Author Topic: AH FM flaw or miss-conception?  (Read 5490 times)

Offline Badboy

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #60 on: January 04, 2005, 09:22:25 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Crumpp
Thanks again for the reply, Badboy.  Very informative.

Why in a fighter would it be slower?

It wouldn’t, and I don’t think I said it would?

Quote
Originally posted by Crumpp
Seems to me it would be faster.  Less mass means less resistance to change. It is already moving that way because the CG is shifting correct?

I agree with the first part of what you say here, but not sure about the part where the CG is shifting, because it doesn’t really shift, as such. When you hear that expression it normally implies something else is doing the shifting, like the cargo, the passengers, or the fuel. The CG itself is just an imaginary point, as HiTech said, the point the plane balances at. So when the tail is there the CG is in one place, The moment it goes away it is somewhere else, but its original location is what causes the original motion, after that, as I said it is just a lump of metal falling.

Quote
Originally posted by Crumpp
Yes but the wing is still a large hunk of drag rather like a sail or a streamer, right?  
When the CG shifts foward the largest amount of drag would fall last.  The prop is still trying to pull the engine, correct?  Thrust out front and drag in the rear?  

I think a lump of metal with a propeller attached, will fall in such a way that it drags the propeller behind it, just like a parachute. Same thing happens with small seeds that spin to the ground like helicopters with the heavy lump underneath, like the one below. Remember, the propeller is still producing thrust, and that's creating a lot more resistance to motion than the drag of the wings and fuselage, so it should fall last.  
 


Just seems natural to me.

Hope that helps…

Badboy
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Offline Straiga

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #61 on: January 04, 2005, 11:00:25 PM »
http://www.onlineaviation.org/My%20Documents/weight.htm

Quote
Crump CG isnt effected by any force. It is just the center of gravity i.e. where the plane always balances at. In some ways you can think of it as a fulcrum.


IM LMAO, Well some force just shot the tail away, that CG location is now going the move. The new lever is now the weight of the engine and the fulcrum that is back by the CG has no leverage from the opposit side, to balance. The CG now moves forward. So quess what the nose pitches forward. Due to good ole plain gravity. The prop is now going to take the rest of the airframe straight down to the seen of the accident. Read the ME-109 balancing on a pin in my post.

The prop cant hold the weight of the airplane in the air the main wing only can in level flight. The main wing has to produce more lift then total weight of the airplane.

Please dont explain MACH TUCK I wouldnt want you to make my point for me. Same goes for Tail Stalls due to Icing.

Im still laughing.

Its ok to admit that your wrong some may laugh but its still ok.

Crumpp you have a good understanding of the concept.

Straiga

Offline Crumpp

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #62 on: January 04, 2005, 11:20:52 PM »
Quote
I think a lump of metal with a propeller attached, will fall in such a way that it drags the propeller behind it, just like a parachute.


Wholeheartily agree, Badboy.
But we are not talking just the engine/prop in freefall.

I think though with the rest of the aircraft minus tail attached, Straiga is correct.

I don't want to get in the middle of a "engineer" fight because I have the "weakest" resume at the table between Badboy, Straiga, and Hitech.  I know Hitech threw out the insult about your teaching ability Straiga which was surprising.  I have found him to be more than willing to help or answer questions.  He is a nice guy and I would suggest giving them a call.

That said looking at the science and Badboy's bomber crash, it makes perfect sense what Straiga is saying.

Crumpp

Offline Straiga

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #63 on: January 05, 2005, 03:10:08 AM »
That is suprising. Thanks Hitech

But did I ever deserve the wise remark to begin with.

Im just trying to express a point of view with alot of practical experience to back it up. I cant even tell you how many different airplanes I have flown in over 30 years of flying. From a 1000 lbs to 550,000 lbs. of aluminum. Is there anybody else with the same experince lets talk.

But if you bark at me I will bark back its kinda fun.

