
May 6th 08, 04:36 AM
posted to rec.aviation.piloting
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limit of trim = limit of travel?
WingFlaps wrote in
:
On May 6, 2:19*am, Bertie the Bunyip
wrote:
On May 5, 6:06*am, WingFlaps wrote:
On May 5, 8:48*am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
WingFlaps wrote
innews:49efc4b4-8ede-40cd-9ad3-5
:
On May 5, 3:19*am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Stealth Pilot wrote
innews:u8kr141dp0o1e
:
On Fri, 2 May 2008 12:32:28 -0700 (PDT), WingFlaps
wrote:
On May 3, 12:40*am, Stealth Pilot
.au
wrote:
On Wed, 30 Apr 2008 00:12:54 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the
Bunyip wrote:
WingFlaps wrote in
news:ad8fc9c9-57cb-4733-9e97-
:
On Apr 30, 9:37*am, wrote:
On Apr 29, 2:24 pm, WingFlaps
wrote:
I don't follow this. The trim surface operates in
the opposite direction to the trimmed surface and
takes area away from it.
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^^^
^
Explain
please?
What area stuff?
Cheers
that area stuff. ...which shows a total lack of aerodynamic
understanding.
Still don't know what you're talking about! Most of that
thread has
spooled off my main server now..
He's trolling.
Cheers
He's not, he's right. Deflecting a tab in the oppostie direction
doesn
't
remove area.
It reduces effective area.
No, it doesnīt. The area is stil there. The tab isnīt "hiding"
because
itīs going the other way, itīs just doing something different. it may
be reducing the effectiveness of the surface, but that isnīt the same
thing as reducing the area.
Nope. Effectiveness is proportional to area -from the old lift
equation.
Sure, but the area hasn't changed.
Bertie
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