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Tip tanks and wing root stresses

 
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Dennis Glaeser



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 53
Location: Rochester Hills, Michigan

PostPosted: Wed Mar 29, 2006 7:56 pm    Post subject: Tip tanks and wing root stresses Reply with quote

Konrad,

Quote:
From a purely structural standpoint, you would get the lowest in-flight wing
root stresses by burning the main (inboard) fuel first.


However typically, other considerations (i.e. unporting, pressure drops from
long lines, ...) drive the operational procedures that should be used.

Dennis Glaeser


That brings up another question that I have regarding Wing Spar Root stress
(not
necessarily in the RV-Series though):

Let me just say that in this scenario one would be able to switch between
all tanks,
.. not draining one into the other.

Would it be best to burn most fuel of the Mains before switching to the
Tips?
Or would one first burn most of the Tips before going to the Mains?

Which way would be better in a fully switchable 4-Tank System?

Thanks,
do not archive


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Randy Richter



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 5
Location: Reston, VA

PostPosted: Wed Mar 29, 2006 8:25 pm    Post subject: Tip tanks and wing root stresses Reply with quote

I gotta chime in here. I've flown KC-135s and C-130s, both of which are
about 130' wide. You can put something like 62,000 lbs of fuel across the
wings of the tanker and 44,000 in the wing of the Herc. For these types of
acft, wing fuel distribution, loading and burn sequence is a factor. They're
limited to 2.5g load factor for this and other reasons.

When you're talking a roughly 10' wing with 120 lbs of fuel in each side
(chock full), I'm thinking that sweating the burn sequence is a waste of
brain cells. If you've got tips, burn mains down till they can take the tip
quantity, then drain. Don't over-complicate your plumbing.

This is all the thought I'll devote to this subject.

Randy

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Randy Richter
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davidfenster(at)comcast.n
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PostPosted: Wed Mar 29, 2006 9:40 pm    Post subject: Tip tanks and wing root stresses Reply with quote

Randall - where were you in the 135? Anyway...

So you must remember a spin in a 37 was a wild ride "Low, Left, and Light".
Low entry (Non-aggressive stall)
Left entry (Had to do with the rotation of the engine)
Light weight (yes, LIGHT weight)

I have spun (in my younger and dumber days) civil AC. In comparison to
the 37, they were more of a spiral. Let loose of pro spin controls and
the thing stops. Unlike the 37 - if you do not provide anti-spin
controls in a definite sequence, the spin will continue or flip over to
inverted. With your head banging around the canopy. My point - if you
think about spinning an aircraft w/o knowing how to get out (not just
letting go of the stick) you are asking for trouble. Yes - in most
circumstances, letting go of pro-spin inputs will drop you out of the
spin. But - does anyone really know the inputs to get you out in an RV
if the crap hits the fan?

In the military we had BOLDFACE. Procedures which were committed to
memory. Spin recovery was one of them.

I would like to see a discussion of pro-spin inputs to get out.

I'll start:

Throttles--Idle
Rudder and Ailerons--Neutral
Stick--Abruptly full aft and hold
Rudder--Abruptly apply full Rudder opposite spin direction (opposite
turn needle) and hold
Stick--Abruptly full forward one turn after applying rudder
Controls--Neutral after spinning stops and recover from dive

The above is the 37 boldface. It is meant as a start. Chances are it
would work, but what do I know...

Let's start the flaming.
Randall Richter wrote:
Quote:


I gotta chime in here. I've flown KC-135s and C-130s, both of which are
about 130' wide. You can put something like 62,000 lbs of fuel across the
wings of the tanker and 44,000 in the wing of the Herc. For these types of
acft, wing fuel distribution, loading and burn sequence is a factor. They're
limited to 2.5g load factor for this and other reasons.

When you're talking a roughly 10' wing with 120 lbs of fuel in each side
(chock full), I'm thinking that sweating the burn sequence is a waste of
brain cells. If you've got tips, burn mains down till they can take the tip
quantity, then drain. Don't over-complicate your plumbing.

This is all the thought I'll devote to this subject.

Randy




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klwerner(at)comcast.net
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PostPosted: Wed Mar 29, 2006 10:06 pm    Post subject: Tip tanks and wing root stresses Reply with quote

Dear Randy,

Thank you for your input on fuel management!

