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Electrically Powered Ultralight Aircraft



 
 
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  #1  
Old August 17th 07, 11:52 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.homebuilt,rec.aviation.ultralight,rec.aviation.soaring
Dan Luke[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 713
Default Electrically Powered Ultralight Aircraft


"Charles Vincent" wrote:

Just because it is not noticeable, or measurable by the lack of sensitivity
with the instrument you are currently not using, does not mean that it does
not exist.

More weight on the bearings will cause more rolling resistance. That is
fact, not open to dispute. If you say it is, I want to buy the rights to
the bearings you are using, so I can patent them and make a fortune.


If a bird craps on your windshield, it is more likely to noticeably
influence your aerodynamic drag than rolling resistance.....I took Jim's
"can't be found" to mean lost in the noise. According to SAE studies,
aerodynamic drag accounts for 60% of the resistance that must be overcome
for highway cruise, with tires being 25% and driveline friction making up
the last 15%.


Pardon the intrusion on this interesting discussion, but just how *does* added
weight in a car impose extra load on the powerplant besides via bearing
friction and tire deformation?

Added weight means the powerplant is doing more work to maintain the same
speed; there's no way around it, the laws of physics demand it. So where's
the extra power going?

--
Dan
T-182T at BFM


  #2  
Old August 17th 07, 11:58 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.homebuilt,rec.aviation.ultralight,rec.aviation.soaring
cavelamb himself[_4_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 474
Default Electrically Powered Ultralight Aircraft

Dan Luke wrote:

"Charles Vincent" wrote:


Just because it is not noticeable, or measurable by the lack of sensitivity
with the instrument you are currently not using, does not mean that it does
not exist.

More weight on the bearings will cause more rolling resistance. That is
fact, not open to dispute. If you say it is, I want to buy the rights to
the bearings you are using, so I can patent them and make a fortune.


If a bird craps on your windshield, it is more likely to noticeably
influence your aerodynamic drag than rolling resistance.....I took Jim's
"can't be found" to mean lost in the noise. According to SAE studies,
aerodynamic drag accounts for 60% of the resistance that must be overcome
for highway cruise, with tires being 25% and driveline friction making up
the last 15%.



Pardon the intrusion on this interesting discussion, but just how *does* added
weight in a car impose extra load on the powerplant besides via bearing
friction and tire deformation?

Added weight means the powerplant is doing more work to maintain the same
speed; there's no way around it, the laws of physics demand it. So where's
the extra power going?


To accellerate...
  #3  
Old August 18th 07, 12:40 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.homebuilt,rec.aviation.ultralight,rec.aviation.soaring
Matt Whiting
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,232
Default Electrically Powered Ultralight Aircraft

Dan Luke wrote:
"Charles Vincent" wrote:

Just because it is not noticeable, or measurable by the lack of sensitivity
with the instrument you are currently not using, does not mean that it does
not exist.

More weight on the bearings will cause more rolling resistance. That is
fact, not open to dispute. If you say it is, I want to buy the rights to
the bearings you are using, so I can patent them and make a fortune.

If a bird craps on your windshield, it is more likely to noticeably
influence your aerodynamic drag than rolling resistance.....I took Jim's
"can't be found" to mean lost in the noise. According to SAE studies,
aerodynamic drag accounts for 60% of the resistance that must be overcome
for highway cruise, with tires being 25% and driveline friction making up
the last 15%.


Pardon the intrusion on this interesting discussion, but just how *does* added
weight in a car impose extra load on the powerplant besides via bearing
friction and tire deformation?

Added weight means the powerplant is doing more work to maintain the same
speed; there's no way around it, the laws of physics demand it. So where's
the extra power going?


Heating the brakes. :-)

Matt
  #4  
Old August 18th 07, 12:55 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.homebuilt,rec.aviation.ultralight,rec.aviation.soaring
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,892
Default Electrically Powered Ultralight Aircraft

In rec.aviation.piloting Dan Luke wrote:

"Charles Vincent" wrote:


Just because it is not noticeable, or measurable by the lack of sensitivity
with the instrument you are currently not using, does not mean that it does
not exist.

More weight on the bearings will cause more rolling resistance. That is
fact, not open to dispute. If you say it is, I want to buy the rights to
the bearings you are using, so I can patent them and make a fortune.


If a bird craps on your windshield, it is more likely to noticeably
influence your aerodynamic drag than rolling resistance.....I took Jim's
"can't be found" to mean lost in the noise. According to SAE studies,
aerodynamic drag accounts for 60% of the resistance that must be overcome
for highway cruise, with tires being 25% and driveline friction making up
the last 15%.


Pardon the intrusion on this interesting discussion, but just how *does* added
weight in a car impose extra load on the powerplant besides via bearing
friction and tire deformation?


It takes more power to accelerate the car to cruise speed in a given time.

F=ma

Added weight means the powerplant is doing more work to maintain the same
speed; there's no way around it, the laws of physics demand it. So where's
the extra power going?


Ummm, no, quite the opposite.

The laws of physics say once an object is in motion it takes no energy
to maintain the velocity UNLESS there is some other force at work
that would cause the velocity to decrease.

Since at a constant speed, the a in F=ma is zero, the force is zero
no matter the mass.

Once at speed in a car (or airplane or rocket ship) the only energy
needed to maintain speed is that equal to any drag forces that
would otherwise slow the car down.