Some people probably think Im not telling the truth about my flying experience or think I dont have a single license in my pocket. Talk to JB 11 or I think he goes under Pokesz now, he has see them. I dont think his really believed how my big my house was either until he saw it, I told him it was a 3 story 6400 sq ft.  Im trying to help him get his rotorcraft rating.

Plus I dont have to prove anything to anybody, I could care less what anybody thinks frankly. Why do I have to blow sunshine up anybodies you know what, to be cool or something. Give me a brake I have better things to do.  But if some times you want to read what I have to say you might learn something. If it sounds like Im mad about this, Im not at all, far from it.

Its takes me about a second in a day to pay for flying in AHII for a month. I enjoy flying in AHII I also enjoy the friend ships and some team work. Its like playing chess, what is the other guy going to do. Some guys really hate me in a tank fight, which is good they keep dying from frustration.

You know you can read a book riding a bike, but its different when you ride one. Also what you read out of a book is not always the way it is either.

Straiga

Straiga

Offline Casca

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #64 on: January 05, 2005, 03:17:36 AM »
Okeedokee.  You have a fat kid and a skinny kid on a teeter totter.  The fulcrum is a literal CG and a metaphorical CL (supporting the sytem) which are co-located.  This of course has to be closer to the fat kid for the system to balance.  The fat kid is the engine and prop and the skinny kid is the empennage.  The skinny kid falls off the teeter totter (or part the the skinny kid...the horizontal stab).  According to what I think I'm hearing is when the skinny kid falls off the fat kid goes up.  The prop doesn't have enough area to act as a parachute and if it producing thrust is insensible of which way is up unless informed by the CG relative to the CL of the system.  When you are considering the plummeting carcass of an erstwhile single engine aircraft what you really have is a light aluminum structure with most the heavy stuff at one end.

Also although the CG shift is undoubtedly a factor I don't consider it to be the primary factor in the pitch down phenomena.  The primary factors are the negative pitching moment of the foil and the loss of the downforce on the tail which is the condition that most airplanes operate in most of the time.

That was an interesting article that bad boy posted but I'm just unaware of any aircraft that carry the tail around with certain exceptions.  F-16s for instance run the CG way back and that oddball NASA plane with the swept forward wings (X29 or something?).  These planes are flown by computers however.

The article has the CG behind the aerodynamic center but by the look of the tail it is still placed ahead of the Cl (the tail looks configured to lift down).
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Offline Straiga

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #65 on: January 05, 2005, 03:28:17 AM »
Casca you crack me up. Sometimes you have to put it simple terms so they can understand it. WTG

Straiga
« Last Edit: January 05, 2005, 03:30:19 AM by Straiga »

Offline hitech

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #66 on: January 05, 2005, 09:26:33 AM »
Quote
Im just trying to express a point of view with alot of practical experience to back it up. I cant even tell you how many different airplanes I have flown in over 30 years of flying. From a 1000 lbs to 550,000 lbs. of aluminum. Is there anybody else with the same experince lets talk



Straiga: What erks me is your assumption that flying experince equates to knowledge of physics.

I constantly see you make inncorect statements like the torque on moving engines off center line, and then claming your pilot experience makes you an expert. Your expertise is flying and managing an airplane. That dosn't equate to detailed knowledge of what makes a plane fly.

Quote
IM LMAO, Well some force just shot the tail away, that CG location is now going the move.


The CG would shift do to a change in total mass locations nothing to do with forces.

Quote
That was an interesting article that bad boy posted but I'm just unaware of any aircraft that carry the tail around with certain exceptions. F-16s for instance run the CG way back and that oddball NASA plane with the swept forward wings (X29 or something?). These planes are flown by computers however.


Cacsa: The confusion I belive normaly come from a definition of CL on an airplane. Is that CL the wing CL, or the CL of the horizontal stab and all other components of the plane combined.

I belive it also is normaly described that way because it is much easyier to describe in basic flight training. Hence why most people think most tail planes are normaly creating a downward force.

For a plane to be stable the combined CL must be behind the CG, but that is an entirely different statment than the Wings CL must be behind the CG. Of the planes we have found with documentation on tail forces in flight. They have produce up forces when in level flight. The resone is that producing down force requires the primary wing to produce more up force to maintian level flight, hence more drag. When you are designing a fast fighter would that be the normal condition you would wish to set it up in?



