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On Oct 3, 8:15 am, Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
Actually I did because every book I read about flying skimped on the subject. I'm going to hop over to MIT's OpenCourseWare later this week and download their most basic course on aero/astro. Benoulli's principle is toss around as if it were facecloth, but I'm getting the feeling that no one is really doing the physics. Lemme see: People have been building flying machines since the late 1800's, about 125 years now, and none of them have been interested enough in the phenomenon of lift to do the physics? How old are you, anyway? Many of the contributors here have been flying much longer than you have likely been alive and have studied this in detail, and some of them might even have doctorates in the subject. The subject of lift has been beaten to death on this forum and if you Googled it you'd find some good information. Both Newton and Bernoulli are correct. Even inside a pipe the static pressure drops as velocity increases. That's why your bottom table jumps as you yank off the top one: you accelerated an airflow. And in generating lift there's a displacement of air. Can't escape that at all. The stagnation point on a leading edge isn't right at the front. It's slightly below the wing, and as AOA increases it moves back underneath quite a bit. It's not all intuitive, you see, and that intuitive understanding of some of this stuff is where people get all messed up and think they have the answers that have escaped all the other experts all these years. We run into this attitude rather frequently in the flight training industry. It tends to make the student unteachable. Dan |
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