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#1
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Gatt writes:
I recommend building an airplane sometime. The ultimate way to prove your theory is to be like the Wright Brothers; build it and fly it. Folks on this forum have logged hundreds of thousands if not millions of collective hours and all of them have put their asses on the line based on the aerodynamic principles in books ... But they have not built airplanes, as you suggest (with a few rare exceptions, and even then they did not design them). About once a month somebody comes in here and wants to talk about how aerospace science is all wrong but the thing is, none of 'em ever seems to have flown an airplane. Flying an airplane wouldn't help, although designing one (successfully) would. |
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On Oct 4, 10:27 am, Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
The cigarettes would be lit so that stream of smoke floats upward. Can cigarettes be lit so that the smoke flows downward? If flat pressure sensors were mounted below the wing, close to the trailing edge, they would show a momentary increase in pressure. We've been told for years by people who do wind-tunnel experiments that the pressure on the bottom is not increased. Again, it's not intuitive. We're feeling drag, not an increase in pressure. If we hold a funnel (a version of a converging duct) with the big end to the wind, we'll find accelerating airflow in it, decreasing pressure, decreasing temperature, and drag that makes us think that the pressure in it is increasing. The air below is moving downward, something that could be measured by an airspeed indicator, but that doesn't mean pressure is increased. It means that the air has dynamic pressure now because it's moving, and if it's moving its static pressure has decreased. Better get building this thing. Get back to us as to the pressure readings under the wing. Dan Dan |
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On Oct 3, 7:04 pm, Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
Hi, The title of this post implies that I know why airplanes fly. I don't, not completely at least. But I do know that I have read a lot of "official" explanations that are just plain wrong. Or just buy the book "Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators" and look at the pictures. -Robert |
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On Oct 4, 12:48 pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote:
On Oct 3, 7:04 pm, Le Chaud Lapin wrote: The title of this post implies that I know why airplanes fly. I don't, not completely at least. But I do know that I have read a lot of "official" explanations that are just plain wrong. Or just buy the book "Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators" and look at the pictures. -Robert What will I see? -Le Chaud Lapin- |
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Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
On Oct 4, 12:48 pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote: On Oct 3, 7:04 pm, Le Chaud Lapin wrote: The title of this post implies that I know why airplanes fly. I don't, not completely at least. But I do know that I have read a lot of "official" explanations that are just plain wrong. Or just buy the book "Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators" and look at the pictures. -Robert What will I see? -Le Chaud Lapin- What will I see???? The collective knowledge of the finest aerodynamics minds since the dawn of aviation. ANA is the "bible" for anyone from Astronauts to Student Pilots. It's not written for the casual user however. I'm sure from what I've been reading of your posts that you might perhaps have something you would like to see changed in the book to reflect a more accurate text. If you would like to do this, please email me and I'll put you in touch with the right people at the Naval Test Pilot School at Patuxant NAS. -- Dudley Henriques |
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Dudley Henriques wrote:
Le Chaud Lapin wrote: On Oct 4, 12:48 pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote: On Oct 3, 7:04 pm, Le Chaud Lapin wrote: The title of this post implies that I know why airplanes fly. I don't, not completely at least. But I do know that I have read a lot of "official" explanations that are just plain wrong. Or just buy the book "Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators" and look at the pictures. -Robert What will I see? -Le Chaud Lapin- What will I see???? The collective knowledge of the finest aerodynamics minds since the dawn of aviation. ANA is the "bible" for anyone from Astronauts to Student Pilots. It's not written for the casual user however. Can us nonNaval aviators still read it? :-) Matt |
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Matt Whiting wrote:
Dudley Henriques wrote: Le Chaud Lapin wrote: On Oct 4, 12:48 pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote: On Oct 3, 7:04 pm, Le Chaud Lapin wrote: The title of this post implies that I know why airplanes fly. I don't, not completely at least. But I do know that I have read a lot of "official" explanations that are just plain wrong. Or just buy the book "Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators" and look at the pictures. -Robert What will I see? -Le Chaud Lapin- What will I see???? The collective knowledge of the finest aerodynamics minds since the dawn of aviation. ANA is the "bible" for anyone from Astronauts to Student Pilots. It's not written for the casual user however. Can us nonNaval aviators still read it? :-) Matt Absolutely! Accurate information is accurate information to all.....well, ALMOST all anyway!! :-)) -- Dudley Henriques |
#8
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Le Chaud Lapin wrote in
oups.com: What will I see? Lots of pictures which is probably all you can comprehend. -- |
#9
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John Godwin wrote:
Le Chaud Lapin wrote in oups.com: What will I see? Lots of pictures which is probably all you can comprehend. Me thinks that reply by LCB, and others like it, have Mx written all over it... ![]() |
#10
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ManhattanMan wrote:
Me thinks that reply by LCB, LCB??? Try LCL....... |
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