HiTech
« Last Edit: January 05, 2005, 12:52:33 PM by hitech »

Offline straffo

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #67 on: January 05, 2005, 12:20:53 PM »
Straiga you are not reasoning with a dynamic model.

The shift of cg can be not enought to pull the nose down, it depend off the sum of all the forces involved.

I won't post more as I've trouble translating from French :)

Offline humble

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« Reply #68 on: January 05, 2005, 03:23:50 PM »
Hmmmm....

As anyone who's ever lost he tail on an R/C plane will attest....

The sucker comes down nose high:( :mad: :confused:

Now thats as close to real life as I want to get...

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Offline Casca

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #69 on: January 05, 2005, 11:48:01 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by hitech

 

Casca: The confusion I belive normaly come from a definition of CL on an airplane. Is that CL the wing CL, or the CL of the horizontal stab and all other components of the plane combined.

I belive it also is normaly described that way because it is much easyier to describe in basic flight training. Hence why most people think most tail planes are normaly creating a downward force.

For a plane to be stable the combined CL must be behind the CG, but that is an entirely different statment than the Wings CL must be behind the CG. Of the planes we have found with documentation on tail forces in flight. They have produce up forces when in level flight. The resone is that producing down force requires the primary wing to produce more up force to maintian level flight, hence more drag. When you are designing a fast fighter would that be the normal condition you would wish to set it up in?


HiTech


Apologies in advance for what I anticipate will be a lengthly post.  I think I see what you are driving at and if you have information that edifies me I am, of course, eager to learn.  I would certainly be interested in seeing a case or two of aircraft that are set up intentionally tail heavy.

To answer the question of the normal condition I would wish to set a fighter up in I would answer, in general terms, that I would want the CG to coincide with the CL at the rearmost allowable loading of the load schedule.  This would provide the highest speed, the lowest stall speed, the best fuel economy, probably something approaching neutral static stability (but thats a big enough subject on its own, lets don't go there) and would have a salutory effect on controlability and manuverability (two other big subjects, so let's ignore them for now).

As for considering the Cl of the system instead of the Cl of the foil in isolation you make a valid point.  That being said the CG of every weight and balance schedule since Orville and Wilber are referenced with respect to LEMAC (leading edge of the mean aerodynamic chord) of the airfoil.  20% to 30% are average ballpark figures for most plain vanialla airfoils.  Now there is every possibility that the aerodynamisicts are dumbing it down so that the mechanic reading the scales can grasp it.  What you say may be entirely true, it's just that I have never seen it.  

I looked for some weight and balance documents online but they were pretty thin.  I was able to come up with a Technical Order W&B schedule for a P-47 which sets the CG limit at 25% to 32% MAC. This does not appear to be a tail heavy aircraft at first glance.

Among the documents I have laying around the office is the Fifth Edition Textbook of the Transportation Safety Institute run by the Federal Aviation Administration.  This is the premier aviation safety and accident investigation training organization in the world (apologies to Cranfield in Jolly old England, that's just the way it is).  All NTSB investigators go through this school and the majority of investigators for almost any major aviation regulatory agency on the globe find themselves there at one time or another.  Many academic luminaries have been and are currently associated with this organization.  Plug: My university, CMSU, is offering our Master of Science in Aviation Safety in collaboration with them via distance learning so if anyone has a yen to kick tin, this is your chance. :)
I'm including a paragraph or two and a couple of illustrations.  If I turn out to be wrong about all of this I will cheerfully admit it and notify TSI to change their text.

To give the quote some context, what is being taught in this portion of the text is to use wreckage distribution and failure modes to determine accident causes.  

