Originally posted by Sorrow[S=A]:
Maybe the Dora made the rolling axis less unstable meaning the plane now had a rolling inertia greater than the "A" series? This would mean there would be more of a pause between direction changes and the plane would take longer to spin- though once started would quickly achieve it's previous rate.
Uh yes, of course ,can be...
but can you tell me why a plane with the SAME wing as A8 and with the only modification of an inline engine and 4 feet more of fuselage lenght has more rolling inertia?
Because i see NO reason for it...
Originally posted by Toad:
You've got the same wing on a longer and probably a bit heavier airframe, right?
Half right only. D9 is 4 feet longer than A8 and I dont see how can this affect rollrate or roll inertia. But D9 was 300lbs LIGHTER than A8, not heavier.
Anyway I dont see how can that affect to rollrate or inertia, too.
Avout CoG, if I dont remember bad ,it was EXACTLY in the same spot in D9 as in A8...that was the reason for the "plug" in the aft fuselage, to keep the CoG in the same spot.
But again, if CoG was a bit forward in D9 than in A8...why should it affect rollrate?? it should affect pitch and yaw, but not roll, isnt it?...
If I dont remember bad, 190 series rollrate was not induced by "roll unstability", but because its little wing and short span, mixed with electrically controled ailerons that made roll an easy thing. THat was also the reason for the good hispeed handling in 190. From what I can see it has nothing to do with weights, CoG, fuselage lenght or engine torque, but for the reasons stated avobe.
So, again, can someone tell me why should D9 have less rollrate than A8?. Because until now I see no reason for it...
Pyro? maybe you knoe something about this?. I'm really curious about this matter (as you all can suppose

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[This message has been edited by RAM (edited 07-23-2000).]