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#35
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![]() T o d d P a t t i s t wrote: I'd say it's the other way around: Lift creates the pressure differential. The pressure differential is caused by the motion of the air as the wing moves through the air. Well how will that work. The air on top is set into motion as a result of the wing pulling on it and the air on bottom is set into motion as a result of the wing pushing on it. How can the motion of the air on the top and bottom of the wing cause a pressure differential? It can't. The pressure differentials are actually caused by the wing pulling and pushing on the air and the air pushing and pulling back. Low pressure does very little to generate lift directly. Example. A ball will suspend in an upward airflow from an air hose. This causes the not to bright people at the NASA web sight to jump to the large and mostly inaccurate conclusion that it is sucked in to the low pressure flow or pushed into it by the higher atmospheric pressure. This is disproved by the fact other shaped object do not seem to be sucked into the flow at all. The shape of the wing, particularly, the upper surface, strongly affects the motion of the air and thereby strongly affects the amount of lift and drag produced. The shape of the wing (the top or bottom) strongly affects the direction of the motion of influenced air. Thereby strongly affecting the amount of lift produced. Example One of the airfoil shapes that generates the most lift at zero degrees angle of attack is the under cambered. It uses shape on top and bottom to divert the low-pressure air. |
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