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#1
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One of the things that TERRIFIED me for the longest time was turbulence.
In fact, the very reason why my wife bought me a "Discovery Flight" at the very beginning (and got me hooked to flying) was to get me to see that there was nothing to fear from planes, after me and her had a really bad (for me) flight back from Italy. Ok ... after a little less than 100 hours of flight I have had my dose of turbulence in flight ... while at the controls of a plane. It is reccommended that if you encounter turbulence you slow down below Va (manouvering speed), so if you encounter an especially stiff gust the plane will stall before pulling enough Gs to snap a wing. That's what the book says ... and I used to follow it to the letter, to the point that even the minimum turbulence would make me slow down to below Va. I remember once, during a mock checkride with a senior instructor we encountered some turbulence and I instinctively pulled the power to slow the plane below Va. The intructor's reaction was instantaneous and unyelding: "The hell are you doin'?" (Heavy Staten Island accent). "Slowing the plane below manouvering speed" I say, my tone of voice like that of a guy that has just been asked why the sun comes up in the morning. "Why?" "Ah .. " I stammer surprised by the question ... isn't it obvious why? "Because we are in turbulence?" it was supposed to be a statement but it came out as a question ... a sheepish question at that. The Instructor roars in laughter, for an instant louder than the engine. "Dude, this is not turbulence. Put that power back in. I want to see that needle at 2400 RPMs, in the RPM green arc." End of the argument. It was light turbulence with occasional moderate. It was one of those cold late winter days when winter is about to give up to spring but doesn't quite like the idea ... To me it felt like we were getting slammed. To him this wasn't even a tickle. Obviously our concepts of turbulence differed dramatically. So, question to the more seasoned and weathered pilots out the If I am clear air (VFR), and I am not close to mountains (so I don't have to worry about mountain waves), and I am flying around in my little cutie Piper Cherokee 180 do I even need to worry about turbulence? I am just about done reading Rod Machado's IFR book and the bottom line is that you need to be inside a thunderstorm in order to start worrying about turbulence. In most conditions, just flying around VFR in your everyday CAT (Clear Air Turbulence) doesn't warrant fussing about it, and all you really have to do is just stay in the green arc. That's all. According to what the book is saying, only older planes really need to worry about Va in moderate turbulence. Modern planes (certified after 69) can fly right through it, as long as you stay in the green arc. I don't plan to fly into thunderstorms any time soon ... so, do I even need to worry about manouvering speed if I am just flying in one of those gusty fall or spring Northeast VFR days? Is staying below the green arc good enough? -- Marco Rispoli - NJ, USA / PP-ASEL My on-line aviation community - http://www.thepilotlounge.com |
#2
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Marco Rispoli wrote:
To me it felt like we were getting slammed. To him this wasn't even a tickle. Obviously our concepts of turbulence differed dramatically. To folks that haven't experienced a lot of turbulence, a little can seem like a lot. I gave a ride to a COZY builder who had never been in a small plane - he asked whether we were in moderate to severe turbulence when I hadn't really even noticed that we had hit a tiny burble. If I am clear air (VFR), and I am not close to mountains (so I don't have to worry about mountain waves), and I am flying around in my little cutie Piper Cherokee 180 do I even need to worry about turbulence? Not really. I fly in the NE, like you do, and while I've experienced mild to moderate turbulence down low on VFR days, I've never really gotten hammered. Even when it __feels__ like I'm getting hammered, it's still considered moderate - go look up the definition of severe turbulence - basically, you can't control the plane. I don't plan to fly into thunderstorms any time soon ... so, do I even need to worry about manouvering speed if I am just flying in one of those gusty fall or spring Northeast VFR days? Nope. If you can keep the plane upright, there's no issue. Is staying below the green arc good enough? You mean red? Below the green arc, I don't think the plane will stay in the air :-). On my COZY (admittedly a homebuilt, but the concept is the same) the red arc begins at 220 mph IAS and the yellow arc begins at 140 mph IAS. Va is 140 mph, but I NEVER fly that slow - usually I'm cruising at about 175 - 180 mph IAS, no matter what the turbulence level (I'm VFR only). The only thing I slow down for in cruise is if the visibility sucks. -- Marc J. Zeitlin http://marc.zeitlin.home.comcast.net/ http://www.cozybuilders.org/ Copyright (c) 2004 |
#3
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![]() You mean red? Below the green arc, I don't think the plane will stay in the air :-). Yea sorry. I meant below the yellow arc. Not below the green arc, but IN the green arc. Typo. Thanks for the info! -- Marco Rispoli - NJ, USA / PP-ASEL My on-line aviation community - http://www.thepilotlounge.com |
#4
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If I am in an area where moderate or greater turbulence can be expected (or
