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#1
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karel wrote:
has the canard concept ever been applied to a flying boat? with pusher propellers? if not, any good reasons? KA (just wondering) (1911 Voisin) http://www.fiddlersgreen.net/AC/airc.../info/info.htm |
#2
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![]() karel wrote: has the canard concept ever been applied to a flying boat? with pusher propellers? if not, any good reasons? I know someone who made a VW powered canard equipped amphibian. Dunno if it was a pusher or a puller, I'll ask next EAA meeting. IIUC, the plane flew well in the air but would not break free of the water at less than 70 mph. Considering that until then, the air rudder was ineffective and the water rudder became ineffective around 40 - 45 mph that make takeoffs a bit hairy. He said landing speed on the water was also around 70 mph, not sure of the reason for that, surely his stall speed was lower. That plane has been dismantled and the engine used for his current non-canard amphibian project (tractor), now undergoing taxi tests. AFAIK, no website. -- FF |
#3
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yep ...
XTC amphibian Also the Merganser (spelling ??) Circa late 70's. Not sure if it ever flew. This is the VW design refered to by another post. "karel" wrote in message ... has the canard concept ever been applied to a flying boat? with pusher propellers? if not, any good reasons? KA (just wondering) |
#4
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![]() .......... :-)) wrote: yep ... XTC amphibian Also the Merganser (spelling ??) Circa late 70's. Not sure if it ever flew. This is the VW design refered to by another post. A couple of weeks ago I was talking with Mr Merganser (also unsure of the spelling) at a fly-in. He said the earlier attempt flew beautifully in the air but landing it was too dangerous. I previously heard about the problems taking off from the water second hand. This rather clearly implies that it did in fact, fly. His present amphibian project is not a canard design. Don't canard designs have a reputation for requiring a smooth landing strip (paved, dry lakebed, etc) in order to take off in a reasonable distance? Supposedly this is because a bumpy field interferes with the establishment of laminar flow over the canard. Seems like you'd have the same problem taking off from water. -- FF |
#5
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#7
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fredfighter wrote:
Hmm. ISTM that a canard does not stall when the aircraft pitches down, it stalls when the aircraft pitches up. Correct. .... Thus each time the aircraft hits a bump or wave the nose pitches up stalling the canard so that the nose of the aircraft comes down hard into the next wave or onto the next bump and then nosedives under the wave or bounces higher and stalls again. Possible. Thanks, now I have a much better understanding of the rough field take-off problem with a canard. Well, you would if that was the reason for the rough field issues, but it isn't. I fly a COZY MKIV, and what happens on a rough field, due to the geometry of the nosegear (and NOT dependent solely on the fact that it's a canard aircraft) is that as high grass or bumps cause the nose gear to flex somewhat, the nose of the plane drops a couple of inches, causing the AOA of the canard to decrease, and decreasing lift. If the drag from the grass/dirt, etc. is high enough, the canard cannot reach a speed or AOA where it can rotate the aircraft. So the problem is one of inability to rotate due to drag on the nosegear and resulting geometry changes that lower the AOA, NOT on canard stalling. I have taken off from a few paved runways that are very bumpy (AFN in NH comes to mind), and if anything, the bumps can help to get the nose of the plane in the air at speed, and never come close to raising the nose far enough to stall the canard. -- Marc J. Zeitlin http://marc.zeitlin.home.comcast.net/ http://www.cozybuilders.org/ Copyright (c) 2005 |
#8
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My distant relatives built several canard biplane pusher seaplanes
between 1911 and 1917. The used engines that they built themselves. The planes were turned with their patented "Jib Sheet Rudder" which was a surface the was mounted on the outside interplane struts between each wing and pivoted to the outside to turn the plane. It was supposed to have worked very well. If you can find a copy of Jane's Planes from back then look for the Boland Aeroplane and Motor Company. There is also a book called "Wings of the Weird and Wonderful" that has a picture of the landplane version. Michele karel wrote: has the canard concept ever been applied to a flying boat? with pusher propellers? if not, any good reasons? KA (just wondering) |
#9
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Michele, hello from Venezuela. As your relative Frank Edward Boland was the first person to fly in Venezuela, I has been researching his life and work for several years now. Here are the results (in Spanish, not the latest version). I will like to have access to any files or records your family keep on that venture, in order to prepare an english version:
https://www.scribd.com/doc/201685272...autico-Ene2014 Thanks in advance Alejandro Irausquin Aeronautical Engineer/Latino-american aviation historian LAAHS El martes, 19 de julio de 2005, 17:54:19 (UTC-4), escribió: My distant relatives built several canard biplane pusher seaplanes between 1911 and 1917. The used engines that they built themselves. The planes were turned with their patented "Jib Sheet Rudder" which was a surface the was mounted on the outside interplane struts between each wing and pivoted to the outside to turn the plane. It was supposed to have worked very well. If you can find a copy of Jane's Planes from back then look for the Boland Aeroplane and Motor Company. There is also a book called "Wings of the Weird and Wonderful" that has a picture of the landplane version. Michele |
#10
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The Rutan style smaller wings canards you see today are designed for
aerodynamic efficiency and speed and not for load carrying capacity. Some of the canard efficiency (and turbulence advantage) is that both the canard and main wing is lifting, whereas in conventional aircraft the tail is actually pushing down. The canard flies just like other wings - obeys the same law of physics - but current canard wing designs are for higher stall speeds to stall before the main wing, a flight safety feature. That means the landing/takeoff speed is limited by the relatively high stall speed of the small canard wing. Canard aircraft are generally more CG sensitive and the canard stall speed is dependent on the CG position - means longer takeoff for front CG and shorter for aft CG. By contrast the conventional design has the CG near lift center of main wing which carries most of the load and essentially dictates the stall speed - considerably lower for the large wing. It is possible to design a canard with large wings and lower stall speeds suitable for water landing. It would probably look something like the Wright brothers design with the canard way out up front to minimize the canard wing CG position dependency. But why bother. -------------------------------------------------------------- SQ2000 canard: http://www.abri.com/sq2000 |
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