![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I am still in the design phase of my future plane. I would like to hear
opinions on design software, and even buy software that someone doesn't use anymore. Brad |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hmmmm ...
You shouldn't need any software to design a light airplane except for maybe an FEA program. However whether of not you need an FEA program depends on the type of structure you are designing. For instance if you are designing a tin airplane then there is little need for FEA (unless you really know what you are doing you will just get trash out because, for example, the FEA does not account for skin buckling). If you are designing a composite airplane then a FEA package is strongly recommended (but not essential) but it needs to laminated composite element. Generally you can calculate all the loads and do all the stressing manually using relatively simple techniques and only moderately advanced maths. I get nervous when amateur designers start asking about software as though it is an essential design tool. Usually this means that it is being used as a black box to fill in a fundamental lack of engineering knowledge with little understanding of what is actually going on inside the code or any ability to interprete what the results are telling them. That is dangerous. My suggestion is to invest your money in a copy of Bruhn's "Analysis and Design of Flight Vehicle Structures" and Stintons "Design of the Airplane" to name a couple of good texts instead of software. Read them and understand what they are saying and then decide if you still need software. If you can't understand the texts then you are not sufficiently qualified to start using design software ... period. In fact if you can't understand them then you should seriously consider buying a set of plans for an established design. Yeah I know .... half of the group is going to rubbish what I have just written but I have been around long enough to see how danagerous non professional designers are with software that they don't understand. (I earn a living designing and modifying all sorts of airplanes - certified and homebuilt). The safest way for a homebuilder to design an airplane is to produce an evolutionary design that is based on an existing sound design and do most of the design work by comparison to other aircraft designs. The best design tool if you are using this approach is a cupboard full of plans for a range of aircraft. "Brad Mallard" wrote in message ... I am still in the design phase of my future plane. I would like to hear opinions on design software, and even buy software that someone doesn't use anymore. Brad "Brad Mallard" wrote in message ... I am still in the design phase of my future plane. I would like to hear opinions on design software, and even buy software that someone doesn't use anymore. Brad |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I appreciate the concern, but I am a Metallurgical & Materials Engineer that
has made a living as a design engineer for the last 10 years. I have had all the hair pulling classes, and analyze loads for a living. I am still in the design phase of my plane, and I have an original design that I have taken parts from a dozen different planes I have seen and been in before along with a few details of my own. I was wanting the software to plug in my variables and throw it in a wind tunnel for analysis. I am very familiar with Autocad, but it doesn't have a wind tunnel. I can change my plane right now, but once I start ordering material, I will be set on my path. So, right now I want to maximize efficiency with the aerodynamics. That's what I want the software for at this time. Brad "smjmitchell" wrote in message om... Hmmmm ... You shouldn't need any software to design a light airplane except for maybe an FEA program. However whether of not you need an FEA program depends on the type of structure you are designing. For instance if you are designing a tin airplane then there is little need for FEA (unless you really know what you are doing you will just get trash out because, for example, the FEA does not account for skin buckling). If you are designing a composite airplane then a FEA package is strongly recommended (but not essential) but it needs to laminated composite element. Generally you can calculate all the loads and do all the stressing manually using relatively simple techniques and only moderately advanced maths. I get nervous when amateur designers start asking about software as though it is an essential design tool. Usually this means that it is being used as a black box to fill in a fundamental lack of engineering knowledge with little understanding of what is actually going on inside the code or any ability to interprete what the results are telling them. That is dangerous. My suggestion is to invest your money in a copy of Bruhn's "Analysis and Design of Flight Vehicle Structures" and Stintons "Design of the Airplane" to name a couple of good texts instead of software. Read them and understand what they are saying and then decide if you still need software. If you can't understand the texts then you are not sufficiently qualified to start using design software ... period. In fact if you can't understand them then you should seriously consider buying a set of plans for an established design. Yeah I know .... half of the group is going to rubbish what I have just written but I have been around long enough to see how danagerous non professional designers are with software that they don't understand. (I earn a living designing and modifying all sorts of airplanes - certified and homebuilt). The safest way for a homebuilder to design an airplane is to produce an evolutionary design that is based on an existing sound design and do most of the design work by comparison to other aircraft designs. The best design tool if you are using this approach is a cupboard full of plans for a range of aircraft. "Brad Mallard" wrote in message ... I am still in the design phase of my future plane. I would like to hear opinions on design software, and even buy software that someone doesn't use anymore. Brad "Brad Mallard" wrote in message ... I am still in the design phase of my future plane. I would like to hear opinions on design software, and even buy software that someone doesn't use anymore. Brad |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Brad Mallard wrote:
I appreciate the concern, but I am a Metallurgical & Materials Engineer that has made a living as a design engineer for the last 10 years. I have had all the hair pulling classes, and analyze loads for a living. I am still in the design phase of my plane, and I have an original design that I have taken parts from a dozen different planes I have seen and been in before along with a few details of my own. I was wanting the software to plug in my variables and throw it in a wind tunnel for analysis. I am very familiar with Autocad, but it doesn't have a wind tunnel. I can change my plane right now, but once I start ordering material, I will be set on my path. So, right now I want to maximize efficiency with the aerodynamics. That's what I want the software for at this time. Brad "smjmitchell" wrote in message om... Hmmmm ... You shouldn't need any software to design a light airplane except for maybe an FEA program. However whether of not you need an FEA program depends on the type of structure you are designing. For instance if you are designing a tin airplane then there is little need for FEA (unless you really know what you are doing you will just get trash out because, for example, the FEA does not account for skin buckling). If you are designing a composite airplane then a FEA package is strongly