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Uh, thanks for trying...I guess:
DC "Bob Fry" wrote in message DC ... At 1000 rpm or so, my airplane will taxi and get up to, what, 15-20 kts? But at double the rpm it will fly at 80-90 kts, though it would take a long time to take off. Surely double the rpm produces more than double the propellor thrust...or does it? Anyway, it seems very nonlinear, that is, double the rpm and I get much more than double the performance. Why is that? DC The laws of physics (certainly those relating to mechanics - DC velocity, acceleration, thrust, drag and all that) are rarely DC linear. Eh? F=ma and many others are. DC On the ground your aircraft is probably not in an DC optimum attitude for drag reduction, so it's probably not fair DC to compare it with an aircraft in the sky. And will your DC aircraft fly straight and level at 1000rpm? If so, how fast? Kee-rist. Drag, and attitude (angle of attack, really) have little to do with the explanation I was looking for. No, of course it won't fly straight and level at 1000 rpm. That's nearly full idle landing rpm. DC The main thing dictating how your aircraft performs is DC drag. "Normal" drag increases with the square of the speed you DC fly at I think you mean parasitic drag. DC - so if you double the speed, you roughly quadruple the DC drag (hence everything has a terminal velocity when falling to DC earth - as you get faster, the drag increases faster than your DC speed increases, and you stop accelerating once drag equals DC the acceleration caused by gravity). Remember also that at low DC speeds you have induced drag, which is high at low speeds but DC vanishes as you get faster. Induced drag--drag caused by the wing producing lift at a vector not perpendicular to flight--never vanishes unless lift vanishes. Anyway I'll restate the question, plus post to r.a.'s garbage heap, r.a.piloting. At 1000 rpm the prop produces some amount of thrust (lift), call it T[1000]. This thrust is only enough to move the plane in a moderate taxi. At double that rpm, 2000 rpm, the prop produces another amount of thrust, call it T[2000]. Now I'm not positive, but it sure seems that T[2000] T[1000] Why, if rpm only doubles, does thrust (seem to) much more than double? |
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