of the fixed/moveable assembly. With a(n impermeable) seal in place and ignoring tip effects, cross talk can't begin until the trailing end of the moving portion, as opposed to beginning at the gap itself. As with everything aerodynamic, there's books-full of complexities associated with the above claim, but the claim is accurate. As noted in other threads, poorly installed/worn gap seals can cause more problems than well-installed ones fix...something to bear in mind if the absence of gap seals on your bird bugs you. (Their absence never did on the Schweizers I owned...come to think of it, the last glider I owned that had [external vinyl tape] gap seals was in 1981!) It's a safe generalization to presume - in the absence of solid information to the contrary - that EVERYthing having to do with gliders' external surface configurations not explicitly determined by some underlying structural consideration, is done for (at a minimum) aerodynamic drag reduction purposes. Gap seals (say on a tube-n-rag Schweizer) being a case in point... Bob W. |
#8
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soartech wrote, On 5/22/2013 10:20 AM:
What is lost without them? One point of glide? What about sink rate? Is this just for racers? My glider does not have them. Does anyone have any facts on this? Thanks. Are you asking about "seals" - a flexible material like tape between the wing and control surface to prevent air from leaking between the two. It might be external or internal. Or, are you asking about "fairings" - generally Mylar across the top or the bottom the wing/control surface gap to smooth the airflow across the gap. The fairing is external only, and might also reduce the leakage from bottom surface to top surface. My glider came with both, but I have no idea of how much they affect the performance. I know the top fairings can degrade the climb when they lose their curvature after 10 years or so. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Feb/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://tinyurl.com/yb3xywl |
#9
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soartech wrote:
What is lost without them? One point of glide? What about sink rate? Is this just for racers? My glider does not have them. Does anyone have any facts on this? Thanks. Our CFI was bitching about the lousy roll rate on the 2-33. We decided to just put some gap tape over the aileron gap, and it actually improved the performance markedly. Peter |
#10
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On Wednesday, May 22, 2013 9:27:37 PM UTC-5, vontresc wrote:
soartech wrote: What is lost without them? One point of glide? What about sink rate? Is this just for racers? My glider does not have them. Does anyone have any facts on this? Thanks. Our CFI was bitching about the lousy roll rate on the 2-33. We decided to just put some gap tape over the aileron gap, and it actually improved the performance markedly. Peter The 2-33 at the Wichita Gliderport has the ailerons sealed nicely and it is hands down the nicest flying 2-33 I have had the pleasure of flying. The 'drag queens' may show the most improvement with these kind of small things because they have the most to gain! |
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