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a wrote in
: On Sep 6, 3:51*am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: a wrote in news:e5fb9dcd-6bd8-42e3-9a50-f6370d188424 @x35g2000hsb.googlegroups.com: On Sep 5, 6:46*pm, Leviterande Leviterande. wrote: Now woludnt a shorter prop with a bigger chord(and q-tips) move more a ir and thus creating equal thrust as a longer propeller with thinner chor d? when I tried the patented fan it was pretty quiet *however. How did you try the patented fan? AS for longer chords? Probably not. Think of the *most efficient wing s for airplanes -- the ones that provide the best lift/drag. They are long and slender. The same principles hold for props. You can be sure if wide chords were better they'd be showing up on experimental aircraft, and they are not. They do actually, and they can be very efficient indeed. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nxz1UF67EQI There's also been the Dyke Delta, and the facetmobile, of course. Bertie I don't think you'd find these as 'efficient' as conventionally shaped aircraft, else we'd be seeing competition gliders shaped this way. Those airplane shapes would have very light wing loading of course, but huge wetted areas -- think drag. Yeah, I understand al of that, but the word efficient is one that is often bandied as some sort of standard, but is just as misunderstood. While I know you mean aerodynamic efficiency in it's purest form, the mission is the yardstick by which you must measure the success of an airplane. Gliders are good at what they do, but they're as much a compromise as any other type of airplane. Low aspect ration machines have a few enormous advantages, not the least of which is a huge speed range and relatively low drag at low alpha. Span loading is more relevant than area loading in many ways and application, depending on what you're trying to get the wing to do at any given momen, and a low span loading, as in a glider, has to be paid for with drag just like any other aerodynamic benifit. Simply put, the longer the span, the more air you're moving around. Now, for some applications, this is more efficient, since by agitating a greater volume air in a less agressive fashion than a little air, you may, and may is the operative word here, create less drag in your flight situation. . As for using that concept for prop blade shape, , where efficiency is defined in the conventional engineering sense as power out divided by power in, long and thin blades seem to win over short and fat. Depends on the application and what you're asking the blade to do. Length brings its own problem here again, but in spades, since tip speeds, particulalry at high cruise speeds, becomes a problem. There simply are no pat answers in aerodynamics. "Monoplanes are more efficient than biplanes" for instnace, is an oft touted example. Simply not true in every aspect. It depends on what you're asking the airplane to do. Of course, particualrexamples may be plucked from the air to prove almost any POV here. You could look at two types of aircraft and compare their performance with a single yardstick, such as fuel burn, but that doesn't make one more efficient than another as whole. just on fuel burn. If the fuel efficient one can't get out of the 800 foot strip it's parked in and the other one can, then the one that can is the more efficient machine for it's mission. That's not to say some airplanes aren't just plain inefficient, but it is a bit ridiculous to say that just because there's a popular mission and most airplanes tend to gel in that corner of design that those types of aircraft are ultimatley the most efficient things in the sky. Bertie |
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