recommended (but not essential) but it needs to laminated composite element. Generally you can calculate all the loads and do all the stressing manually using relatively simple techniques and only moderately advanced maths. I get nervous when amateur designers start asking about software as though it is an essential design tool. Usually this means that it is being used as a black box to fill in a fundamental lack of engineering knowledge with little understanding of what is actually going on inside the code or any ability to interprete what the results are telling them. That is dangerous. My suggestion is to invest your money in a copy of Bruhn's "Analysis and Design of Flight Vehicle Structures" and Stintons "Design of the Airplane" to name a couple of good texts instead of software. Read them and understand what they are saying and then decide if you still need software. If you can't understand the texts then you are not sufficiently qualified to start using design software ... period. In fact if you can't understand them then you should seriously consider buying a set of plans for an established design. Yeah I know .... half of the group is going to rubbish what I have just written but I have been around long enough to see how danagerous non professional designers are with software that they don't understand. (I earn a living designing and modifying all sorts of airplanes - certified and homebuilt). The safest way for a homebuilder to design an airplane is to produce an evolutionary design that is based on an existing sound design and do most of the design work by comparison to other aircraft designs. The best design tool if you are using this approach is a cupboard full of plans for a range of aircraft. "Brad Mallard" wrote in message ... I am still in the design phase of my future plane. I would like to hear opinions on design software, and even buy software that someone doesn't use anymore. Brad "Brad Mallard" wrote in message ... I am still in the design phase of my future plane. I would like to hear opinions on design software, and even buy software that someone doesn't use anymore. Brad If that's what you want, search for X-Plane. I hear it has aerodynamic modeling capability. As a bonus, you can virtually fly your new design around. Jason |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Wind tunnels, truck tests and large scale RC - or a test
pilot that you didn't like anyway - are still needed." Oh boy, I hear a sound coming our way. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Yes care must be exercised in using other designs for comparison as
well. I would take some of the more reputable designs. There are certainly some very poor designs that are quite popular and so the popularity of the design is not a measure of the goodness of the engineering. However I think if a homebuilder exercises with care and takes appropriate advice on some details then they stand a much better chance of designing a successful homebuilt using this method than by trying to do the analysis from first principles. OK WRT aerodynamic software. I use the CMARC/PSW code from Aerologic (Peter Garrison). This is a linear panel code and quite suitable for what you need. Not cheap but probably the entry level aerodynamic software if you want build a complete 3D model of the airplane. It is not that easy to use and will realistically take you a year or part time effort to learn properly and do the analysis on your airplane. The support provided by Peter and Dave Pinella is excellant and I would recommend this program. However I would also buy a copy of Katz "Low Speed Aerodynamics" to accompany this program to help you understand the theory and limitations of panel methods. A simpler approach may be a Vortex lattice code. This is a cheaper option but only allows a 2D planar model of the configuration. I use the NASA VLM code. You may be able to find a source of this on the web for download. If it is aifoils you are interested in then use XFOIL. You can find that free on the web. I use that and with care it is reliable for most cases. ONce again though I would urge you to analyse a lot of airfoils with known characteristics and learn the pitfalls of the code before you use it to develop new sections. Unfortunately there is no cheap FEA software that is any good. Entry level is realistically in the range of $4000 USD. There are cheaper codes though. It really depends on what you need to do and the sorts of structure that you want to analysis. Give me more details and I can advise further. I have used (and routinely use) a range of FEA codes. WRT the X-Pilot program. I am not familar with it but it sounds more like a flight simulation package. There are a number of such programs around. Any flight simulation package that is worth anything will require the input of a set of aerodynamic derivates for the aircraft. This is not something that an amateur designer will be capable of calculating with any accuracy. I think I can fairly safely say that this is the domain of the professional - even professional engineers stuggle with this. However if you want to try then get yourself a copy of the USAF Stability and COntrol DATCOM and the relevant ESDU data sheets as a starting point. OK final comment. When using any software it is important to spend a lot of time running it on problems with known results before you use it to design something new. This helps you understand how to run it, the pitfalls and helps teach how to interprete the output data. I cannot emphasis this enough. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Buy a new old stock (5.66) version of X-Plane off E-bay for $5.
You will be asked to enter a parasitic drag number but the forces beyond that will be calculated for you depending on the flight surfaces you create and the air foils you pick or design. Regards "Brad Mallard" wrote in message ... I am still in the design phase of my future plane. I would like to hear opinions on design software, and even buy software that someone doesn't use anymore. Brad |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay wrote...
the forces beyond that will be calculated for you... ********** Change "calculated" to "estimated" and you'll be close to correct. If you're doing a non-derivative design and want some hope at all of being close in your estimate you better understand the limitations and assumptions that went into XPlane specifically and blade element theory in general. Dave 'carpe datum' Hyde |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I agree there is no way that you can accurately simulate the behaviour of an
airplane without the use of derivatives. All the "real" simulators work this way. Even a model based on simple linear derivatives will have many limitations associated with it. "Dave Hyde" wrote in message ... Jay wrote... the forces beyond that will be calculated for you... ********** Change "calculated" to "estimated" and you'll be close to correct. If you're doing a non-derivative design and want some hope at all of being close in your estimate you better understand the limitations and assumptions that went into XPlane specifically and blade element theory in general. Dave 'carpe datum' Hyde |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Hardware and software for motion platform | [email protected] | Home Built | 0 | November 4th 04 10:57 PM |
Aircraft Design 1942 flying boats FA | Sally | Home Built | 0 | August 19th 04 06:49 PM |
amateur design consultant? | Shin Gou | Home Built | 14 | June 30th 04 01:34 AM |
ANNOUNCEMENT - Flight Dynamics Software | J2 Aircraft Information | Home Built | 3 | June 8th 04 11:52 PM |
Carbon Spar design and construction workshop | Marske Flying Wings | Home Built | 0 | September 18th 03 05:47 PM |