T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
671.1 | Here' one! | TOWNS::COX | Scott C. Cox | Wed Aug 24 1988 17:08 | 11 |
| I just received a catalog from Zenith Aviation Books, they have
one of the best R/C book assortments I've seen, including some on
sailplane design. Call them for a catalog.
Zenith Aviation Books
P.O. Box 1
Osceola, WI 54020
1-800-826-6600
Scott Cox
|
671.2 | Frank Zaic's Glider Design | USRCV1::BLUMJ | | Wed Aug 24 1988 17:37 | 8 |
| There is a book written by the venerable Frank Zaic which is excellent.
Although this book was written in the 1940's it is still one of
the best books available. I will send you the information on where
to order this book. It is a paperback and very inexpensive.
Regards,
Jim Blum
|
671.3 | Most complete I know of | WILKIE::SWEENEY | | Thu Aug 25 1988 14:47 | 12 |
| There is a paperback I think is called Model Aircraft
Aerodynamics. It is sold mail order through most model magazines.
It is so complete that I have heard it is sometimes used as a
college text.It has airfoil coordinates and polars and also has
a lot of material on balance and dynamics with an emphasis on
gliders.
|
671.4 | I have (had?) it | LEDS::COHEN | | Thu Aug 25 1988 15:34 | 18 |
|
This is the book that I have, somewhere (sigh). It is an
excellent theoretical text on the design of, principally, model
gliders. It thoroughly discusses just about everything you'de
ever want to know about aerodynamics, like Lift to Drag ratios,
Renolds numbers, laminar flow, turbulent flow, center of lift vs.
aerodynamic center, the effects of CG postion, and tons of other
stuff I don't remember anything about. The worst part about it is
that it's not really a "cookbook" type of manual that will tell
you how to design a plane. It teaches you what you need to know
about plane design in terms of mathematical formulas, and you have
to put the "pieces" together. In order to really use what the
book has, you have to work through it like you're taking a course
in aircraft design, so that you understand all the areas covered
in the book. I'de recommend it, though, since even a quick
reading will teach you things you probably didn't know.
Randy (8^|)
|
671.5 | Chuck Cunningham's formulas | CLOSUS::TAVARES | John -- Stay low, keep moving | Thu Aug 25 1988 16:51 | 20 |
| Chuck Cunningham, in RCM, has over the years republished a
series on plane design, including a segment on glider design.
The last time this was done, to my knowledge, was in '86 -- give
or take a year. I have his articles as published in the late
'70s, but I'm sure what I have is not substantially different
from the latest version.
Chuck adheres to rules of thumb, what I call the Good Ol' Boy
Method, in which he specifies the surfaces in terms of percentage
of the wing area, and the moments in terms of chord lengths. His
proportions are classic in that you will find them similarly
stated in free flight design texts also.
Personally, I've used Chuck's recepie in conjunction with other
sources to design several variations on an original glider (Yes,
despite my misadventures in learning to fly, I've attempted to
fly my own design too! It takes more money than brains...).
Anyway, I'll send you copies of the articles if you send my your
mailstop offline. That goes for nearly everyone else too.
|
671.6 | Thanks from the sunny Spain. | BARNA::JORDI | | Fri Aug 26 1988 09:21 | 10 |
| Hi,
Thank you very much for your information.
I'am living in Barcelona (Spain) and ussually is dificult to obtain
information about foreing books and magazines about aeromodelling.
Regards.
Jordi
|
671.7 | | SPKALI::THOMAS | | Tue Aug 30 1988 16:26 | 12 |
| I used to fly gliders at one time. Back in 85 when I was in CXO
working on a project. Since then I've wondere why most gliders
that run ailerons and rudder still utilize such large amounts of
dihedral? In my eyes extra dihedral than what is minimuly necessary
causes the wing to yaw to much which should slow down the ship.
Insufficient dihedral would cause adverse roll. I was wondering
why a design isn't developed that minimized that amount of dihedral
so that rudder only produced a yaw rather than a roll in the direction
of the rudder deflection. Anyone have any ideas??
Tom
|
671.8 | Dihedral | USRCV1::BLUMJ | | Wed Aug 31 1988 09:24 | 15 |
| The more dihedral a glider has, the more inherently stable it is(ie
the greater its ability to resume straight level flight after a
maneuver). A straight wing glider with little or no dihedral that
does not have ailerons is incapable of roll when rudder is deployed.
Hence the glider just slips along akin to a sailboat trying to come
about with its centerboard up. Dihedral allows one wing to be
partially stalled which is why the glider rolls when rudder is
deployed. Gliders with generous dihedral are usually very stable
and easy to fly. There is currently a 6 part series in Model Aviation
discussing all the aspects of dihedral.
Regards,
Jim
|
671.9 | | SPKALI::THOMAS | | Wed Aug 31 1988 11:15 | 11 |
| Jim here is where I'm coming from;
I one wants a glider that turns quickly but with miminal drag I
would think that the best way to do this would be a slight deflection
of the ailerons and the deflectionof the elevator and rudder. this
would tend to make the turn tight and flat which I would think would
result in minimum drag in the turn. If I correct then I wonder why
anyone hasn't designed such a ship?
Tom
|
671.10 | Straight Wing vs. Polyhedral | USRCV1::BLUMJ | | Thu Sep 01 1988 09:46 | 17 |
| You are exactly right, however the low dihedral aileron ships will
tip stall much more easily than their polyhedral complements and
usually fly much faster due to higher wing loading and lower drag.
These flying characteristics make a low dihedral, aileron ship hard
to handle for inexperienced or slow reflexed flyers. If you are
a skilled flyer the quicker response of an aileron ship might be
desireable. For slope soaring straight wing aileron ships are the
norm, but it appears polyhedral ships still hold the edge for thermal
duaration contests. At this years NATS 2/3rds of the gliders were
polyhedral and I believe all the top placing ships were polyhedral.
The debate among people much more knowledgeable than I goes on over
which design flys better. However all agree that a polyhedral ship
is easier to fly!
Regards,
Jim
|
671.11 | theory about spiral stability | BRAT::RYDER | perpetually the bewildered beginner | Sun Aug 05 1990 22:28 | 4 |
| The four part dihedral series by Blaine Beron-Rawdon appeared in Model
Aviation in August through November of 1988. The current issue,
September 1990, has the first of a two part expansion into Spiral
Stability by the same author.
|