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#22
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![]() buttman wrote: My instructor, which is a very knowledgable guy tried telling me that lift has nothing to do with airspeed. He said that lift is directly and soley related to AOA and AOA only. Uh-huh. So if you use a crane to lift up the nose of a 747 sitting on the ramp, your instructor believes it will be generating the same amount of lift as it would at that AOA and 400 knots. Detach the crane and the 747 will just stay there in a nose up attitude without any visible means of support. Or maybe your instructor has a poor understanding of lift. Lift is actually a mathematical formula: L = 1/2 air density * velocity squared * area of the wing * coefficient of lift for that wing. Your instructor should know that; it is on both the commercial and flight instructor written exams. You generally can't do much about the air density, but you usually can change your velocity and the coefficient of lift. The coefficient of lift for most wings increases with AOA, peaking at the critical AOA and dropping off sharply at higher AOA after that. Some flaps and other devices (variable geometry wngs come to mind) can change the area of the wing and/or its coefficient of lift. Also, "the area of the wing" is not quite right; it really is a reference area which might have little to do with the actual wing size. A helicopter, for example, uses a reference area equal to the entire disk, not just the blades. The same rule applies to propellers. The reference area on a fixed wing plane includes the area through the fuselage, as if the wing was all one piece. You can use either sq. feet or sq. meters (or, heck, sq. rods if you want to) for the reference area; it all works out as long as you use the same type of units all through the calculation, including air density. |
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