Author Topic: The Parity of turning ability  (Read 1376 times)

funked

  • Guest
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #45 on: August 01, 2000, 11:04:00 AM »
Mavric I'll go practice, it's been a while since I flew a bomber in WB.  But I did a barrell roll at the 99 Con with 6 gunners aboard in the Buff Duel.  

funked

  • Guest
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #46 on: August 01, 2000, 02:03:00 PM »
Just did a couple of loops and some barrel rolls in the B-17 in both sims, at 25% fuel, 5000 feet.  You have to dive a little to do a loop, and I lost about 1500 feet after 2 loops in both sims.

In AH you are limited by stall, in WB you are limited by the reduced elevator response that HotSeat put in when the B-24 was released.

Offline Badboy

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1226
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #47 on: August 01, 2000, 02:05:00 PM »
 
Quote
Originally posted by F4UDOA:


BadBoy,

I have always thought the actual performance of the A/C would exceed the flight tunnel test because of addition lift from the body, tail surfaces, and propwash over the wings. However in the case of the Max cl for P-51 I still don't think it is much over 1.5 in a clean config. If you solve for the Max CL based on a 106MPH stall (That comes from the flight manual not AH) the Max Cl is 1.44

Which is generous because 9700LBS is heavy in a P-51D.

F4UDOA

Your calculations look fine, but they do neglect some important factors, also I disagree with your assessment of the weight. The P-51A had a maximum take off weight of 10,600lbs and the P-51D had a maximum take off weight of 12,100lbs. If you rework the calculations for the P-51D with a 106mph stall speed just after take off, your calculations require a Cl = 1.8.

Also, you can't consider any aditional lift from the "tail surfaces" because in a stable configuration the tail will be detracting from the radial g. But the P-51D wasn't always stable, as I'll explain later. However, one significant factor that was also neglected in the research paper you referenced earlier is the contribution of prop thrust to the radial g.  As an example, consider a P-51D flying close to the 1g stall speed, at an AoA close to 18 degrees, the prop thrust will be contributing to the radial g enough to increase the apparent coefficient of lift from 1.44 to 1.6. During a flight test in which an aircraft apparently achieved a lift coefficent of 1.89 (USAAF data) the actual lift being generated aerodynamically would have been closer to a Cl of 1.7 with the component of prop thrust subtracted. That would still include the contribution from the fuselage and the effect of the prop wash energising the boundary layer, which when ignored (during wind tunnel tests on the airfoil for example) yields results much closer to the values that you are comfortable with.

As for the tail force mentioned earlier, during low speed high AoA, the engine thrust contributes to the radial g. At high AoA this can enhance the lift significantly and another benefit of this is that because normally the centre of lift and centre of gravity are relatively close together, with positive stability that requires a downward force on the tail, however, the component of prop thrust, with its large lever arm provides a strong nose up pitching moment that reduces the downward tail force, thus enhancing the lift even further. However, the Merlin powered versions, including the D we have in Aces High, were not so easy to analyse. During a turning engagement these aircraft could become unstable which could mean a stick force reversal, requiring the pilot to push forward on the stick in order to prevent the turn from tightening. This was only a problem with high fuel levels in the fuselage tank because that shifted the centre of gravity backwards creating a very small stability margin. That alone was not so much of a problem on its own, but the centre of pressure also moves forward considerably as the AoA increases until the aircraft became longitudinally unstable. In that situation the pilot needed to apply a push force to the stick in order to prevent further increase in AoA and the eventual stall. That reduction, (or in extreme cases, reversal) of the tail force would enhance the lift even further. My own calculations consider the contribution of all the factors previously mentioned, including prop thrust and longitudinal stability as described above.  