Have you looked at the current crop of high mileage cars?

They all have very aerodynamic profiles to get the air drag down.

--
Jim Pennino

Remove .spam.sux to reply.
  #5  
Old August 18th 07, 02:33 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.homebuilt,rec.aviation.ultralight,rec.aviation.soaring
Ernest Christley
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 199
Default Electrically Powered Ultralight Aircraft

wrote:

The laws of physics say once an object is in motion it takes no energy
to maintain the velocity UNLESS there is some other force at work
that would cause the velocity to decrease.

Since at a constant speed, the a in F=ma is zero, the force is zero
no matter the mass.

Once at speed in a car (or airplane or rocket ship) the only energy
needed to maintain speed is that equal to any drag forces that
would otherwise slow the car down.

Have you looked at the current crop of high mileage cars?

They all have very aerodynamic profiles to get the air drag down.


They also have very narrow, hard tires. Unfortunately, the DOT has laws
against solid rubber tires or they could be made even harder.

Your analysis would be mostly correct if we were talking about trains.
I've stood beside a loaded one and watched it deform the tracks. A car
on the road is like a machine rolling across a mattress. Extra weight
pushes the tire down into the mattress and increases the drag. The
energy is going into deforming the tires and heating them. Ask any over
the road trucker what happens when you're hauling 40-tons and you don't
keep your tire pressure up. Tends to light up the night.
  #6  
Old August 18th 07, 03:05 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.homebuilt,rec.aviation.ultralight,rec.aviation.soaring
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,892
Default Electrically Powered Ultralight Aircraft

In rec.aviation.piloting Ernest Christley wrote:
wrote:


The laws of physics say once an object is in motion it takes no energy
to maintain the velocity UNLESS there is some other force at work
that would cause the velocity to decrease.

Since at a constant speed, the a in F=ma is zero, the force is zero
no matter the mass.

Once at speed in a car (or airplane or rocket ship) the only energy
needed to maintain speed is that equal to any drag forces that
would otherwise slow the car down.

Have you looked at the current crop of high mileage cars?

They all have very aerodynamic profiles to get the air drag down.


They also have very narrow, hard tires. Unfortunately, the DOT has laws
against solid rubber tires or they could be made even harder.


Your analysis would be mostly correct if we were talking about trains.


My analysis of what?

The biggest source of drag on a car is air followed by tires.

Of course the makers are going to put hard tires on as well as
streamline the vehicle to get mileage up.

The less drag, the less gas the vehicle uses.

What's your point?

--
Jim Pennino

Remove .spam.sux to reply.
  #9  
Old August 18th 07, 06:35 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.homebuilt,rec.aviation.ultralight,rec.aviation.soaring
Charles Vincent
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 170
Default Electrically Powered Ultralight Aircraft

wrote:
In rec.aviation.piloting Charles Vincent wrote:
wrote:

The biggest source of drag on a car is air followed by tires.

Of course the makers are going to put hard tires on as well as
streamline the vehicle to get mileage up.

The less drag, the less gas the vehicle uses.

What's your point?


That is only true in cruise on the highway. In stop and go city driving
driveline friction is the majority, followed by inertia. Air and tire
is a small percentage combined.


Inertia is not drag.

Inertia is F=ma.

In stop and go driving, F=ma dominates.

If it didn't, hybrids converting the F in deceleration into energy in
the batteries instead of heat in the brakes wouldn't get their high
mileage numbers.


Yes Jim, I knew the difference, and I see you know too. I had assumed
you also knew the difference between aerodynamic drag and rolling
friction when you lumped then together in your statement "The biggest
source of drag on a car is air followed by tires." I figured you were
using drag in a more generalized way rather than jumping to the
conclusion you just didn't know the difference. Since you are insisting
on being pedantic, then I will have to point out that inertia is really
just the m in F=ma, the formula just establishes a relationship between
the property of mass called inertia and force and acceleration. I
expect that the manufacturers are working to reduce all of the
"retarding" forces on their vehicles, which benefit them without regard
to the motive source. Electric vehicles can have an advantage in the
regime where inertia is the dominate "retarding" force and a
disadvantage where it is not.

Charles
  #10  
Old August 18th 07, 06:46 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.homebuilt,rec.aviation.ultralight,rec.aviation.soaring
Ernest Christley
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 199
Default Electrically Powered Ultralight Aircraft

wrote:
In rec.aviation.piloting Ernest Christley wrote:
wrote:

The laws of physics say once an object is in motion it takes no energy
to maintain the velocity UNLESS there is some other force at work
that would cause the velocity to decrease.

Since at a constant speed, the a in F=ma is zero, the force is zero
no matter the mass.

Once at speed in a car (or airplane or rocket ship) the only energy
needed to maintain speed is that equal to any drag forces that
would otherwise slow the car down.

Have you looked at the current crop of high mileage cars?

They all have very aerodynamic profiles to get the air drag down.


They also have very narrow, hard tires. Unfortunately, the DOT has laws
against solid rubber tires or they could be made even harder.


Your analysis would be mostly correct if we were talking about trains.


My analysis of what?

The biggest source of drag on a car is air followed by tires.

Of course the makers are going to put hard tires on as well as
streamline the vehicle to get mileage up.

The less drag, the less gas the vehicle uses.

What's your point?


The point is that weight matters...even in land-locked vehicles.
 




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