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On Mar 13, 1:37 pm, WingFlaps wrote:
Nope, if the airspeed is constant, the lift from the two wings is not the same. This is thought provoking discussion I was hoping to start! Can you see why lift does not equal weight in both cases? Common misconception: that a climbing wing is generating more lift than a descending wing. If the flight paths are both straight lines, whether climbing or descending, the lift is the same in both cases. As Jim said, only a change in the direction of flight will change the lift/weight ratio. A G-meter (such as in our Citabrias) will prove it. If the airspeeds are the same and the flight paths are both straight, the AOAs are both the same, too. But change the speeds while leaving the flight paths alone, and the AOA will change. It's why the airplane has a nose-high attitude in level slow flight as opposed to a lower nose attitude in level cruise. Dan |
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