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pchapman(at)ionsys.com Guest
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Posted: Wed Aug 29, 2007 11:57 am Post subject: tuft test video - 601 HDS |
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I finally got around to doing a little video of some tuft testing on
the 601 HDS I fly, filmed with a 0.3 wide angle lens on the camcorder.
It is posted online at http://pcxstuff.blip.tv/file/356716/ and can
also be downloaded as a 13MB .wmv file. It's not a particularly clear video.
It was an unprofessional test, a flight with no detailed plan, on a
dark, turbulent day, quickly done before the weather got any worse.
But I haven't seen anything better, so this will have to do until I
get around to trying again.
In its nearly 2 minutes, the video basically shows slow flight,
throttled back, with a few approaches down to incipient stalls. Audio
was removed (including a lot of oil canning noise near the stall!),
but some indicated speeds called out by the pilot are shown in text
on screen. Speeds are typically low, eg 70 mph indicated before
slowing down, then down to 50 or 40 indicated (naturally likely
inaccurate) for the slow flight. The pitch angle against the horizon
is an indication of the speed.
At about 37 and 49 seconds seconds there are clear stall recoveries,
after a lot of wing rock. I don't know if there was an actual stall
break or the pilot simply let the stick forward once the bucking was
getting enough.
I haven't thought through it all yet myself, but a few observations
are possible:
-- One can clearly see the region of separated airflow spread
outboard and forward as the wing gets closer to a stall.
-- Even when in slow flight not right at a stall, a large area near
the wing root doesn't have straight fore to aft flow. I'm not current
on my aerodynamics, but a waving yarn might only indicate an area of
a turbulence within a thick boundary lager, and not fully separated
flow. One can't see the actual wing/fuselage junction, but even
outboard of that, the flow isn't all front to back.
-- It doesn't take much to mess up airflow right down on the wing
surface, if closer to the leading edge.
There's a yarn just behind of the aft, inboard Dzus fastener on the
wing locker. Even when the plane dives with speed when recovering
from a stall, that yarn doesn't like to stay straight. On the other
hand, the yarn behind the top of the main wheel strut, also behind an
obstacle, does stay straight. A quick guess is that the slight
upwards bulge of the wing locker near the front of the locker is
what's actually causing a flow problem, not the Dzus fastener. The
slight bulge is far enough forward on the airfoil that the shape
becomes critical, unlike for the gear strut which is further back.
The yarn that is forward of the "behind the Dzus" one, is right on
the locker, and it shows a tendency to lift off the surface rather
than stay flat on the wing.
-- There is substantial inwards flow near the trailing edge of the
wing. Some is expected near the tip as the tip vortex rotates up and
inwards. But at low speed there's some inwards flow component along
the aileron pretty much all the way inboard. Some inwards flow can be
expected from a sharply forward swept trailing edge wing, but the
amount is much more than I expected.
-- Right when the plane is about to stall, it is impressive how many
of those little yarns are trying to go the wrong way, to jump the
aerodynamically sinking ship!
Peter Chapman
Toronto, ON
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Gig Giacona
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1416 Location: El Dorado Arkansas USA
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Posted: Wed Aug 29, 2007 12:23 pm Post subject: Re: tuft test video - 601 HDS |
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Great video. I to looks like the air is really confused just aft of the inboard corner of the wing locker.
I wonder if this is caused by the locker?
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_________________ W.R. "Gig" Giacona
601XL Under Construction
See my progress at www.peoamerica.net/N601WR |
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grs-pms(at)comcast.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Aug 29, 2007 1:12 pm Post subject: tuft test video - 601 HDS |
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Thanks for posting the video. The wing locker is obviously disturbing the
flow. It would be interesting to locate an array of VGs at about 5% of the
local chord in front of the locker area. I'd bet on an improvement. Also I
notice that the tufts near the tip stay pretty well aligned as the angle of
attack approaches the stall point. Credit to Chris for that.
How about tufting the canopy aft of the high point and along the top skin
behind the canopy. I'll bet there is considerable separation there, even at
cruising speed. I expect that Zodiacs pay a price for that great
visibility.
As for the area near the wing root, I wonder if a suitable fillet wouldn't
improve that.
George
Do not archive.