is possible) like desending to an airport in mountainous terrain with the wind howling, I slow down whether I am currently experiencing any turbulence or not. If I am flying along below small cumulus and experiencing some bumps, I don't slow down. There is nothing wrong with slowing down if you are uncomfortable. I would try to keep everything in the green arcs as much as possible though. Mike MU-2 "Marco Rispoli" wrote in message et... One of the things that TERRIFIED me for the longest time was turbulence. In fact, the very reason why my wife bought me a "Discovery Flight" at the very beginning (and got me hooked to flying) was to get me to see that there was nothing to fear from planes, after me and her had a really bad (for me) flight back from Italy. Ok ... after a little less than 100 hours of flight I have had my dose of turbulence in flight ... while at the controls of a plane. It is reccommended that if you encounter turbulence you slow down below Va (manouvering speed), so if you encounter an especially stiff gust the plane will stall before pulling enough Gs to snap a wing. That's what the book says ... and I used to follow it to the letter, to the point that even the minimum turbulence would make me slow down to below Va. I remember once, during a mock checkride with a senior instructor we encountered some turbulence and I instinctively pulled the power to slow the plane below Va. The intructor's reaction was instantaneous and unyelding: "The hell are you doin'?" (Heavy Staten Island accent). "Slowing the plane below manouvering speed" I say, my tone of voice like that of a guy that has just been asked why the sun comes up in the morning. "Why?" "Ah .. " I stammer surprised by the question ... isn't it obvious why? "Because we are in turbulence?" it was supposed to be a statement but it came out as a question ... a sheepish question at that. The Instructor roars in laughter, for an instant louder than the engine. "Dude, this is not turbulence. Put that power back in. I want to see that needle at 2400 RPMs, in the RPM green arc." End of the argument. It was light turbulence with occasional moderate. It was one of those cold late winter days when winter is about to give up to spring but doesn't quite like the idea ... To me it felt like we were getting slammed. To him this wasn't even a tickle. Obviously our concepts of turbulence differed dramatically. So, question to the more seasoned and weathered pilots out the If I am clear air (VFR), and I am not close to mountains (so I don't have to worry about mountain waves), and I am flying around in my little cutie Piper Cherokee 180 do I even need to worry about turbulence? I am just about done reading Rod Machado's IFR book and the bottom line is that you need to be inside a thunderstorm in order to start worrying about turbulence. In most conditions, just flying around VFR in your everyday CAT (Clear Air Turbulence) doesn't warrant fussing about it, and all you really have to do is just stay in the green arc. That's all. According to what the book is saying, only older planes really need to worry about Va in moderate turbulence. Modern planes (certified after 69) can fly right through it, as long as you stay in the green arc. I don't plan to fly into thunderstorms any time soon ... so, do I even need to worry about manouvering speed if I am just flying in one of those gusty fall or spring Northeast VFR days? Is staying below the green arc good enough? -- Marco Rispoli - NJ, USA / PP-ASEL My on-line aviation community - http://www.thepilotlounge.com |
#5
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"Marco Rispoli" wrote in message
et... It is reccommended that if you encounter turbulence you slow down below Va (manouvering speed), so if you encounter an especially stiff gust the plane will stall before pulling enough Gs to snap a wing. Minor correction: the wings snap due to excessive lift (force), not due to excessive Gs (acceleration). Staying below Vne keeps the force from being excessive; staying below Va keeps the acceleration from being excessive. Vne does not vary with weight; Va varies in proportion to the square root of gross weight, becoming a stricter limit when weight is lower. That's because the less mass you have, the more acceleration is produced by a given force. If you don't feel more than 2G upward acceleration (or 1G downward) in turbulence, you're well within the acceleration design limits for a normal-category airplane. --Gary |
#6
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"Gary Drescher" wrote in message
news:T_z9d.436094$8_6.136539@attbi_s04... Minor correction: the wings snap due to excessive lift (force), not due to excessive Gs (acceleration). Staying below Vne keeps the force from being excessive; staying below Va keeps the acceleration from being excessive. Vne does not vary with weight; Va varies in proportion to the square root of gross weight, becoming a stricter limit when weight is lower. That's because the less mass you have, the more acceleration is produced by a given force. IMHO, you are making things more confusing, not less. Yes, what will break the structure is force. But when we talk about "G's", typically we are describing a *factor* multiplied with the weight of the airplane, not "acceleration due to gravity". In that context, all "G's" means is "a factor increasing the nominal 1G force experienced by the airplane". For example, in a bank, lift needs to be increased in order to maintain vertical speed (i.e. prevent up or down acceleration), usually at zero. At a high enough bank angle (much higher than any normal operation would require), the "G's" exceed the certification limit. Those "G's" would be a static state, not due to acceleration of the airplane (if allowed to turn, the airplane would also be accelerating, but this acceleration isn't directly related to the "G's" experienced...if you could somehow counteract the lateral force caused by the increase in lift, the