This is the ultimate BBS thread, because it exemplifies what people have been repeating for years and years "How would you know, you've never flown a World War II plane before". Now we have a real life Air Force pilot, who has flown B-29s, A-26s, and even the ultra-rare P-82, and people are trying to tell him how the planes actually flew. LOL. Earl1937 I find your threads extremely interesting, and try to read every one of them. Keep up the good work sir!
DaveBB:Earl is a very enthusiastic player and a very experienced pilot.I would never wish to debate Earl on best practices when piloting aircraft.And I would love to fly with Earl in my RV.
I have been wanting to make a series of video , mostly on where to look when performing maneuvers, hence the head cam. Here is my first attempt.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ulpdOHcCiNE But I do not see anyone telling early how a plane flew or how to fly a plane. I see a technical discussion of aerodynamics about what make planes fly. In this particular case, adverse yaw. A pilot must be taught about adverse yaw so as to know he must apply rudder to compensate for it. Thinking and remembering that a downward aileron causes drag is a good way to remember.
But i have learned that most pilots only have a basic understanding of the physics of flight. Pilots are taught in a way that they understand the basics of physics as is required to best operate an airplane. The diagram on the wiki sight is 100 % correct. But it also does not tell the entire story. It is showing what causes adverse yaw in a steady state roll. There is also adverse yaw immediately when applying aileron Pryor to the roll developing . This is basically do to the downward deflected aileron. But more accurately it is do to the shifting of the lift vs AOA curve due to the increase camber of the wing caused by the downward deflected aileron. This lift curve shift creates more lift & hence more induced drag and possibly more profile/parasitic drag. Once the roll is steady state, (not a steady state turn but ROLL) then both wings must be producing approximately the same lift or the roll would be increasing or decreasing in RPM. The AOA is greater on one wing vs the other , but the camber is greater on the lower AOA wing so both are creating the same lift. The steady state condition is what the wiki is describing. Also that diagram is very similar to why makes a helicopter auto rotate.
Now notice this quote from early "Don't know who posted that explanation on Wiki, but it is not quite true". With out any physics explanation of why he thinks it is not true. And when debated Earl simply states i have all this back ground I teach ,I fly and I have written articles.
HiTech