---
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Gig Giacona
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1416 Location: El Dorado Arkansas USA
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pchapman(at)ionsys.com Guest
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Posted: Wed Aug 29, 2007 2:40 pm Post subject: tuft test video - 601 HDS |
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George wrote:
Quote: | How about tufting the canopy aft of the high point and along the top skin
behind the canopy. I'll bet there is considerable separation there,
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Good idea.
There's a single canopy tuft test picture that I took years ago, 3/4
the way down the page:
http://web.ionsys.com/~pchapman/zdc/zdc_photos_construction.htm
(I haven't updated the 601 part of my website in years.)
Quote: | As for the area near the wing root, I wonder if a suitable fillet wouldn't
improve that.
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.. Like Dave Austin put on his plane. While the video showed an area
of disturbed airflow much larger than a fillet, the video was all at
low speed and not cruise. (A small photo of Dave's fillet is on the
same web page mentioned above.)
Gig wrote:
Quote: | Since you are doing tuft testing how about doing the side of they
fuselage and find a good location for a static port.
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I'm NOT planning to duct tape the camera to the wingtip to look back inboard.
Peter Chapman
Toronto, ON
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grs-pms(at)comcast.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Aug 29, 2007 3:50 pm Post subject: tuft test video - 601 HDS |
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Peter:
Nice set of pictures. I wonder if VGs mounted on the aft canopy bow would
be too far aft to improve the situation. It should be relatively easy to
attach them to the screws that tie the bow to the plexiglass and experiment
a bit. Ideally the VGs should be forward of the crown of the canopy, but,
at least in your photo, the flow appears to remain attached aft of that
point.
George
Do not archive
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Terry Phillips
Joined: 11 Jan 2006 Posts: 346 Location: Corvallis, MT
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Posted: Thu Aug 30, 2007 6:43 am Post subject: tuft test video - 601 HDS |
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Peter, thank you for posting the video. Very interesting results there. It
is really great when someone takes the time and effort to produce real
data, rather than just speculating--like I am doing
Your study reminds me of the work that Klaus Truemper did on his HDS--see:
http://www.utdallas.edu/~klaus/Airplane/airplane.html
and follow the link to the wing root fairing. Klaus used a manometer to
look at the pressure at various points on his HDS and demonstrated that the
curvature of the fuselage over the wing creates a low pressure region at
the wing root aft of the widest part of the fuselage. Klaus built wing root
fairings that reduced the effect of the low pressure zone and improved the
performance and stall behavior of his aircraft. Is it possible that the
inward flow at the aileron is caused by the low pressure region all the way
in at the wing root? I plan to put fairings on my 601XL, but I'm hoping
that someone will start selling them before I get to that point so that I
don't have to make them myself.
The turbulence around the wing locker is troubling. I am putting in the
wing lockers, and I am planning to use flexible tape to cover the hinge.
Soaring pilots commonly use tape to seal gaps, see, e.g.,
http://www.wingsandwheels.com/page29.htm
My goal was primarily to seal the rain out. However, there might be a
fringe benefit of reducing boundary layer separation caused by the locker
door hinge. The separation along the inboard side of the wing locker door
could be caused by air leakage from the inside of the wing. The bottom of
the wing is a high pressure area. I'm guessing that the inside of the wing
is pressurized through any small opening on the bottom of the wing. There
appears to be a gap along the inside edge of the locker door. Leakage
through that gap could induce separation, and your video suggests that is a
problem area on that wing. It would be interesting to know if taping that
gap would affect the separation in that zone. If leakage is causing the
problem, possible fixes might be to use more Dzus fasteners along the door
edge, putting a thin gasket to improve the seal, or stiffening the door by
gluing or riveting on longitudinal doubler strips to the inside of the door.
Thanks again for posting the video. Nice work.
Terry
At 03:54 PM 8/29/2007 -0400, you wrote:
Quote: |
I finally got around to doing a little video of some tuft testing on the
601 HDS I fly, filmed with a 0.3 wide angle lens on the camcorder.
It is posted online at http://pcxstuff.blip.tv/file/356716/ and can also
be downloaded as a 13MB .wmv file. It's not a particularly clear video.
It was an unprofessional test, a flight with no detailed plan, on a dark,
turbulent day, quickly done before the weather got any worse. But I
haven't seen anything better, so this will have to do until I get around
to trying again.
