![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I am currently designing an aircraft to compete in a competition with
a specific goal and the way I'm proceding is as follows: 1) Select a published airfoil with characteristics that meet the design goal/s. Use a free program like xfoil to help in the analysis. 2) Create a spreadsheet to compute the mass of the various components based on material densities which is then tied to the airfoil lift coefficient and vehicle speed to size the wing. It will calculate the required moment arms to keep the MAC, aerodynamic center and CG where they should be in relation to each other and size the wing and tail. The wieght can also tie to the aircraft performance issues important to you to size the power requirement which determines engine weight to loop back through the previous calculations with the weight correction. You could carry it further to cover strength analysis. 3) Create a model in the 3d modelling software you have access to (I used Solidworks) and import it into a 3d CFD program to verify the validity of your design (I used Ansys). You could probaly get a local university student to take care of this step for you for next to nothing. 4) Build and fly the prototype. 5) Repair the prototype and make adjustments. I saw no need to create an executable. The spreadsheet was fast and easy to adjust as required along the way. There are quite a few programs available to do this that are not very expensive but I personally didn't care for any of the ones I saw. On Tue, 25 Sep 2007 21:17:19 -0700, Le Chaud Lapin wrote: Hi All, I have never really used a CAD program to design anything. I toyed with AutoCAD back in 1987 but nothing more. I'd like to design a small model aircraft, about one meter in length. Even though it's small, it's still complex. There are many mechanical pieces. The most important feature I need, by far, is interdependencies of paramters. [There is probably a fancy name for this]. In other words, if I change an artifact of the aircraft from one material to the other, I would like the change to manifest in every aspect of the aircraft that depends on the material. I guess this is standard feature. I would like to be able to program interelationships also, preferrably in C++, but a scripting language will do. The other important feature is that I need the tool to be "3D-aware" from the outset. I'm hearing others in rec.aviation.piloting that AutoCAD is not entirely 3D-aware. I don't know what that means, and I am definitely not interested in finding out by trial and error. I post to CCS because the presentation of SolidWorks on its website gives me the feeling that they understand these issues and attacked them head on, but any CAD package would do. Finally, I prefer cheap over expensive. ![]() -Le Chaud Lapin- |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
CAD Tools For Aircraft Design | Le Chaud Lapin | Piloting | 9 | September 26th 07 01:47 PM |
Great Aircraft Ownership Tool | Jay Honeck | Piloting | 4 | January 20th 06 03:09 PM |
X-Plane for aircraft design | Ghazan Haider | Simulators | 1 | August 28th 05 09:17 AM |
Larger Cirrus Design Aircraft? | Will | Piloting | 6 | January 5th 05 02:36 PM |
Comments on new design carbon aircraft kit? | lifespeed | Home Built | 2 | December 3rd 03 03:22 PM |