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calculating Va
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bmwebb(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Thu Mar 02, 2006 7:48 pm    Post subject: calculating Va Reply with quote

Speaking of the motor mount, I had heard that Sean Tuckers Bi-plane was G
limited only by the motor mount. Otherwise, I guess even he couldn't break
the airframe.

When pondering, don't forget the whole airframe, not just the wings.

Bradley

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jdmcbean(at)cableone.net
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PostPosted: Thu Mar 02, 2006 8:02 pm    Post subject: calculating Va Reply with quote

Al,
You must have been speaking with Dave Snell.. Great guy.. Although the
aircraft wings are supporting a lighter load.. say 1 pilot, low fuel, no
baggage etc... The engine mount is still carrying the same weight...

FYI.. The engine mount, baggage area even the horizontal tail surface was
load tested.

Fly Safe !!
John McBean
www.sportplanellc.com
"The Sky is not the Limit... It's a Playground"

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smokey_bear_40220(at)yaho
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PostPosted: Thu Mar 02, 2006 11:50 pm    Post subject: calculating Va Reply with quote

Clem,

Never a bad question.

Some of us skin a cat front to back, some back to
front. If John's example didn't go your direction,
try this one. (Mom always said I was a bit backward)

Suppose a plane has a gross weight of 1000 lbs. At X
speed it can just lift 3.8 G's or 3,800 lbs before
stalling. So X = VA speed at gross weight.

If you loaded the plane to only 760 lbs and flew it at
the same X speed, it could still lift 3,800 lbs, but
that would take 5 G's to reach 3,800 lbs of lift and
stall it.

WT G's Wing load
1000 x 3.8 = 3,800 lbs
760 x 5 = 3,800 lbs

The lighter the weight, the more G's you can pull at
the same speed and it is the G's that cause the
overload because the engine (and you, etc) still weigh
the same. So you have to slow down to keep from
exceeding 3.8 G's before stalling at lower weights.

760 lbs x 3.8 G's = 2,888 lbs of lift

At 760 lbs, you need to slow down so that your wing
can only generate 2,888 lbs of lift before stalling or
you can exceed 3.8 G's.

Quote:
From this you should see that it is not the wings that
will fail on a Fox. They can lift gross weight at the

designed G limit. But the other components can exceed
their G'limit before the wings stall, let alone fail,
at below gross weight, or higher than VA speeds.

Likewise in the rock and string example, the lighter
rock (plane) can be spun to a higher G limit before
the string (wing) breaks. The G limit of the rock,
not the string is the limiting factor.

Hope that helps because simple is all I can do
anymore. Wink

Kurt S. S-5

--- jdmcbean <jdmcbean(at)cableone.net> wrote:

Quote:
Clem,
Lets see if we can help...........

This will be very simplified: We know that the wing
stalls at a given angle of attack not airspeed......

Fly Safe !!
John McBean
www.sportplanellc.com
"The Sky is not the Limit... It's a Playground"


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smokey_bear_40220(at)yaho
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PostPosted: Fri Mar 03, 2006 12:15 am    Post subject: calculating Va Reply with quote

Michel,

I think the point is that you will reach your limit
before the Fox will, unless you are a fighter pilot.
After all, we are up there for fun, right? If it
isn't fun, slow down, or go down and wait until it is
nicer.

And you are right about my having to work at it. For
work they give me a 2.5 G plane? I flew around to a
completely different country to avoid clear air
turbulence last year, because I had to hold myself
down in the seat to go thru it. Worst I had seen in
many years and I wasn't about to go thru it at any
speed.

Kurt S.

--- Michel Verheughe <michel(at)online.no> wrote:
Quote:

Hello Kurt,

On Mar 2, 2006, at 12:29 AM, kurt schrader wrote:

> In the Fox, I slow down when it scares me.

So do I! But I was hoping for a slightly more
descriptive experience..........


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Michel



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 966
Location: Norway

PostPosted: Fri Mar 03, 2006 1:36 am    Post subject: calculating Va Reply with quote

On Mar 2, 2006, at 11:12 PM, Bradley M Webb wrote:
Quote:
Isn't that the real point of a forum such as this?
Of course, Bradly: Learning and enjoying it!


On Mar 3, 2006, at 12:39 AM, Lowell Fitt wrote:
Quote:
I think the Kitfox is a fine airplane, well designed and engineered.
So do I, my dear Lowell "Alfred E. Neuman" Fitt! Smile

Be happy, don't worry!

On Mar 3, 2006, at 9:13 AM, kurt schrader wrote:
Quote:
I think the point is that you will reach your limit before the Fox
will.
That is, actually, the kind of answer I was looking for, Kurt. If I am

the weakest link, I know I won't put myself in turbulence danger
because my tolerance is very low, indeed. It also matches my opinion
about sailing: Any modern sailboat will take much more than any crew
will. As an unfortunate result, life are lost at sea because vessels
are abandoned while they are found still floating after the storm. We
are the weakest link but we must learn to keep our head cool when the
sh... hum, turbulence ,,, hits the fan!

Cheers,
Michel

do not archive


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morid(at)northland.lib.mi
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PostPosted: Fri Mar 03, 2006 4:20 am    Post subject: calculating Va Reply with quote

Good one Kurt. Cleared it all right up for me.
Thanks for taking the time.
Deke

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