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Old December 30th 03, 05:57 AM
Mary Shafer
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On Tue, 30 Dec 2003 02:21:26 GMT, Chad Irby wrote:

You don't need a few thousand hours on an airframe to figure out the
fuel usage. It's a fairly simple thing called "math."


Once you know what the drag is, sure. But predicting the drag is
fraught with error, as previous aircraft have shown. The usual
failure in prediction is trim angle of attack. It's wrong, which
means that the horizontal is set at the wrong angle, so the trim drag
is higher than predicted and the fuel usage is, too.

I'm trying to remember which airplane it was that was sweating out
something like 250 drag counts between predicted and as-flown a while
back. They were moving antennas, fidgeting with the cg to change the
trim angle, smoothing the skin--all kinds of stuff. It must have been
the F-16, I guess.

Mary
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Mary Shafer Retired aerospace research engineer