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Help and Support Forums => Help and Training => Topic started by: TDeacon on February 20, 2016, 12:23:29 PM

Title: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: TDeacon on February 20, 2016, 12:23:29 PM
Anyone know approximately what are the corner speeds for the Spit 9 and the P-51 in the current version of AH2?  Sorry if this is already in here somewhere, but my search results seem to turn up 10-year-old stuff. 

Mark H. 
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: FLS on February 20, 2016, 12:45:06 PM
The actual speeds vary with your weight and altitude. You can check them by finding the slowest speed you can pull to blackout. In the Spit 9 and P-51 that will be around 225 and 270 mph.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Rolex on February 20, 2016, 12:49:39 PM
Clean stall of aircraft x √6 (2.45) is a good approximation.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Traveler on February 25, 2016, 01:25:39 AM
Clean stall of aircraft x √6 (2.45) is a good approximation.
[/quote
By "Clean stall" I take it you me gear up , zero flaps and power off stall speed?   it would be nice to know the corner speeds for aircraft with two notches of flaps and two notches of flaps with a load out of ords also?
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Drano on February 25, 2016, 09:37:05 AM
Use Rolex's same calculation factors using a plane in whatever configuration you like. Clean stall means the speed at which it stops flying straight and level with no stick input.

 People often times think there is a set "corner speed " for a plane. This simply isn't true. The corner speed for a Spit IX with 100% fuel will be higher than one with 25%. To find the difference fly at a given configuration of fuel, flaps, gear, altitude, etc., and slow down flying straight and level until you stall. Plug that speed into Rolex's calculation above. There's your corner speed for that plane at that configuration.

Sent from my XT1585 using Tapatalk

Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Traveler on February 25, 2016, 10:34:32 AM
Use Rolex's same calculation factors using a plane in whatever configuration you like. Clean stall means the speed at which it stops flying straight and level with no stick input.

 People often times think there is a set "corner speed " for a plane. This simply isn't true. The corner speed for a Spit IX with 100% fuel will be higher than one with 25%. To find the difference fly at a given configuration of fuel, flaps, gear, altitude, etc., and slow down flying straight and level until you stall. Plug that speed into Rolex's calculation above. There's your corner speed for that plane at that configuration.

Sent from my XT1585 using Tapatalk

I understand what you are trying to  saying, however, a "clean stall" is a term in aviation that does involve a change in Angle of Attack, you remember that pesky AOA thing that when in excess to the Apparent Wind causes the wing to Stall at any speed.                                   
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: FLS on February 25, 2016, 11:03:49 AM
I believe clean stall for this purpose is a power on stall with gear and flaps up. You are calculating the full power 6g stall speed with the full power 1g stall speed. A power off stall speed would be lower.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Drano on February 25, 2016, 11:13:27 AM
Yes but if you're trying to find stall at a given configuration you have to test at that configuration. There simply isn't a set in stone stall speed for any plane at all configurations.

Using the Spit IX example, if both Spits were at 25% fuel, one at sea level and one at 10k they'd have different stall speeds.

Sent from my XT1585 using Tapatalk

Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: FLS on February 25, 2016, 11:30:40 AM
Yes but if you're trying to find stall at a given configuration you have to test at that configuration.

That was already mentioned and isn't in dispute.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Drano on February 25, 2016, 11:42:32 AM
I'm trying to clarify that the "clean" stall speed you describe isn't THE stall speed for a plane and therfore that factor can't be used to find THE corner speed for that aircraft other than for THAT SINGLE CONFIGURATION. This is constantly confusing for some people. I'm not part of that group.

There are so many factors at work. Lift, drag, gravity, relative wind, air density. Corner speed can be a fleeting very thing!

Sent from my XT1585 using Tapatalk

Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: FLS on February 25, 2016, 11:52:20 AM
I'm trying to clarify that the "clean" stall speed you describe isn't THE stall speed for a plane and therfore that factor can't be used to find THE corner speed for that aircraft other than for THAT SINGLE CONFIGURATION. This is constantly confusing for some people. I'm not part of that group.

There are so many factors at work. Lift, drag, gravity, relative wind, air density. Corner speed can be a fleeting very thing!

Sent from my XT1585 using Tapatalk

The first thing I wrote was The actual speeds vary with your weight and altitude. That wasn't clear? Nothing wrong with you repeating it but you already repeated it once and nobody is disagreeing.  :D

Since you can't maintain corner speed I wouldn't worry too much about hitting it exactly as long as you're near it when you need to be.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Drano on February 25, 2016, 12:22:25 PM
Sorry to have intruded on your forum. Thought I'd contribute to the discussion but apparently that ain't cool. No problem. All yours.

