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#1
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Still thinking about VNE and whether it is usually stated as a TAS
rather than an IAS (one must read the POH to be sure, of course). I've gotten the notion, probably from comments I've not understood very well, that the "coffin corner" is the intersection of stall speed as an IAS indication on the airspeed indicator, and VNE understood as a TAS and thus occurs at a decreasing IAS with altitude. I guess the consequence of this notion is that as aircraft altitude goes up the stall speed TAS goes up to ultimately bump into the VNE TAS. If VNE is published as an IAS, like stall speed, then stall speed and VNE would never converge. Or maybe it was the Manuevering TAS that could bump into the VNE TAS. IS this what is sometimes referred to as the "coffin corner"? |
#2
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I have always understood that "coffin corner" is when the TAS for the stall
increases to meet the onset of compressibility or whatever which occurs at Mach 1. I understand that the TAS of Mach 1 does not change with the reduced density at altitude, whereas of course the TAS of the stall increases. I am sure I remember reading years ago that "coffin corner" was the limitation for the maximum altitude for operating the Boeing B47. W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.). Remove "ic" to reply. "Jim" wrote in message ... Still thinking about VNE and whether it is usually stated as a TAS rather than an IAS (one must read the POH to be sure, of course). I've gotten the notion, probably from comments I've not understood very well, that the "coffin corner" is the intersection of stall speed as an IAS indication on the airspeed indicator, and VNE understood as a TAS and thus occurs at a decreasing IAS with altitude. I guess the consequence of this notion is that as aircraft altitude goes up the stall speed TAS goes up to ultimately bump into the VNE TAS. If VNE is published as an IAS, like stall speed, then stall speed and VNE would never converge. Or maybe it was the Manoeuvring TAS that could bump into the VNE TAS. Is this what is sometimes referred to as the "coffin corner"? |
#3
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Jim,
You hit the nail on the head in paragraph three then confused yourself! As you climb your Stall TAS increases however VNE TAS doesnt. So they will run into each other at very high altitudes or at least give you a very small airspeed envelope to operate in. It is this fact that you have to remember. Always think in TAS and you cant go far wrong. IAS is only a value that we see and unless you convert it accordingly to TAS at altitude you may as well forget it. At 18:00 16 December 2003, Jim wrote: Still thinking about VNE and whether it is usually stated as a TAS rather than an IAS (one must read the POH to be sure, of course). I've gotten the notion, probably from comments I've not understood very well, that the 'coffin corner' is the intersection of stall speed as an IAS indication on the airspeed indicator, and VNE understood as a TAS and thus occurs at a decreasing IAS with altitude. I guess the consequence of this notion is that as aircraft altitude goes up the stall speed TAS goes up to ultimately bump into the VNE TAS. If VNE is published as an IAS, like stall speed, then stall speed and VNE would never converge. Or maybe it was the Manuevering TAS that could bump into the VNE TAS. IS this what is sometimes referred to as the 'coffin corner'? |
#4
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On 16 Dec 2003 18:40:56 GMT, Mark Brown
wrote: Jim, You hit the nail on the head in paragraph three then confused yourself! As you climb your Stall TAS increases however VNE TAS doesnt. So they will run into each other at very high altitudes or at least give you a very small airspeed envelope to operate in. It is this fact that you have to remember. Always think in TAS and you cant go far wrong. IAS is only a value that we see and unless you convert it accordingly to TAS at altitude you may as well forget it. Thank you Mark. I think I understand it now. |
#5
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Jim wrote:
It is this fact that you have to remember. You can climb pretty high in an average glider before you "have to remember" this. If you actually find a wave to climb that high, I guess you rather have to remember the the boiling point of water... Stefan |
#6
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Jim wrote:
Still thinking about VNE and whether it is usually stated as a TAS rather than an IAS (one must read the POH to be sure, of course). I've gotten the notion, probably from comments I've not understood very well, that the "coffin corner" is the intersection of stall speed as an IAS indication on the airspeed indicator, and VNE understood as a TAS and thus occurs at a decreasing IAS with altitude. I guess the consequence of this notion is that as aircraft altitude goes up the stall speed TAS goes up to ultimately bump into the VNE TAS. If VNE is published as an IAS, like stall speed, then stall speed and VNE would never converge. VNE is due to two effects, compressibility (TAS affected), and force of the wind (IAS). Stall speed is an IAS thing. The corner is when you can go no slower (stall/IAS) and no faster (compressibility/TAS). Bad place to be. |
#7
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In article ,