In its nearly 2 minutes, the video basically shows slow flight, throttled
back, with a few approaches down to incipient stalls. Audio was removed
(including a lot of oil canning noise near the stall!), but some indicated
speeds called out by the pilot are shown in text on screen. Speeds are
typically low, eg 70 mph indicated before slowing down, then down to 50 or
40 indicated (naturally likely inaccurate) for the slow flight. The pitch
angle against the horizon is an indication of the speed.
At about 37 and 49 seconds seconds there are clear stall recoveries, after
a lot of wing rock. I don't know if there was an actual stall break or the
pilot simply let the stick forward once the bucking was getting enough.
I haven't thought through it all yet myself, but a few observations are
possible:
-- One can clearly see the region of separated airflow spread outboard and
forward as the wing gets closer to a stall.
-- Even when in slow flight not right at a stall, a large area near the
wing root doesn't have straight fore to aft flow. I'm not current on my
aerodynamics, but a waving yarn might only indicate an area of a
turbulence within a thick boundary lager, and not fully separated flow.
One can't see the actual wing/fuselage junction, but even outboard of
that, the flow isn't all front to back.
-- It doesn't take much to mess up airflow right down on the wing
surface, if closer to the leading edge.
There's a yarn just behind of the aft, inboard Dzus fastener on the wing
locker. Even when the plane dives with speed when recovering from a stall,
that yarn doesn't like to stay straight. On the other hand, the yarn
behind the top of the main wheel strut, also behind an obstacle, does stay
straight. A quick guess is that the slight upwards bulge of the wing
locker near the front of the locker is what's actually causing a flow
problem, not the Dzus fastener. The slight bulge is far enough forward on
the airfoil that the shape becomes critical, unlike for the gear strut
which is further back. The yarn that is forward of the "behind the Dzus"
one, is right on the locker, and it shows a tendency to lift off the
surface rather than stay flat on the wing.
-- There is substantial inwards flow near the trailing edge of the wing.
Some is expected near the tip as the tip vortex rotates up and inwards.
But at low speed there's some inwards flow component along the aileron
pretty much all the way inboard. Some inwards flow can be expected from a
sharply forward swept trailing edge wing, but the amount is much more than
I expected.
-- Right when the plane is about to stall, it is impressive how many of
those little yarns are trying to go the wrong way, to jump the
aerodynamically sinking ship!
Peter Chapman
Toronto, ON
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Terry Phillips
ttp44~at~rkymtn.net
Corvallis MT
601XL/Jab 3300 slow build kit - Rudder done--finally; working on the stab
http://www.mykitlog.com/N47TP/
| - The Matronics Zenith-List Email Forum - | | Use the List Feature Navigator to browse the many List utilities available such as the Email Subscriptions page, Archive Search & Download, 7-Day Browse, Chat, FAQ, Photoshare, and much more:
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_________________ Terry Phillips
Corvallis, MT
ttp44<at>rkymtn.net
Zenith 601XL/Jab 3300 slow build kit - Tail feathers done; working on the wings. |
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pchapman(at)ionsys.com Guest
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Posted: Thu Aug 30, 2007 8:14 am Post subject: tuft test video - 601 HDS |
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At 10:37 30-08-07, you wrote:
Quote: | Is it possible that the inward flow at the aileron is caused by
the low pressure region all the way in at the wing root?
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For all I know, sure, it could be encouraging some of that inwards flow.
Quote: | There appears to be a gap along the inside edge of the locker door.
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Yes that particular locker door is a little bulged in spots -- I
think a snugly fitted door would do better. Just didn't come out
perfectly when built. Next time I should put yarn right next to those
gaps to see if I can detect outflow -- or tape up the gap for one
flight. I personally wouldn't worry about gap taping the hinges given
all the other drag sources, and because water can also leak in from
the sides. But no objections if one can get it to fit snugly over the
hinge. (I did use some sort of gap seal like tape on the top wing
skin where the locker doors press on them when closed, to try to
reduce any metal on metal (or metal on paint) rubbing.)
I sometimes thought of doing water manometer tests of pressures in
the rad ducting in my engine compartment... and now that I've looked
again at Klaus' page, I see he has done exactly that.
Peter Chapman
Toronto, ON
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