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#1
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Do I have the following right?:-
Jet:- Vx IAS stays the same as altitude gets higher. Vy IAS reduces as altitude gets higher. Both angle and rate of climb lessen as altitude increases. Prop:- Vx IAS increases as altitude gets higher. Vy IAS reduces as altitude gets higher. Both angle and rate of climb lessen as altitude increases. If the above is right, is there a rule of thumb for how much the various speeds change, or is it really aircraft+powerplant reliant? TIA |
#2
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"xerj" wrote in message
... Do I have the following right?:- Jet:- Vx IAS stays the same as altitude gets higher. Vy IAS reduces as altitude gets higher. Both angle and rate of climb lessen as altitude increases. Prop:- Vx IAS increases as altitude gets higher. Vy IAS reduces as altitude gets higher. Both angle and rate of climb lessen as altitude increases. I'm not convinced that it is right. Vx occurs at the airspeed where excess thrust is maximized, while Vy occurs at the airspeed where excess power is maximized. Off the top of my head, I don't see any reason to believe that for a jet, that it's a given that maximum excess thrust would occur at a constant airspeed with respect to altitude. It's true that many jet installations are derated, so that the engine can continue to produce sea-level power and thrust up to a certain altitude. But then, the same is true for many turbocharged piston-engined propeller airplanes. And some jet installations aren't derated and so power and thrust falls off with altitude just as would happen for a normally-aspirated piston-engined airplane. Beyond the difference in combustion air compression, a jet is really not that different from a propeller, with respect to producing thrust. Fan/prop blades both pull air in and push it out...the jet just happens to have a shroud around it. The similarity is especially great with respect to high-bypass turbofan engines, where thrust from combustion is a very small proportion of total thrust. I admit that I haven't studied the facts surrounding your question closely. But I think that even with a pure jet, thrust is not actually constant with altitude (except in the case of derating, of course). At first glance, I don't see any reason to believe that Vx and Vy behave significantly differently depending on the basic engine technology (ignoring the question of altitude-compensating technology like turbochargers, of course). Pete |
#3
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I agree with Peter, and haven't ever seen a difference just because of
engine type. One minor nit.......jet engines are typically FLAT rated, not derated, although that also happens. Flat rated means that a big engine with lots of horsepower is limited to some lower horsepower at sea level. That engine can then continue to extract that same horsepower as it climbs to an altitude to where it typically temps out. Here is a discussion of falt and derating. http://www.pprune.org/forums/showthread.php?t=222816 Karl "curator" N185KG "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... "xerj" wrote in message ... Do I have the following right?:- Jet:- Vx IAS stays the same as altitude gets higher. Vy IAS reduces as altitude gets higher. Both angle and rate of climb lessen as altitude increases. Prop:- Vx IAS increases as altitude gets higher. Vy IAS reduces as altitude gets higher. Both angle and rate of climb lessen as altitude increases. I'm not convinced that it is right. Vx occurs at the airspeed where excess thrust is maximized, while Vy occurs at the airspeed where excess power is maximized. Off the top of my head, I don't see any reason to believe that for a jet, that it's a given that maximum excess thrust would occur at a constant airspeed with respect to altitude. It's true that many jet installations are derated, so that the engine can continue to produce sea-level power and thrust up to a certain altitude. But then, the same is true for many turbocharged piston-engined propeller airplanes. And some jet installations aren't derated and so power and thrust falls off with altitude just as would happen for a normally-aspirated piston-engined airplane. Beyond the difference in combustion air compression, a jet is really not that different from a propeller, with respect to producing thrust. Fan/prop blades both pull air in and push it out...the jet just happens to have a shroud around it. The similarity is especially great with respect to high-bypass turbofan engines, where thrust from combustion is a very small proportion of total thrust. I admit that I haven't studied the facts surrounding your question closely. But I think that even with a pure jet, thrust is not actually constant with altitude (except in the case of derating, of course). At first glance, I don't see any reason to believe that Vx and Vy behave significantly differently depending on the basic engine technology (ignoring the question of altitude-compensating technology like turbochargers, of course). Pete |
#4
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I'm not convinced that it is right.
Vx occurs at the airspeed where excess thrust is maximized, while Vy occurs at the airspeed where excess power is maximized. Off the top of my head, I don't see any reason to believe that for a jet, that it's a given that maximum excess thrust would occur at a constant airspeed with respect to altitude. The ***TAS*** would definitely increase, but the drag/thrust curve moves to the right rather than to the right and up like the power required curve. As far as I can tell, and I'm basing it (probably WAY too much) on the interactive program found at this page http://www.professionalpilot.ca/aero.../climb_jet.htm, the ***IAS*** remains almost constant for a jet. Confusing stuff. |
#5
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"xerj" wrote in message
... The ***TAS*** would definitely increase, We were talking about IAS. I didn't change that. but the drag/thrust curve moves to the right rather than to the right and up like the power required curve. As far as I can tell, and I'm basing it (probably WAY too much) on the interactive program found at this page http://www.professionalpilot.ca/aero.../climb_jet.htm, the ***IAS*** remains almost constant for a jet. Got an example that doesn't require the installation of an ActiveX control? I have, against my better judgment, already succumbed to Java and Flash, but I draw the line at adding Shockwave to the mix. Also note that "remains almost constant" isn't the same as "stays the same". Confusing stuff. It's only confusing to those who haven't studied it enough to have an intuitive sense of how things work. Of course, that describes most of us (including myself). ![]() seems to me that in aerodynamics particularly, most analysis winds up being based on some fairly simple principles. The trick is knowing how to apply them. Pete |
#6
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No, I don't have an example without the need for shockwave.
I'll trawl around and see if I can can up with something. |
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