Jim wrote: Still thinking about VNE and whether it is usually stated as a TAS rather than an IAS (one must read the POH to be sure, of course). I've gotten the notion, probably from comments I've not understood very well, that the "coffin corner" is the intersection of stall speed as an IAS indication on the airspeed indicator, and VNE understood as a TAS and thus occurs at a decreasing IAS with altitude. I guess the consequence of this notion is that as aircraft altitude goes up the stall speed TAS goes up to ultimately bump into the VNE TAS. If VNE is published as an IAS, like stall speed, then stall speed and VNE would never converge. Or maybe it was the Manuevering TAS that could bump into the VNE TAS. IS this what is sometimes referred to as the "coffin corner"? I think "coffin corner" is a totally different phrase relating to high speed stall buffet. At some high mach number at high altitude, a shockwave causes airflow separation from the wing and a stall. There is also for the wing a low speed "traditional" stall which occurs with too much angle of attack. There is some TAS where the curves of stall speed and max mach number intersect. This happens at some altitude. At that altitude and above, the aircraft WILL stall, one way or the other, despite precise speed control. I'm told the U-2 used to fly around at 80 kts IAS at this coffin corner, and the FL was determined by how much turbulence was expected (flying right at the intersection altitude can only be done at perfect airspeed in perfectly smooth air). Another issue is designing an aircraft shape where all the parts (underbelly, top, tail surfaces, wings) stall at the same mach mach number (high and maybe low speed). This prevents shaking and buffeting and allows a higher mach speed, and better efficiency, and apparently higher altitudes before reaching "coffin corner" or equivalent "coffin corners" for turbulent conditions. I watched a video at a 737 ground school about a captain who flew a 737 into coffin corner, hit some turbulence, low speed stalled, and spun the 737. After spinning through many thousands of feet, he recovered. I heard the galley was out of liquor a few minutes later... I don't believe "coffin corner" is from high speed separation over the wing over the wing. But there may be some relation as the wavi air goes over the wing and the rather narrow control surface and waves over the aileron or elevator, causing it to stall, engage, stall, engage, etc. I.e. flutter. So maybe flutter is related to narrowness of glider control surfaces? And therefore each control surface has its own little tiny "coffin corner"? Who knows... |
#8
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In article 3fdf566a$1@darkstar, Mark James Boyd wrote:
I don't believe "coffin corner" is from high speed separation over the wing over the wing. I should have said "I don't believe it's from separation over the wing of a glider." The glider's don't go that fast, don't have a shockwave, and don't reach anything near the effects of mach. |
#9
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Jim writes:
Still thinking about VNE and whether it is usually stated as a TAS rather than an IAS (one must read the POH to be sure, of course). I've gotten the notion, probably from comments I've not understood very well, that the "coffin corner" is the intersection of stall speed as an IAS indication on the airspeed indicator, and VNE understood as a TAS and thus occurs at a decreasing IAS with altitude. I guess the consequence of this notion is that as aircraft altitude goes up the stall speed TAS goes up to ultimately bump into the VNE TAS. If VNE is published as an IAS, like stall speed, then stall speed and VNE would never converge. Or maybe it was the Manuevering TAS that could bump into the VNE TAS. IS this what is sometimes referred to as the "coffin corner"? As you get higher, power drops off so you CAN'T go faster, or you get Mach limited, and IAS drops so you get closer to stall. So, you can't go faster, and you can't go slower or you stall. As soon as you have the slightest load increase or slight turn, stall, and probably spin. You do not have to go anywhere near Vne or Va, just get high enough. -- Paul Repacholi 1 Crescent Rd., +61 (08) 9257-1001 Kalamunda. West Australia 6076 comp.os.vms,- The Older, Grumpier Slashdot Raw, Cooked or Well-done, it's all half baked. EPIC, The Architecture of the future, always has been, always will be. |
#10
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![]() "Paul Repacholi" wrote in message ... Jim writes: Still thinking about VNE and whether it is usually stated as a TAS rather than an IAS (one must read the POH to be sure, of course). I've gotten the notion, probably from comments I've not understood very well, that the "coffin corner" is the intersection of stall speed as an IAS indication on the airspeed indicator, and VNE understood as a TAS and thus occurs at a decreasing IAS with altitude. I guess the consequence of this notion is that as aircraft altitude goes up the stall speed TAS goes up to ultimately bump into the VNE TAS. If VNE is published as an IAS, like stall speed, then stall speed and VNE would never converge. Or maybe it was the Manuevering TAS that could bump into the VNE TAS. IS this what is sometimes referred to as the "coffin corner"? As you get higher, power drops off so you CAN'T go faster, or you get Mach limited, and IAS drops so you get closer to stall. So, you can't go faster, and you can't go slower or you stall. As soon as you have the slightest load increase or slight turn, stall, and probably spin. You do not have to go anywhere near Vne or Va, just get high enough. There's a story in here http://www.nationalgeographic.com/wave/index.html Click the plus sign on the 747. Frank Whiteley Colorado |
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