Sent from my XT1585 using Tapatalk

Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: FLS on February 25, 2016, 12:38:48 PM
Discussion and questions are always welcome. 
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Puma44 on February 25, 2016, 01:19:41 PM
Knowing the corner speed ( best turn rate) at various altitudes is good to know for general reference in the heat of the battle.  Knowing that one best corner speed for a particular aircraft is good to know so that if the opportunity presents itself, drive the fight to the general altitude for that speed. 

It's easy to over think the concept while trying to analyze and understand it.  The K.I.S.S ( keep it simple stupid) method usually works most effectively.  DISCLAIMER: Not calling anyone stupid.  It's a common term in many situations.  I'm usually looking in the mirror when I remember and quote it to myself.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Wiley on February 25, 2016, 01:37:16 PM
So... I'm a bit confused.  Please correct me where I'm wrong, but I'm just trying to understand the concepts.

Stall speed is a function of the speed of the air moving over the wing, right?

Indicated airspeed is basically the speed of that air moving over the wing, but it's tied to the amount of air molecules that is actually moving over the wing, right?  That's why as you go higher, you move faster through the thinner air, but the indicated being the same means it's moving through the same amount of molecules of thinner air, doesn't it?

Shouldn't the IAS remain consistent for stall speed regardless of altitude?  I tend not to think in terms of numbers while playing the game, so I've never particularly noticed.

Wiley.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: FLS on February 25, 2016, 02:32:47 PM
So... I'm a bit confused.  Please correct me where I'm wrong, but I'm just trying to understand the concepts.

Stall speed is a function of the speed of the air moving over the wing, right?

Indicated airspeed is basically the speed of that air moving over the wing, but it's tied to the amount of air molecules that is actually moving over the wing, right?  That's why as you go higher, you move faster through the thinner air, but the indicated being the same means it's moving through the same amount of molecules of thinner air, doesn't it?

Shouldn't the IAS remain consistent for stall speed regardless of altitude?  I tend not to think in terms of numbers while playing the game, so I've never particularly noticed.

Wiley.

It's because thrust and drag change differently with altitude. The power on stall would be affected not the power off stall. For turning at corner speed it's the same, the thrust and drag are not affected equally by altitude.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Wiley on February 25, 2016, 04:09:39 PM
It's because thrust and drag change differently with altitude. The power on stall would be affected not the power off stall. For turning at corner speed it's the same, the thrust and drag are not affected equally by altitude.

Ah!  Because the prop's doing the same thing regardless of alt, it's affected by air density.  Thanks!

Wiley.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: FLS on February 25, 2016, 04:16:18 PM
The prop is like the wing at altitude, it's the engine power that's decreasing thrust with altitude until the high blower or whatever you have kicks in to mitigate it giving you a jump in performance. You can see that in the climb rate charts.

I'm not saying there's no change in prop efficiency but I think engine power is a bigger factor.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Traveler on February 25, 2016, 08:38:36 PM
So... I'm a bit confused.  Please correct me where I'm wrong, but I'm just trying to understand the concepts.

Stall speed is a function of the speed of the air moving over the wing, right?

WRONG , a Stalled wing has nothing to do with with Speed.  It's all about AOA.

Indicated airspeed is basically the speed of that air moving over the wing, but it's tied to the amount of air molecules that is actually moving over the wing, right?

Wrong, Airspeed indicators work by measuring the difference between static pressure, captured through one or more static ports; and stagnation pressure due to "ram air", captured through a pitot tube.

That's why as you go higher, you move faster through the thinner air, but the indicated being the same means it's moving through the same amount of molecules of thinner air, doesn't it?

Not entirely correct.  At increased altitude (more accurately, density altitude), for the same given indicated airspeed (IAS) the aircraft's true airspeed (TAS) will be higher.


Shouldn't the IAS remain consistent for stall speed regardless of altitude?
 

 Most aircraft exhibit a small difference between the airspeed actually shown on the instrument (indicated airspeed, or IAS) and the speed the instrument should theoretically show (calibrated airspeed or CAS). This difference, called position error, is mainly due to inaccurate sensing of static pressure. It is usually not possible to find a position for the static ports which, at all angles of attack, accurately senses the atmospheric pressure at the altitude at which the aircraft is flying.

Again, one more time, a stall has nothing to do with airspeed.  AOA is what causes the wing to stall.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: FLS on February 25, 2016, 08:52:55 PM
Wiley stall speed is the slowest speed you can maintain level flight because the AOA is at the critical AOA. Going slower reduces lift and you descend. Increasing AOA also reduces lift and you descend.