Konrad
do not archive (again)
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aerobubba(at)earthlink.ne
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PostPosted: Thu Mar 30, 2006 2:13 am    Post subject: Tip tanks and wing root stresses Reply with quote

Subject: RE: Tip tanks and wing root stresses


Quote:
.I gotta chime in here. I've flown KC-135s and C-130s, both of which are
about 130' wide... ...when you're talking a roughly 10' wing with 120
lbs of fuel in each side

Quote:
(chock full), I'm thinking that sweating the burn sequence is a waste of
brain cells...

Let's see, the Boeings I've flown burn the center first, as do the
Airbusses. On the other hand, the 45' Westwind I've flown burns... ah...
the center first. Hmmm. Well, at least the 36' Cessna 310 I've flown
burns the... ah.. inboards first.

Quote:
This is all the thought I'll devote to this subject.

How unfortunate.

For those who are interested, consider two chairs, a yardstick, and a roll
of quarters. Place the yardstick across the backs of the chairs. Now
place the roll of quarters on the middle of the yardstick and watch the
yardstick flex and fall between the chairs. Replace the yardstick, unroll
the quarters, and distribute them along the span of the yardstick. Watch
in amazement as the yardstick carries the load.

Now consider that the RV series was not designed with tip tanks.

The size of the aircraft is not relevant. Whatever it's size, it was
designed to do a particular job. Distributing the fuel towards the tips
decreases bending loads on the spar, which has a positive impact on both
the instantaneous load it can carry as well as it's fatigue life.

Operate your aircraft however you see fit, but physics is physics...

Glen Matejcek
aerobubba(at)earthlink.net


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khorton01(at)rogers.com
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PostPosted: Thu Mar 30, 2006 3:33 am    Post subject: Tip tanks and wing root stresses Reply with quote

On 30 Mar 2006, at 05:05, Glen Matejcek wrote:

Quote:

<aerobubba(at)earthlink.net>

Now consider that the RV series was not designed with tip tanks.

The size of the aircraft is not relevant. Whatever it's size, it was
designed to do a particular job. Distributing the fuel towards the
tips
decreases bending loads on the spar, which has a positive impact on
both
the instantaneous load it can carry as well as it's fatigue life.

Operate your aircraft however you see fit, but physics is physics...

I certainly agree that burning the inboard fuel first will reduce
wing bending loads. That could be a significant issue if you wanted
to do aerobatics with fuel in the tip tanks. But everyone seems to
agree that aerobatics should only be done when the tip tanks are empty.

The tip tanks will only be filled for cross country flight, when the
load factors are low. In this case, the wing bending stress would
only seem to be a concern if you got into heavy turbulence. If you
get into heavy turbulence with fuel in the tip tanks, you should slow
down, well below Va, to reduce the loads on the tip tank to wing
attachment.

I don't see wing bending loads as a major issue, considering how
people will fly the aircraft when there is fuel in the tip tanks. If
the wing is designed to take 6gs without tip tanks, surely it can
easily handle a typical cruise flight load spectrum with fuel in the
tips. What am I missing?

Kevin Horton RV-8 (finishing kit)
Ottawa, Canada
http://www.kilohotel.com/rv8


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dennis.glaeser(at)eds.com
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PostPosted: Thu Mar 30, 2006 6:52 am    Post subject: Tip tanks and wing root stresses Reply with quote

You aren't missing a thing (as usual!) The change in root stresses that
tip tanks in an RV would produce (or reduce) are miniscule in the big
picture. I think Konrad was looking for more of a theoretical answer to
enhance his understanding of how wing loading works.

Dennis Glaeser
RV-7A Fuselage

------------------------------------------
I don't see wing bending loads as a major issue, considering how people
will fly the aircraft when there is fuel in the tip tanks. If the wing
is designed to take 6gs without tip tanks, surely it can easily handle a
typical cruise flight load spectrum with fuel in the tips.
What am I missing?

Kevin Horton
RV-8 (finishing kit)


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 30, 2006 8:22 am    Post subject: Tip tanks and wing root stresses Reply with quote

On 2:05:17 2006-03-30 "Glen Matejcek" <aerobubba(at)earthlink.net> wrote:
Quote:
Now consider that the RV series was not designed with tip tanks.

This is irrelevant. The RV was designed to carry the fuel as (effectively)
a roll of quarters placed at the center of the span, since it was designed
with only inboard tanks.

