![]() |
| 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 |
|
#21
|
|||
|
|||
|
But there can't be a relative wind unless some other force is acting on the
plane. It goes along with the wind just like a raisin in a cake. If the wind changes speed or direction suddenly, the inertia of the plane drags the raisin through the cake briefly creating relative wind until the plane reaches the same speed as the wind. The inertia is acting briefly like an outside force. Take a look at the next weathervane you see. It has a pivot attached to the roof which is attached to the ground. Take a look at the next airplane you see... An airplane is not a weathervane. Let's say you are in a open cockpit airplane in no wind. You are hit from the side by a sudden 75 knot gust that continues as a steady wind. Because of the inertia, the plane does not start moving sideways at 75 knots instantly. You will experience a brief moment of 75 knots of wind on your cheek which will rapidly diminish as the plane picks up sideways speed. Because the vertical tail is well aft of the center of gravity, the plane may well "weathervane" into the wind as you suggest. The inertia of the plane, acting through the center of gravity, which is point bodies in space tend to rotate about, is briefly the pivot of the weathervane. The plane will quickly accelerate to 75 knots sideways motion. When it reaches the speed of the wind, there will be not further evidence of wind (and no further weathervane tendency) except by looking at the ground. If you were in a hot air balloon, you would also feel a sudden strong wind that dropped of very quickly to zero after which you would be sailing across the landscape at 75 knots but able to light a candle in the basket and not see if flicker a bit. -- Roger Long Kobra wrote in message ... Do I fly?! Don't be a wise ass...why do you think they call it "weathervaning"? What does a weathervane do? It turns the "weathervane" into the relative wind. An airplane is a weathervane too and the wind can and does turn an airplane into the relative wind. Definition: "weathervaning". Kobra "CASK829" wrote in message ... The tail does not know what direction the wind is blowing if the airplane is in the air. So therefore it DOES NOT push the nose into the wind. Do You fly? It's from the wind striking the vertical stabilizer and pushing the nose into the wind. Kobra |
|
#22
|
|||
|
|||
|
To weathervane, you need differential force. A steady wind while on the ground
allows such a force to develop. A steady wind in the air does not. However, a gust in the air does (the resistance would be due to inertia, and centered at the center of gravity). Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
|
#23
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Kobra" wrote in message ... Do I fly?! Don't be a wise ass...why do you think they call it "weathervaning"? What does a weathervane do? It turns the "weathervane" into the relative wind. An airplane is a weathervane too and the wind can and does turn an airplane into the relative wind. Definition: "weathervaning". As others have pointed out, it's only "weathervaning" if the aircraft is in contact with the ground the same as a weathervane on a building. If the airplane is airborne it is in a moving air mass and by definition can not "weathervane". Think about it, if airplanes "weathervaned" in flight every plane in the sky would want to turn into the wind instead of going where you wanted it to. Relative wind in flight is airflow opposite the direction of aircraft movement through the air mass, it is not defined as a headwind, crosswind or tailwind. The aircraft I primarily fly is a b*#&h on the ground in a crosswind due to the large vertical stab area and the arm from the vertical to the center of pressure. But, once airborne she's a beauty. Regards, Mish |
|
#24
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... That yaw can be described as "weathervaning" and the rudder is used to counteract it. What you are describing is actually "adverse yaw". Weathervaning only occurs when in contact with the ground. |
|
#25
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Roger Long" om wrote in
message ... But there can't be a relative wind unless some other force is acting on the plane. "Some other force". You mean, like the lift vector being tilted to one side or the other, dragging the airplane sideways? An airplane is not a weathervane. No, you're right. An airplane is an airplane and a weathervane is a weathervane. However, the airplane can behave a lot like a weathervane in a variety of situations, including while in flight. All it takes is for the relative wind to not be coming directly from the nose. Pete |
|
#26
|
|||
|
|||
|
"David Megginson" wrote in message
... That would require extremely draggy ailerons. I know that some planes turn sloppy without rudder, but what planes don't change heading at all? Gliders? Gliders are the most common, most dramatic example, yes. And it's true that even most of the "worst behaved" airplanes probably will eventually get around to changing heading. But those that do, may still take a while to get around to it, and even a "well behaved" airplane can demonstrate adverse yaw. Just put in a bunch of aileron input without using the rudder and note the heading change on the DG as the bank occurs. If you want to find an airplane that just keeps on slipping without turning, I'd guess that airplanes like a Pitts or some fighter jets would be good examples. I know for a fact that the Marchetti SF260 is a good example, but haven't had a chance to fly other aircraft with similar characteristics. Generally speaking, less stable aircraft are more likely to not bother to yaw in the direction of the slip, by definition. Probably for the vast majority of airplanes, saying that they simply won't ever change heading is an overstatement, I admit. But many will turn opposite the bank, and many will take a VERY long time to make any significant heading change. Pete |
|
#27
|
|||
|
|||
|
|
|
#28
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Robert Moore" wrote in message
. 7... But I think that the discussion was weathervaning into the actual wind, not the relative wind. That's not how I read it. Alex was asking about flight on final approach in a crosswind. In that situation, aileron by itself to maintain groundtrack along the extended centerline will definitely cause the relative wind to not be aligned with the longitudinal axis. That lack of alignment then results in imbalanced forces on the vertical stabilizer, which then results in weathervaning. If I bank away from the wind, does the airplane then weathervane into or away from the wind? Away from the the Earth-relative wind, but into the airplane-relative wind. The only thing that can cause the airplane to weathervane into the actual wind is for the wheels to be in contact with the ground. If you mean "the only thing that can cause the airplane to weathervane into the actual wind without any other control inputs", then yes...I'd have to agree with that. I don't think that's the question originally posed though. (Nitpicking ![]() Without the qualification I mention, banking into the actual wind causes a slip in the direction of the actual wind, which causes the relative wind to come from the same direction as the actual wind, which would cause weathervaning into the actual wind. Without enough aileron input, the plane wouldn't actually weathervane all the way around to align the longitudinal axis with the actual wind, but the airplane certainly would have weathervaned toward that direction. It's all about your frame of reference and your other assumptions. Lacking the necessary assumptions, one is free to imagine situations where the statement is not true. (End nitpicking) Without the pivot, a weathervane doesn't weathervane. True. However, even when not on the ground, there is a pivot. It just happens to be at the CG rather than the landing gear. Also, the "wind" that's relevant for the question of weathervaning changes from being the wind relative to the Earth, to being the wind relative to the airplane. Pete |
|
#29
|
|||
|
|||
|
|
|
#30
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Gary Mishler" wrote in message
news:THXrb.166838$Fm2.146042@attbi_s04... That yaw can be described as "weathervaning" and the rudder is used to counteract it. What you are describing is actually "adverse yaw". Weathervaning only occurs when in contact with the ground. No. Adverse yaw is drag caused by ailerons and acts *opposite* to the direction of the bank. If you'd take the time to read my statements more carefully, you'd see that in the statement you quoted, the yaw I'm talking about acts in the *same* direction of the bank. And is in fact "weathervaning". Pete |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|