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Old January 26th 08, 02:35 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Bertie the Bunyip[_22_]
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Default Aerodynamic question for you engineers

Jim Logajan wrote in
:

Phil J wrote:
Imagine
that you had a couple of tall jack stands that you could place under
the wings to elevate the airplane a foot or so off the ground. Let's
say you place the stands under the wings just back from the CG such
that you have to press down on the tail to keep the nosewheel off the
ground. This is similar to the condition of flight since the center
of lift is aft of the center of gravity. Now if you push down on the
tail, the airplane will rotate about the center of lift. Wouldn't it
work the same way in the air?


They aren't equivalent situations, mechanically speaking.

As I understand it, the force of the tail plane's elevators typically
moves the center of lift forward and backward along the airplane's
axis as the elevators are moved up and down (as well as changing the
lift magnitude a little - though that is secondary). One presumably
enters stable flight when the center of lift is moved to coincide with
the center of gravity.


That's exactly the case if you include the stab in the CL equation. If
you're just referring to it on the wing itself, providing the AoA and speed
remain the same it doesn;t shift. It's a matter of definition.


Bertie