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Old October 20th 07, 12:02 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Tina
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Posts: 500
Default Blended-wing Airliner

The point I was making, Jose, was that it took quite an extreme action
to induce that 0.3 Gs, so in terms of effects on PX the G induced
forces due to how fast the airplane banks into its turn are
unimportant. That effect was offered as one objection to a blended
wing flying machine: another, px discomfort because of their distance
from the windows, seems to have been muted as well.

Other issues, like pitch induced Gs, shouldn't be worse than those
experienced in existing airplanes and may even be better if the width
of the blended wing airplane leads to a shorter overall length.

It'll be interesting to see if such a machine reaches the market in
the next couple od decades.




On Oct 20, 6:06 am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Jose wrote in news:mmfSi.60532$YL5.26439
@newssvr29.news.prodigy.net:

and have concluded (a rebuttable
conclusion) it's not a problem for realistic airplane operations. Your
comments tend to support that.


Actually, my comments are not intended to support this. I think people
would have a problem going up and down and down and up at a third of a
g. It would feel like a roller coaster ride.


Wouldn't be as much as that in practice and you get g from the airplane
rotating around it's pitch axis when you sit in a cigar tube anyway!

Bertie