On Sun, 28 Mar 2004 20:30:57 +0200, Denis
wrote:
Edward Downham wrote:
It is important to note that this margin is there to cope with things such as
ASI position and calibration errors. When you fly a glider at an _indicated_
speed of Vne, you might actually be nearer Vd and the realm of the test pilot.
No. VNE is an indicated airspeed limit (IAS). If there is a airspeed
calibration error, VNE has been reduced to correct it. The margin is
there for instrumental errors, and *pilot* errors.
Well, this one is just a little scary. For more than one glider of my
acquaintance Vne is given as a TAS in the manual. This can be
converted to IAS of course, but the IAS would, of course, decrease
with altitude.
Vstall, on the other hand, seems just about always to be given as an
IAS, and as an IAS the stall speed will remain about the same as
altitude increases. This is all pretty basic stuff I know, so I
probably misinterpreted your statement about Vne.
One way to look at the "coffin corner" situation where some very
high-flying aircraft, such as the U-2, I suppose, can end up at an
altitude where the stall speed, in TAS, has come very close to the
Vne, as a TAS.
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