As a point of interest, the USAAF data for the P-38L is for a maximum lift coefficient with out flaps of 2.17 and that can be explained because of its twin engine configuration. The P-38 generates even more lift than expected, due to the twin engines for two reasons. Firstly, during low speed high AoA, the engine thrust contributes to the radial load factor twice as much as the single engine fighters. Another benefit of this is the reduction in downward tail force, thus enhancing the lift even further. Secondly, and more importantly, the wings are in the slipstream of the propellers and the wash speeds up and energises the air over them, which significantly increases the lift and reduces the stall speed. Unlike the single engine fighters, this does not result in asymmetrical lift because of the counter rotation, so that also reduces the tendency to spin. All of these factors result in an actual coefficient of lift much greater than the average flight sim pilot, or for that matter, your average aero graduate would normally expect. Add to that, the fact that the unusually high aspect ratio wing gave the P-38 enhanced climb rate and sustained turning ability, all of which is often ignored in flight sim'modelling. For the real P-38, that means that in a clean configuration with flaps deployed, it could turn at VERY low speed, shuddering on the edge of stall, but would not snap into a spin (unless mishandled) because unlike the single engined fighters its counter rotating engines had no net torque and no asymmetrical lift. That meant that if a good pilot stalled in a tight turn, the P-38 would just mush outwards, and that could be recovered with forward stick and no loss of altitude. A good pilot could rack the P-38 around in and out of stall to safely effect a very tight turn, and get the best advantage from that high maximum coefficient of lift <g>.

 
Quote
Originally posted by F4UDOA:


Also it is my understanding that P-47 clean stall is 115Mph, FW190A5 is almost 110Mph and the F4U is at 100Mph. Is this the same data your working with? What do your tables show for these A/C relative to each other in turning ability? How do you feel they are represented in the Simm?


Andy only pointed me to AH a few days ago. I'm investigating those very questions and I promise to keep you up to date on my thinking.

Badboy

The Damned (est. 1988)
  • AH Training Corps - Retired
  • Air Warrior Trainer - Retired

Offline Badboy

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1226
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #48 on: August 01, 2000, 02:12:00 PM »
 
Quote
Originally posted by Westy:


I remember one where you showed AH's P-56-D was off by 5mph at 18k or some alt. No big deal, that's not why I mention it.


Ahhh, I remember now. That wasn't an EM diagram, just a speed comparison and the data wasn't all my own  

 
Quote
Originally posted by Westy:


Anyway,,,, What does the graph show? It appears to me the Spit can handily and easily out turn the 51 but that's why I ask as you say it's not very disparaging and I'm not sure if I'm looking at this right or not.

-Westy


You can see from this diagram that the difference in turn rate is not as significant as the difference in turn radius. Notice how the Spitfire is only slightly farther around its circle than the P-51. However, notice how much smaller the Spitfire's turn circle is. The Spitfire can out turn the P-51, but it can turn inside it even more dramatically. This diagram only shows the situation when both fighters are at their maximum sustained turn rates in sustained level turns. At higher speeds, the advantage may swap hands and I can only determine that from an EM diagram overly, and that's on the way  

Badboy


The Damned (est. 1988)
  • AH Training Corps - Retired
  • Air Warrior Trainer - Retired

Offline F4UDOA

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1731
      • http://mywebpages.comcast.net/markw4/index.html
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #49 on: August 01, 2000, 03:18:00 PM »
Badboy,

Your friend Andy just posted the same Doc I have on stall speeds.
 
The stall for the P-51D looks like 10,000lbs at 106MPH max Cl of 1.49.

Anyway that is the Doc I was looking for.

I'm curious as to where you got the P-38 and P-51 3G stall numbers. Was it the Report of Joint Fighters or America's Hundred Thousand?
I know the author of both of those books,
Frances Dean. He is a neighbor of mine and has let me visit his house and research. The numbers for stall speeds and conditions of the aircraft are a little touchy because of who translated the text. It can be a little vague as to MPH and Knots as flaps or no flaps.

He has given me some documents I have scanned regarding flight test of the P-51B vs the F4U-1(modified) and F4U-1A(In service condition) as well as the F6F-3 and F4U-1D vs the FW190A5. Here is the link if you are interested.  
http:// [url=http://members.home.net/markw4/FW190_F4U.html]http://members.home.net/markw4/FW190_F4U.html[/url][/url]
 http://members.home.net/markw4/index2.html

Hope this helps.

