T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1405.1 | | CLOSUS::TAVARES | John -- Stay low, keep moving | Mon Jan 27 1992 10:40 | 5 |
| There's some discussion of this in the airfoils note, the one that has
the foil drawing program. In a nutshell, look at the NACA series; the
2415 is a popular foil for sport flying, and the 0009 is used often
for aerobatics. Of course, each of these foils can be made thicker
or thinner until they "look right".
|
1405.2 | symetrical airfoils info wanted | KBOMFG::KNOERLE | | Wed Jun 17 1992 09:44 | 15 |
|
I'm looking for some symetrical airfoils for a future fun-flight
(a' la Twister) and a future pattern plane. I have the coordinates
available for NACA0009, SD8020 and E168. These can easily be thickened
or thinned, no prob. Now, the SD8020 and 0009 look alike, but the
Eppler looks significantly different. Does anybody has a recommendation
for the one or the other ?
Bernd
(my current project uses the SD8020 with 15% thickness, should be a
high (relatively) manouvrable, small backjard plane. Since it is not
finished I don't know about it's real flying charakteristics)
|
1405.3 | The Evil One Is Who To Ask... | CXDOCS::TAVARES | John-Stay low, keep moving | Wed Jun 17 1992 11:39 | 7 |
| My own humble and inexpert opinion is that for power planes,
especially using the informal foam cutting or balsa/monokote
construction, you're working too hard with anything besides a NACA
foil. This is especially true of the newer Selig, etc foils since
they inherently depend on very close tolerances for their performance
gains. Go easy on yourself, the 009 is tried and true. Personally, I
like the semi-symetrical 24xx series, particularly the 2412 and 2415.
|
1405.4 | Book of Light Aircraft Airfoils | LHOTSE::DAHL | Customers do not buy architectures | Thu Sep 09 1993 13:11 | 12 |
| For future reference:
I have a book which contains about a hundred airfoils with their lift and drag
curve plots. I originally bought it for the curve data to use with the FLIGHT
simulator. If people are interested in lift and draft coefficient data for a
particular airfoil, I could look it up to see if it's in this book.
I can't recall the name of the book, something like Airfoils for Light Aircraft
(full scale), compiled by Rice. All of the airfoils are fairly old, from the
1920s to 1930s mostly (determined by the wind tunnel test dates on the graph
plates).
-- Tom
|