Adding fuel further out merely decreases the load on the wing during
cruise. Burning the fuel from the wingtip first, you just return to the
stock configuration, which is fuel centered near the fuselage. So at no
point are you worse off than having just fuel in the inboard tanks.

Quote:
physics is physics...

Funny, that's what I was thinking... Smile

-Rob


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ceengland(at)bellsouth.ne
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PostPosted: Thu Mar 30, 2006 11:34 am    Post subject: Tip tanks and wing root stresses Reply with quote

Kevin Horton wrote:

Quote:


On 30 Mar 2006, at 05:05, Glen Matejcek wrote:



>
><aerobubba(at)earthlink.net>
>
>Now consider that the RV series was not designed with tip tanks.
>
>The size of the aircraft is not relevant. Whatever it's size, it was
>designed to do a particular job. Distributing the fuel towards the
>tips
>decreases bending loads on the spar, which has a positive impact on
>both
>the instantaneous load it can carry as well as it's fatigue life.
>
>Operate your aircraft however you see fit, but physics is physics...
>
>

I certainly agree that burning the inboard fuel first will reduce
wing bending loads. That could be a significant issue if you wanted
to do aerobatics with fuel in the tip tanks. But everyone seems to
agree that aerobatics should only be done when the tip tanks are empty.

The tip tanks will only be filled for cross country flight, when the
load factors are low. In this case, the wing bending stress would
only seem to be a concern if you got into heavy turbulence. If you
get into heavy turbulence with fuel in the tip tanks, you should slow
down, well below Va, to reduce the loads on the tip tank to wing
attachment.

I don't see wing bending loads as a major issue, considering how
people will fly the aircraft when there is fuel in the tip tanks. If
the wing is designed to take 6gs without tip tanks, surely it can
easily handle a typical cruise flight load spectrum with fuel in the
tips. What am I missing?

Kevin Horton RV-8 (finishing kit)
Ottawa, Canada
http://www.kilohotel.com/rv8


I don't see bending loads as an issue; I see roll & yaw authority when
low & slow in the pattern as the issue. In cruise configuration maybe it
makes sense to reduce control sensitivity a bit, but I want 'normal'
handling in the pattern. My concern is breaking a wing against the
ground after an inadvertent almost developed spin, not overloading it.
Aren't handling issues why most wing mounted aux tank systems say no acro?

I know Kevin knows about this, but for those who want to burn the
inboard tanks 1st, try this. Apply the roll of quarters trick to
control. Spread 'em out, tape them down, twirl the stick around your
body, & stop it as quickly as possible. Then try the same trick with
the whole roll at the outer end.


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 30, 2006 2:54 pm    Post subject: Tip tanks and wing root stresses Reply with quote

I see your point, not an injenear just an old plumber. AND Kevin knows a
whole more about this stuff than me.
Take a 10' stick of 1/2" PVC (the older the better) and tape the quarters on
the end next to your hand & "snap" the pipe like a whip. It "may" break.
Take hold of the same pipe on the other end, snap it in the same motion.
OH yea, before you snap it the second time, clear the area of people, dogs &
breakable things. Borrow a full face helmet, wear gloves & and a thick
jacket. The second snap will result not on a simple break but PVC shrapnel.
Been there, tried that. Now think of the PVC pipe as a wing. As I said I'm
no injenear but I do live in the real world where stupid tricks have been
done just to see how things work. KABONG Do Not Archive

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PostPosted: Thu Mar 30, 2006 4:08 pm    Post subject: Tip tanks and wing root stresses Reply with quote

If having weight at the end of the wing is so great and beneficial then
why didn't Van's design it that way? It seems to me that any benefit
is just unneeded gravy.

The biggie is that it causes no harm.

Ron Lee

do not archive


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 30, 2006 4:36 pm    Post subject: Tip tanks and wing root stresses Reply with quote

On 16:06:53 2006-03-30 Ron Lee <ronlee(at)pcisys.net> wrote:
Quote:
If having weight at the end of the wing is so great and beneficial
then why didn't Van's design it that way?

It's only great for a cross-country cruiser. For a light, sporty aircraft
like an RV, the extra weight out there robs you of roll rate and increases
your moment of inertia in spins. It's also more complex to build, and more
plumbing to install. I guess Van wanted to keep it simple.

-Rob


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