Later
F4UDOA

Offline wells

  • Copper Member
  • **
  • Posts: 166
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #50 on: August 01, 2000, 04:39:00 PM »
DOA,

That formula elimates density (for simplicity), so it's only good if you use Indicated speed and not True speed.

Offline Badboy

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1226
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #51 on: August 02, 2000, 02:31:00 PM »
 
Quote
Originally posted by F4UDOA:

Your friend Andy just posted the same Doc I have on stall speeds. The stall for the P-51D looks like 10,000lbs at 106MPH max Cl of 1.49. Anyway that is the Doc I was looking for.

Yep, that figure can be found with more of the manual at:
 http://www.icon.co.za/~pauljnr/manual.htm

However, while that is based on flight tests, they do appear to have been done power off. As such, the figures won't include any of the effects we have been discussing and that's why I originally dismissed that manual as valid only for the purpose for which it was intended. I assume that was primarily the safety of pilots converting to the P-51. I also suspect that they were done power off for that very reason, to provide reliable stall figures for emergency power off landings and, I believe that it was normal to allow a small safety margin in the figures also. If you consider the stall speed from your figure for the 8,000lbs configuration you get a Cl = 1.52 and adding in the contribution of prop thrust to the lift at that speed brings the effective Cl back to 1.7. Then adding the other effects, including propwash energising the boundary layer, the increase in lift due to changes in the stability, and we are right back where we started.

 
Quote
Originally posted by F4UDOA:

The numbers for stall speeds and conditions of the aircraft are a little touchy because of who translated the text. It can be a little vague as to MPH and Knots as flaps or no flaps.

Yep, and that raises some interesting issues, but that's another story.

 
Quote
Originally posted by F4UDOA:

Here is the link if you are interested.
Hope this helps.

Many thanks... I haven't seen that before, I'll enjoy reading it.

Badboy
The Damned (est. 1988)
  • AH Training Corps - Retired
  • Air Warrior Trainer - Retired

Offline wells

  • Copper Member
  • **
  • Posts: 166
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #52 on: August 02, 2000, 03:59:00 PM »
Badboy, the Cl doesn't really increase.  It's the apparent velocity that increases because of propwash to increase the lift.  That can be misleading when it comes to the induced drag calculations that are based on Cl values.

For example:  Cl = 1.5 at 100 mph and 1.7 @ 94 mph might be the same as far as lift capacity is concerned, but when you go to do the induced drag calculations, they will not be the same.

Offline F4UDOA

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1731
      • http://mywebpages.comcast.net/markw4/index.html
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #53 on: August 02, 2000, 04:24:00 PM »
Badboy,

Yup,

The lift coefficient varies with power settings although I'm still not sure where you get the 1.72. The weight in the equation I posted was for 10,000lbs not 8,000 giving me 1.49. Anyway I know the increase of power adds airflow over the wings increasing Max Cl. I just wanted to show the data without the benifit of power to show just the lifting wing and body. If I do the cacl for Cl at 8,000lbs the Cl is much lower albeit with no power.

8,000lbs*391/(94Mph^2*233.19Wing Area)
3128000/(8836*233.19)
3128000/2060466.8
=1.518 No flaps (The calc doesn't work with flaps because it increases wing area and I don't know what to add to 233.19 to make that an accurate number)

By contrast look at the same data for the F4U-1D Corsair. Stall speeds IAS
Weight 11,300LBS
Stall No power Clean(No Flaps)100MPH
Max Cl=1.407
Stall Power Clean 96MPH
Max Cl=1.526
Stall No Power Full Flap(50Degrees)86MPH
Stall Power Full Flap 76MPH

Have you ever flown a F4U-1D in AH at Full Flap at 76MPH? It falls like a brick. The Mustang also stalls too high. But that's why these charts are important for comparison to real life numbers.

Wells,

You mentioned IAS not TAS for the equations. That's true however there is an Airspeed correction chart in the F4U manual that shows TAS to be roughly equal to IAS with the greatest difference being 3Knots high at 70knts IAS and 8knots low at 300KNTS IAS.
This would seem to work in favor of the A/C and not far off enough to affect the Max Cl.

