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Old September 5th 16, 09:15 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default Vortex generators?

On Monday, September 5, 2016 at 2:50:02 PM UTC-4, Dave Nadler wrote:
On Monday, September 5, 2016 at 1:18:21 PM UTC-4, wrote:
On Monday, September 5, 2016 at 11:05:05 AM UTC-4, Dave Nadler wrote:
On Monday, September 5, 2016 at 10:22:02 AM UTC-4, wrote:
Possibly some of these aircraft have laminar separation bubbles
that are made better by tripping the flow directly to turbulent.

As I think I understand it...

A turbulator is used to transition laminar to turbulent flow to
avoid laminar separation; the turbulent flow causing less drag
than a big bubble. Turbulators can be a relatively thin tape, or
blow holes...

A vortex generator is a lot taller, and is used to pull
higher-speed flow down to the much slower boundary layer,
and create a vortex that inhibits span-wise flow in the
slower boundary layer. That can be used to prevent separation
in some cases; either in laminar or turbulent flow.
It also be used to aid in cooling - there was a great article
recently (KitPlanes ? Sport Aviation?) about a rear-engined
canard that needs tall turbulators to get air into the
aft cooling scoops.

Gary - start with some thin tell-tales and a GoPro to look
at the flow around the top wing surface at the root, aft
of the spar.

Hank - Could Gary be seeing the same issue as the 20's
experience - double-bad-adverse-gradient at fuselage
junction? You install turbulators on the 20 top surface
at the root for this, no?

Interesting stuff....
Best Regards, Dave


Dave- In a word- yes. The simple construction geometry leaves a square
hollow corner where the wing meets the fuselage. Due to the pressures
in that area, sooner or later the air can't follow the contour, especially
at high angles of attack in slow flight. The "standard" cure for this is
a fillet to provide a contour the air can follow.


Its the gradient that causes the separation. The fuselage is angled away
from the wing, the top of the wing is angled downwards. Combination reduces
the pressure too much too fast, hence separation. It may take a pretty big
fillet to fix, for example on Genesis.

Putting a turbulator/vortex generator ahead of the separation can entrain
more air into the boundary layer there...


Different animals though, no? A turbulator takes laminar flow and turbulates
it to make it stickier. But it doesn't really change the boundary layer,
thickness does it? Any aero experts out there? A vortex generator sticks
up to mix air outside the boundary layer, reducing the boundary layer
thickness in the resulting vortex area, right?

I once put some fillets on the root of a 1-26 and reduced the separation
enough to lower the stall speed about 4 mph if I remember correctly.


Cool! Of course you need a pitot-static and ASI better than factory
to really find out the speeds down at that end.

Anyway, all these solutions improve the situation at high CL but
add just add drag at low CL, right? Probably don't improve max LD
unless something is drastically wrong with the original design...


The contrast is more about degree than action, I think. Vortex generators are commonly larger and many are placed at angles to the local flow to disturb much more air than the smaller turbulators used to transition attached laminar flow into attached turbulent flow. Both stick up through the local layer into higher energy air and cause mixing. It's mostly about degree.
On big jets it is probably almost all intended to add energy to the boundary layer so that controls work better and air stays attached to high lift devices at very high C/L.
One interesting application I heard from Mike Opitz was the adding of turbulators forward of the hinge line of the rudder on a Grob Twin. He reported a remarkable improvement in feel and handling.
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