wings would still experience increased "G's", but the airplane would track straight ahead). Vne is not typically related to lifting force at all, but rather to other things like flight control flutter and longitudinal strength of airframe structures (e.g. drag pulling the wings backwards). In level flight, at any airspeed, the wing is generating exactly as much lift as there is weight of the airplane. The force (lift) is constant. Va, on the other hand, is related to a variety of other things. In the sense that those things have to do with rapid changes in airfoil loading, they are related to acceleration. But ultimately, those limits still have to do forces imposed on structure. The acceleration is relevant -- higher acceleration results in higher G forces on structure -- but the reason that Va changes due to weight has less to do with the distinction between "force", "G's", and "acceleration" and more to do with the fact that there are internal structures carrying loads that don't change with total gross weight of the airplane. It's true that "the less mass you have, the more acceleration is produced by a given force", but the reason this is relevant here is not because acceleration is the problem per se. Rather, it's because there are components in the airplane with a fixed load that, with the increase in total acceleration of the airplane, could experience loads higher than designed for. Because of these, the acceleration limit of the entire airframe needs to be held constant. If it weren't for that, increased acceleration would not be a problem, because the total load (force) at lower weights would be the same, and it's force that breaks things, not acceleration. As this relates to the original statement, Va is the only airspeed related to "keeping the force from being excessive". You can fly above Va and below Vne, and still create out-of-limit *force* on the airframe, enough to damage or even break the structure, simply by exerting too rapid a control movement (on the elevator, for example). Vne does nothing to prevent this; only Va does (and it's not perfect either...there exist gusts in nature than can still exceed the structural limits at or below Va). IMHO, arguing that Vne is only about force and Va is only about acceleration is misleading and only serves to confuse the issue. Ultimately, they are *both* about force imposed on various parts of the airframe structure; they just happen to be addressing different *force-related* issues. Pete |
#7
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Oops, major slip: I meant to say Vno, not Vne.
--Gary "Gary Drescher" wrote in message news:T_z9d.436094$8_6.136539@attbi_s04... "Marco Rispoli" wrote in message et... It is reccommended that if you encounter turbulence you slow down below Va (manouvering speed), so if you encounter an especially stiff gust the plane will stall before pulling enough Gs to snap a wing. Minor correction: the wings snap due to excessive lift (force), not due to excessive Gs (acceleration). Staying below Vne keeps the force from being excessive; staying below Va keeps the acceleration from being excessive. Vne does not vary with weight; Va varies in proportion to the square root of gross weight, becoming a stricter limit when weight is lower. That's because the less mass you have, the more acceleration is produced by a given force. If you don't feel more than 2G upward acceleration (or 1G downward) in turbulence, you're well within the acceleration design limits for a normal-category airplane. --Gary |
#8
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Gary Drescher wrote:
Minor correction: the wings snap due to excessive lift (force), not due to excessive Gs (acceleration). What?!!! You can't have force with out acceleration and you can't have acceleration with out force. The most basic formula in physics is: F = MA or Force = Mass times Acceleration. A net force gives you acceleration. -- Chris W Bring Back the HP 15C http://hp15c.org Not getting the gifts you want? The Wish Zone can help. http://thewishzone.com |
#9
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"Chris W" wrote in message
news:a9T9d.5690$cJ3.3838@fed1read06... Gary Drescher wrote: Minor correction: the wings snap due to excessive lift (force), not due to excessive Gs (acceleration). What?!!! You can't have force with out acceleration and you can't have acceleration with out force. The most basic formula in physics is: F = MA or Force = Mass times Acceleration. A net force gives you acceleration. Yes, of course. But staying below Vno is what keeps the wings from snapping, by keeping the lift (force) from being more than the wing can bear. Staying below Va is what keeps the aircraft's acceleration from being more than other components can bear. The difference is important, because it explains why you have to scale Va (but not Vno) in proportion to the square root of your gross weight. For a given airspeed, weighing less obviously does not put greater lift force on the wings. But (again for a given airspeed), weighing less does increase the acceleration that the lift force causes (F=MA; for a given airspeed, lift=F is constant; so less M implies more A). That's why Va becomes a stricter limit at lower weight, whereas Vno is unchanged. --Gary |
#10
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"Gary Drescher" wrote in message
news:nCT9d.150772$wV.28126@attbi_s54... for a given airspeed, lift=F is constant; Sorry, I should have said: for a given airspeed, and at the maximum coefficient of lift, lift=F is constant. (The limits Va and Vno are calculated to be the airspeeds that offer protection even at the angle of attack that achieves the maximum coefficient of lift.) --Gary |
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