Later
F4UDOA  

Offline Badboy

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1226
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #54 on: August 02, 2000, 05:02:00 PM »
 
Quote
Originally posted by wells:
Badboy, the Cl doesn't really increase.  It's the apparent velocity that increases because of propwash to increase the lift.  That can be misleading when it comes to the induced drag calculations that are based on Cl values.

For example:  Cl = 1.5 at 100 mph and 1.7 @ 94 mph might be the same as far as lift capacity is concerned, but when you go to do the induced drag calculations, they will not be the same.

Agreed.

Badboy

The Damned (est. 1988)
  • AH Training Corps - Retired
  • Air Warrior Trainer - Retired

Offline F4UDOA

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1731
      • http://mywebpages.comcast.net/markw4/index.html
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #55 on: August 02, 2000, 05:27:00 PM »
Now I'm confused??  

jehu737

  • Guest
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #56 on: August 02, 2000, 05:39:00 PM »
First of all...  Well... rrrr, uummmm.

Nevermind.

------------------
jehu

Offline Badboy

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1226
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #57 on: August 02, 2000, 05:45:00 PM »
 
Quote
Originally posted by F4UDOA:

The lift coefficient varies with power settings

Not really, it just appears to if you lump together all the contributions to the lift, and then calculate a new Cl based on that. As already pointed out, you can't use that value of Cl in the induced drag calcs, and I only do it for a general impression of the overal lift producing capability.

 
Quote
Originally posted by F4UDOA:

although I'm still not sure where you get the 1.72. The weight in the equation I posted was for 10,000lbs not 8,000 giving me 1.49.

Yep, but take the figures two places below that give 8000lbs and 94mph, the Cl clocks out at 1.52. Then calculate the component of prop thrust at that speed normal to the velocity vector, add that to the lift and recalculate a new Cl, it clocks out just over 1.7, but for that you need the curves for the engine power and the prop efficiency.

 
Quote
Originally posted by F4UDOA:

If I do the cacl for Cl at 8,000lbs the Cl is much lower albeit with no power.

Agreed, but I prefer to include everything I can in my model, because I've found that the little things all add up. However the performance comparison of real aircraft of that time was very unscientific, and I'm afraid we (I'm more guilty than most) are now verging on the anal retentive... Men whose lives depended on this stuff, didn't labor the point this much  

 
Quote
Originally posted by F4UDOA:

Have you ever flown a F4U-1D in AH at Full Flap at 76MPH? It falls like a brick. The Mustang also stalls too high. But that's why these charts are important for comparison to real life numbers.

Nope, (bows head in shame) I haven't flown the F4U at all yet. But I will analyse its performance in AH and provide an EM diagram for it. That will show EXACTLY how it performs in AH, and how it compares with the other AH aircraft, but only that. While I can absolutely guarantee that my EM diagrams will reflect the in-sim' aircraft performance, I'm normally reluctant to make any such claims about my real world aircraft analysis. Now if we could get Andy to put some of the real warbirds through their paces after I had fully fitted them with flight test instrumentation, we might have a
chance... Anyone here own a warbird we can play with?  

Badboy
The Damned (est. 1988)
  • AH Training Corps - Retired
  • Air Warrior Trainer - Retired

Offline wells

  • Copper Member
  • **
  • Posts: 166
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #58 on: August 02, 2000, 08:25:00 PM »
DOA,

Look at your lift equation.  It contains the CL and Velocity, right?  When you have 'power on', the velocity increases, not the CL.  However, when you calculate the new CL based on the new 'indicated' stall speed (lower), it will seem higher because the pitot tube is outside the prop flow and doesn't show the increase in velocity over the wings.  Now, if you were to base your Cdi calcs on that new CL, you'd get too much induced drag.

eye

  • Guest
The Parity of turning ability
« Reply #59 on: August 02, 2000, 09:48:00 PM »
Hi badz about time you got here. It will be a pleasure to kill you hee too


EYE