View Full Version : Books on design of small aircraft
jan olieslagers[_2_]
July 14th 09, 10:47 AM
These pages regularly mention books on aircraft design by one Tony 
Bingelis. Has anyone the exact references for these, preferably ISBN 
numbers?
Apart from the use of imperial/US measures, would these be as much use 
in Europe as in (their native?) USA?
Any other study books to recommend?
PS I seemed to remember these were marketed by EAA, but their website 
found me video's but no books...?
TIA,
Ron Wanttaja[_2_]
July 14th 09, 03:25 PM
jan olieslagers wrote:
> These pages regularly mention books on aircraft design by one Tony 
> Bingelis. Has anyone the exact references for these, preferably ISBN 
> numbers?
> Apart from the use of imperial/US measures, would these be as much use 
> in Europe as in (their native?) USA?
> Any other study books to recommend?
> 
> PS I seemed to remember these were marketed by EAA, but their website 
> found me video's but no books...?
Bingelis' books are how-to books on construction, not aircraft design. 
Go to the "Publications" section of the EAA Store online....
http://shop.eaa.org/html/publications_howto.html?cart_id=
....they're near the top.
Ron Wanttaja
Brian Whatcott
July 15th 09, 03:19 AM
jan olieslagers wrote:
> These pages regularly mention books on aircraft design by one Tony 
> Bingelis. Has anyone the exact references for these, preferably ISBN 
> numbers?
> Apart from the use of imperial/US measures, would these be as much use 
> in Europe as in (their native?) USA?
> Any other study books to recommend?
> 
> PS I seemed to remember these were marketed by EAA, but their website 
> found me video's but no books...?
> 
> TIA,
Pazmany's Light Plane Design is well regarded. He was not of the
by guess and by gosh school - far from it - he was the real McCoy - even 
though his PL-1 took flack for taking in the thousands of hours to build.
There is a comparably worthwhile design handbook from a couple of Aero 
faculty at Loughborough U. in the UK - but I forget the name....
Their design example was also a metal 2 place low wing monoplane but 
they are good on wood specs
Brian W
Jim Logajan
July 15th 09, 05:06 AM
Brian Whatcott > wrote:
> jan olieslagers wrote:
>> These pages regularly mention books on aircraft design by one Tony 
>> Bingelis. Has anyone the exact references for these, preferably ISBN 
>> numbers?
>> Apart from the use of imperial/US measures, would these be as much use 
>> in Europe as in (their native?) USA?
>> Any other study books to recommend?
>> 
>> PS I seemed to remember these were marketed by EAA, but their website 
>> found me video's but no books...?
>> 
>> TIA,
> 
> Pazmany's Light Plane Design is well regarded. He was not of the
> by guess and by gosh school - far from it - he was the real McCoy - even 
> though his PL-1 took flack for taking in the thousands of hours to build.
> There is a comparably worthwhile design handbook from a couple of Aero 
> faculty at Loughborough U. in the UK - but I forget the name....
> Their design example was also a metal 2 place low wing monoplane but 
> they are good on wood specs
Another book, which I have but don't have anything else to compare to, is 
"Simplified Aircraft Design for Homebuilders" by Daniel Raymer. I can see 
it being of great value for initial iterations in the design of 
conventional single engine fixed-wing aircraft. But final design would 
require more knowledge than covered in that slim volume!
I also recommend "Model Aircraft Aerodynamics" by Martin Simons. I think it 
serves as a great introduction to aerodynamics in general - for a fraction 
of the price of fancier textbooks. Mostly non-numerical except for the 
appendicies. It contains a pretty good discussion on understanding Reynolds 
number, since that is an issue model aircraft designers run into right 
away. But several appendicies provide wind tunnel results (lift, drag, 
center of pressure) on about 30 airfoils (at different Re values), their 
profiles, and profiles of a bunch more airfoils. The first appendix goes 
through example calculations on computing lift, drag, and aerodynamic 
center of wings of various profiles and aspect ratios.
D.Smith
July 15th 09, 09:32 PM
For design of small aircraft I found the Hiscocks book very interesting.
	Design of Light Aircraft
	Richard D. Hiscocks
	ISBN 0-9699809-0-6
jan olieslagers wrote:
> These pages regularly mention books on aircraft design by one Tony 
> Bingelis. Has anyone the exact references for these, preferably ISBN 
> numbers?
> Apart from the use of imperial/US measures, would these be as much use 
> in Europe as in (their native?) USA?
> Any other study books to recommend?
> 
> PS I seemed to remember these were marketed by EAA, but their website 
> found me video's but no books...?
> 
> TIA,
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