In other words the stall occurs at the critical angle of attack and stall speed refers to the speed where that AOA produces level flight.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Traveler on February 25, 2016, 10:13:12 PM
Wiley stall speed is the slowest speed you can maintain level flight because the AOA is at the critical AOA. Going slower reduces lift and you descend. Increasing AOA also reduces lift and you descend.

In other words the stall occurs at the critical angle of attack and stall speed refers to the speed where that AOA produces level flight.

This is true: "the stall occurs at the critical angle of attack"   

This is not ture: "Stall speed refers to the speed where that AOA produces level flight"  if the aircraft is in level flight, the wing is not stalled because the critical AOA has not been exceeded.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: FLS on February 25, 2016, 10:36:44 PM
This is true: "the stall occurs at the critical angle of attack"   

This is not ture: "Stall speed refers to the speed where that AOA produces level flight"  if the aircraft is in level flight, the wing is not stalled because the critical AOA has not been exceeded.

It is true by definition. If you are at the critical angle of attack and flying level you are at stall speed. If you are slower you are descending, if you are faster you are climbing, and if you increase AOA you are no longer flying level.

Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: PJ_Godzilla on February 26, 2016, 05:25:16 AM
It is true by definition. If you are at the critical angle of attack and flying level you are at stall speed. If you are slower you are descending, if you are faster you are climbing, and if you increase AOA you are no longer flying level.

Or, of you tend to think graphically, its a point of zero slope and maximum on the cl versus alpha curve... increase or decrease  alpha from here and cl decreases.

If at stall speed and clmax flying level, weight equals lift. decrease speed and weight will exceed lift, increase and vice versa.

The part I'm wondering about though, is with/without flap. THe impact of flap on clmax is well known - I'll cite fig 13 in the URL for some examples: http://adg.stanford.edu/aa241/highlift/clmaxest.html (http://adg.stanford.edu/aa241/highlift/clmaxest.html)

If we go back to the 2.45*stall speed rule of thumb, the trick to understanding flap impact on stall speed is to know, apriori, the incremental CLMax per increment of flap on your a/c. If I knew that, I could, since lift is linear with CL, expect to be able to lower the root of stall speed by an offsetting proportion - but none of this is clean or easy in the moment. However, it'd be pretty helpful if anybody (like maybe FLS) has clmax versus flap deflection for some of our in-game stuff, like especially 109s.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Traveler on February 26, 2016, 08:26:27 AM
It is true by definition. If you are at the critical angle of attack and flying level you are at stall speed. If you are slower you are descending, if you are faster you are climbing, and if you increase AOA you are no longer flying level.
Please where is that definition?  Read the definition for a Stall condition.  It's not level flight.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: FLS on February 26, 2016, 08:35:49 AM
Please where is that definition?  Read the definition for a Stall condition.  It's not level flight.

You keep saying stall instead of stall speed. I'm using the FAA definition of stall speed.

http://www.faa.gov/regulations_policies/handbooks_manuals/aircraft/airplane_handbook/media/faa-h-8083-3a-3of7.pdf
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Oldman731 on February 26, 2016, 10:42:03 AM
You keep saying stall instead of stall speed. I'm using the FAA definition of stall speed.

http://www.faa.gov/regulations_policies/handbooks_manuals/aircraft/airplane_handbook/media/faa-h-8083-3a-3of7.pdf


"The minimum speed below which further controlled flight is impossible is called the stalling speed."

That has nothing to do with level flight.  Just sayin'.

- oldman
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Traveler on February 26, 2016, 11:25:38 AM
You keep saying stall instead of stall speed. I'm using the FAA definition of stall speed.

http://www.faa.gov/regulations_policies/handbooks_manuals/aircraft/airplane_handbook/media/faa-h-8083-3a-3of7.pdf

there is no speed at which a stall can not happen.

Please look at page .4-3 of your stated source.

Source: FAA-H-8083-3A, Airplane Flying Handbook page 4-3.
STALLS A stall occurs when the smooth airflow over the airplane’s wing is disrupted, and the lift degenerates rapidly. This is caused when the wing exceeds its critical angle of attack. This can occur at any airspeed, in any attitude, with any power setting.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: PJ_Godzilla on February 26, 2016, 11:58:34 AM
I'm pretty sure FLS is banging his head against the wall right now.

Maybe not in FAA terms, but in strict engineering terms,

V(stall) = (2W/(rho*S*CL(max)))^.5

So, I don't see why you guys keep talking stall when he clearly says "stall speed".