"To be able to analyze an inflight breakup, it first must be clearly understood how an aircraft is aerodynamically loaded in its normal configuration.  Reference is made to Fig. CIII-29.  It must be remembered that an aircraft rotates around the center of gravity, and the center of gravity is located in close proximity to the quarter chord point of the mean aerodynamic chord (that would be 25% LEMAC mentioned above).  The center of gravity in this illustration may be assumed to be in the center of the aircraft and in the area of the spar outline.  The arrow under the engine represents the weight of all items ahead of the CG and the arrow under the aft fuselage represents the weight of all items aft of the CG. The sum of the moments of these two forces around the CG, in addition to the wing pitching moment (my italics, it seems to keep getting lost in the shuffle), if it is a cambered airfoil, will result in a nosedown pitch.  This resultant nosedown pitch is prevented by a download on the tail. This download then brings the pitching moment to zero, and my be considered as that balancing force which places the aircraft in a state of equilibrium as far as pitching moments are concerned."

The following illustration is on page 181 of the text and shows the condition that we have been discussing.

No more breakfast forever Part 1



This illustration is on page 182 of the text.

Headed for Page Two on Paul Harvey



This is of course the typical pitch down and breakup sequence (wings failing down if we are going fast enough).

Wish they had used a Piper instead of a Mooney. I used to have a Mooney, great ship.  Someone in the game said you had an RV-8.  I'm planning on building one at some point (any opinions on the Eggenfellner setup?  I'm thinkin we are gonna lose 100LL at some point so the angle valve IO360 might become problematic).  Probably belongs in a different thread.

Here at the school we have a V Tail Bonanza in pieces at the airport.  We lay it out twice a year for the final in the Accident Investigation class.  It belonged to a mortician who was picking up a body with two surviving family members.  On the way back he lost it in IMC and wound up in a spiral dive.  Upon popping out the the clouds and seeing the ground he hauled back on the yoke hard enough to cause one of the stabilizers and ruddervators to come off of the airplane.  With the remaining ruddervator he managed to stay up about ten minutes after which it also left the airplane.  It, no surprise here, pitched down and the wings failed in the typical downward direction.  This aircraft was right at or out of rear CG limits (the body was in a coffin projecting into the tail cone).

I think the above fairly summarizes how I've arrived at my conclusions although they are not the only sources.  If you can show me where I'm off track I'm all ears.

Casca
« Last Edit: January 06, 2005, 02:45:09 AM by Casca »
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Offline Seeker

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #70 on: January 06, 2005, 02:11:08 AM »
Anybody want to host the Beaufort crash clip for linking here?

2.3 Mb.

Offline Straiga

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #71 on: January 06, 2005, 10:20:47 AM »
Deleted for flame.
« Last Edit: January 06, 2005, 11:10:26 AM by hitech »

Offline hitech

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #72 on: January 06, 2005, 01:19:31 PM »
Casca:

http://naca.larc.nasa.gov/reports/1947/naca-tn-1483/naca-tn-1483.pdf

Check out page 19 shows tail loads at various conditions and CG's

Note: Up =  a positive load.

HiTech

Offline Wolfala

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #73 on: January 06, 2005, 01:55:59 PM »
Interesting picture Casca posts of a Mooney cracking up - the  irony though Mooney's have the best in flight breakup record of any plane in history. Atleast they could've used a Bonanza.

Wolfala
« Last Edit: January 06, 2005, 02:03:05 PM by Wolfala »


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Offline Casca

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AH FM flaw or miss-conception?
« Reply #74 on: January 06, 2005, 03:59:50 PM »
Thanks for the link appreciate the reply.  I think we are going to have to agree to disagree on this one.  What the chart on page 19 shows me (and feel free to correct me if I have mis-interpeted this) is that it's possible to get the horizontal to see a positive (up) load if we are mushing around lower power settings and/or higher AoA.  No argument from me there.  What the graph on page 47 (n = load factor) makes abundantly clear to me is that at load factor of 1 and 29.7% MAC CG (which is admittedly not the most rearward CG condition) the tail is operating with a negative (down) load at any speed in excess of about 75 mph power on and about 82 mph power off.

That is a very interesting document by the way.

Thanks
Casca
« Last Edit: January 06, 2005, 04:18:01 PM by Casca »
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