![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have noticed some fine scratches on the top of my wing surface that
are diagonal across the chord in opposing pattern. Can anyone explain if there is an aerodynamic reason for having these scratches remaining on the surface? |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Discus 44 wrote:
I have noticed some fine scratches on the top of my wing surface that are diagonal across the chord in opposing pattern. Can anyone explain if there is an aerodynamic reason for having these scratches remaining on the surface? Do you mean "is there a good reason for them to stay there in order to enhance performance?" Uhhh, no. Will the fine scratches degrade your performance? Uhhh, no. These come from the finish sanding process. Standard procedure is to sand on a 45 degree bias to the chord line, alternating orientation with each succeeding grade of paper. So, what you're seeing is the remaining scratches from two passes of sanding (e.g. 600 and 800 grit). If you look at them with a 4x loop magnifier, you can usually see if one bias is slightly different from the other (ie. if the line sloping up to the left is 600 and the line sloping up to the right is 800). If you look at your ailerons, you won't see this, since all of the scratch marks will be aligned spanwise, as that's the way these are sanded. If you're really anal, you can go back to something like 600 grit and resand the whole wing, carefully working your way up through the grits to either 1000 or even 1200 grit (a pretty boring and labor intensive procedure that requires someone to tutor you for a while). Or, you can ignore it and fly. I would choose the latter :-)) P3 |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Papa3 wrote: Discus 44 wrote: I have noticed some fine scratches on the top of my wing surface that are diagonal across the chord in opposing pattern. Can anyone explain if there is an aerodynamic reason for having these scratches remaining on the surface? Do you mean "is there a good reason for them to stay there in order to enhance performance?" Uhhh, no. Will the fine scratches degrade your performance? Uhhh, no. These come from the finish sanding process. Standard procedure is to sand on a 45 degree bias to the chord line, alternating orientation with each succeeding grade of paper. So, what you're seeing is the remaining scratches from two passes of sanding (e.g. 600 and 800 grit). If you look at them with a 4x loop magnifier, you can usually see if one bias is slightly different from the other (ie. if the line sloping up to the left is 600 and the line sloping up to the right is 800). If you look at your ailerons, you won't see this, since all of the scratch marks will be aligned spanwise, as that's the way these are sanded. If you're really anal, you can go back to something like 600 grit and resand the whole wing, carefully working your way up through the grits to either 1000 or even 1200 grit (a pretty boring and labor intensive procedure that requires someone to tutor you for a while). Or, you can ignore it and fly. I would choose the latter :-)) P3 Thanks for your reply. Is the reason for this factory sanding to remove high spots or to blend the whole surface. Given the high quality of the tooling, there should be little reason to sand the surface. This is how I would perceive the process to be if the tools are good. Anyway I was just curious if there was a secret competition reason for roughing the surface to keep the airflow attached longer than a shiny smooth surface would give. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Discus 44" wrote in message ups.com... Anyway I was just curious if there was a secret competition reason for roughing the surface to keep the airflow attached longer than a shiny smooth surface would give. There is research to suggest that a slightly rough surface will keep airflow attached a bit longer than a mirror smooth surface. I've flown wings sanded with various grits from 400 to 2000 and find no difference in performance. Stopping at 400 grit is a LOT less work than continuing to 2000. The REAL reason for a mirror surface is that it's a lot easier to keep clean. That said, I've always suspect that the "sand your wings" suggestion came from a well known competitor trying to mess with another competitors head. 80 grit anyone? Bill Daniels |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Bill Daniels wrote: "Discus 44" wrote in message ups.com... Anyway I was just curious if there was a secret competition reason for roughing the surface to keep the airflow attached longer than a shiny smooth surface would give. There is research to suggest that a slightly rough surface will keep airflow attached a bit longer than a mirror smooth surface. I've flown wings sanded with various grits from 400 to 2000 and find no difference in performance. Stopping at 400 grit is a LOT less work than continuing to 2000. The REAL reason for a mirror surface is that it's a lot easier to keep clean. That said, I've always suspect that the "sand your wings" suggestion came from a well known competitor trying to mess with another competitors head. 80 grit anyone? Bill Daniels IIRC, one reason that was given for not waxing wings was to avoid beading of raindrops if you flew through a shower. I've also heard the other suggestion that a slightly rough surface reduces drag. I imagine one of the problems is that measuring the delta between these two conditions would be outweighed by the measurement errors themselves. I'm sure someone lurking here has thought more about this? P3 ps. I always encourage my competition to use a coarse file on the leading edge; removes bugs very effectively :-)) |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
At 19:24 27 September 2006, Discus 44 wrote:
Thanks for your reply. Is the reason for this factory sanding to remove high spots or to blend the whole surface. Given the high quality of the tooling, there should be little reason to sand the surface. This is how I would perceive the process to be if the tools are good. Anyway I was just curious if there was a secret competition reason for roughing the surface to keep the airflow attached longer than a shiny smooth surface would give. Contrary to popular belief gel coat when it is removed from the mould does not have a shiny mirror surface that is why it has to be polished (sanded). Over time the gel coat shrinks and you can often see the pattern of the underlying glass layup. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The bigger issue is with flying in rain. The highly polished, waxed finish will bead up with water droplets. The rougher surface will shed water without forming the really draggy (is that a word?) droplets. Same as if you waxed your windshield in your car, water beads up instead of sheeting off. So if and when you have to blast through that virga line the drop in performance will not be as severe.
Bob |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bob Caldwell wrote:
The bigger issue is with flying in rain. The highly polished, waxed finish will bead up with water droplets. The rougher surface will shed water without forming the really draggy (is that a word?) droplets. Same as if you waxed your windshield in your car, water beads up instead of sheeting off. So if and when you have to blast through that virga line the drop in performance will not be as severe. So, should we be using RainEx on our wings? Jack |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
absolutely NOT........RainX causes rain to form tiny droplets which are then
blown off by wind......you want no droplets at all...ever.. tim "Jack" wrote in message et... Bob Caldwell wrote: The bigger issue is with flying in rain. The highly polished, waxed finish will bead up with water droplets. The rougher surface will shed water without forming the really draggy (is that a word?) droplets. Same as if you waxed your windshield in your car, water beads up instead of sheeting off. So if and when you have to blast through that virga line the drop in performance will not be as severe. So, should we be using RainEx on our wings? Jack |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Tim Mara wrote:
absolutely NOT........RainX causes rain to form tiny droplets which are then blown off by wind......you want no droplets at all...ever.. tim "Jack" wrote in message et... Bob Caldwell wrote: The bigger issue is with flying in rain. The highly polished, waxed finish will bead up with water droplets. The rougher surface will shed water without forming the really draggy (is that a word?) droplets. Same as if you waxed your windshield in your car, water beads up instead of sheeting off. So if and when you have to blast through that virga line the drop in performance will not be as severe. So, should we be using RainEx on our wings? But many do wax the wings -- and so get BIG drops -- do they not. Is the only answer to stay out of the rain and/or simply clean your wings with pure water, but never apply any protective finish? Jack |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Osan’s 51st Fighter Wing to get its own coin | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | April 5th 04 10:44 PM |
Announcing THE book on airshow flying | Dudley Henriques | Piloting | 11 | January 9th 04 07:33 PM |
Props and Wing Warping... was soaring vs. flaping | Wright1902Glider | Home Built | 0 | September 29th 03 03:40 PM |
Can someone explain wing loading? | Frederick Wilson | Home Built | 4 | September 10th 03 02:33 AM |
Wing Extensions | Jay | Home Built | 22 | July 27th 03 12:23 PM |