He stipulated: CLMax (alpha crit) and level flight (neither descending nor ascending, thus in equilibrium, L=mg).

If that condition obtains, any decrease in speed (lift = 5 rho v^2 cl S, mg = constant for our purpose here, albeit time-dependent in reality) will result in a lift decrease and you will descend, any increase and you will ascend.

Okay, so he might be mis-quoting the book - but his statement is entirely logical and correct.

Traveler is also correct in stating "there is no speed at which a stall can't happen", but that is a fundamentally different statement than that made by the equation I cite (eg, accelerated stall is entirely possible above the stall speed).  Oldman's statement is also correct - but misses the point of the definition, though, I'll note, the equation in no way cares that you be in level flight but rather only cares that you are in vertical force equilibrium.


You guys need a referee and a translator.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Traveler on February 26, 2016, 01:04:13 PM
I'm pretty sure FLS is banging his head against the wall right now.

Maybe not in FAA terms, but in strict engineering terms,

V(stall) = (2W/(rho*S*CL(max)))^.5

So, I don't see why you guys keep talking stall when he clearly says "stall speed".

He stipulated: CLMax (alpha crit) and level flight (neither descending nor ascending, thus in equilibrium, L=mg).

If that condition obtains, any decrease in speed (lift = 5 rho v^2 cl S, mg = constant for our purpose here, albeit time-dependent in reality) will result in a lift decrease and you will descend, any increase and you will ascend.

Okay, so he might be mis-quoting the book - but his statement is entirely logical and correct.

Traveler is also correct in stating "there is no speed at which a stall can't happen", but that is a fundamentally different statement than that made by the equation I cite (eg, accelerated stall is entirely possible above the stall speed).  Oldman's statement is also correct - but misses the point of the definition, though, I'll note, the equation in no way cares that you be in level flight but rather only cares that you are in vertical force equilibrium.


You guys need a referee and a translator.

The problem for me is the two different definitions provided for Vs by the FAA : "VS Stalling speed or minimum steady flight speed at which the aircraft is controllable”
which is it?

Vs =  A stall occurs when the smooth airflow over the airplane’s wing is disrupted, and the lift degenerates rapidly. This is caused when the wing exceeds its critical angle of attack. This can occur at any airspeed, in any attitude, with any power setting.
   OR
Vs = minimum steady flight speed at which the aircraft is controllable.

 We flight instructors have spent thousands of hours having students fly at Vs +5 to demonstrate positive control in the realm of slow flight in preparation for landing drills.  If the AOA reaches the critical angle of attack, the wing stalls, there is no aircraft control until the AOA is reduced.  So how can Vs  represent  two different flight realms, one controlled and one out of control?
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: PJ_Godzilla on February 26, 2016, 01:40:55 PM
This is worthy of some thought.

The second Vs you cite is the one, on review, cited in the equation to which I refer. It is the minimum speed at which you can generate enough lift to offset weight. Anything below that, and, since CL is at max, you simply don't have enough dynamic pressure to cancel weight.

The first one, imj, is almost meaningless because and as you note, at any speed you can cause separation and even flow reversal on the upper surface of the wing. You're into accelerated ("speed higher than") the defined Vs. Further, you've got sufficient energy, in that state, to recover a lot of dynamic pressure, given control authority. 

But that's just my interpretation. You're in the Flight instruction business. I am merely an aging aero guy who crossed over to the dark side of management long ago. It's a worthy topic.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: FLS on February 26, 2016, 02:02:20 PM
It's simple. The stall and stall speed are two different things. The critical AOA is not greater than the critical AOA.

Traveler defines the stall as the departure from controlled flight. The part where the student goes "whoa!". It's understandable and useful but it's a narrow definition not shared by the FAA.

Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: PJ_Godzilla on February 26, 2016, 04:33:20 PM
Well, were aligned then - but you've ignored my request. You wouldn't happen to know in-game cl max increments for the 109g-14 at 1-4 notches of flap, would you?

Edit : come to think, it'd be pretty easy to back it out based on an in-game test of vs at each flap setting.
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: FLS on February 26, 2016, 05:29:54 PM
I was going to suggest you compare the lowest speed you can pull 3g at each flap extension. Note the speed and you can figure the radius and rate. But I see you get that already.   :aok
Title: Re: current AH2 corner speeds
Post by: Rolex on February 26, 2016, 06:54:33 PM
The 2.45 x stall speed rule-of-thumb is based on clean stall. Corner Velocity is like an instantaneous fleeting petal in a fight. Now Sustained Turn... that 's the ticket!  :D