View Single Post
  #2  
Old May 5th 04, 04:36 PM
Eggert Ehmke
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

(Craig Funston) schrieb:

I have driven many miles with an automobile test rig consisting of a
pitot, a static and a TE probe connected to a pair of side by side
U-tube water manometers. The manometers share the same static and one
uses the pitot signal while the other uses the TE signal. A properly
calibrated TE probe will cause exactly the same pressure difference as
the pitot, just with the opposite sign.


I understand we need the TE probe to generate the difference
static-dynamic because classical instruments are pure mechanical and
need the TE information to compensate the vario. But given electronic
devices/computers, do we really need the TE probe at all? The
information is given, when static and dynamic pressure are known. The
rest can be calculated. Wrong?
Eggert