i278
Mechanical
- Apr 16, 2002
- 49
This was brought up briefly in a rather infamous thread, and I'd like to fill-in a rather glaring hole in my knowledge.
The short story: Miper has posted in the past that a tail download must always be present to ensure adequate longitudinal dynamic stability. (My apologies if I've misinterpreted or misquoted)
The short question: Why?
The longer question: If static stability is present (neg slope on the dCm/dalpha curve for all configs), then shouldn't dyn stab depend on the relationship of the initial forcing function (crudely based on the slope of the stat stab curve? and, hence, tail volume?) to the damping coef (crudely based on what? a 'non-dimensional' tail arm?) If this is at all close to reality, I don't see how the absolute value of tail load (positive, neagtive, or zero) has any bearing on the matter.
It's obvious by now that I don't have the Perkins & Hage text. My current books have lots of material on stat stab determination (the easy stuff), but only a cursory overview of dyn stab, complete with those helpful little graphs. (Oh look, the divergent case diverges! How useful!) Would P&H sort me out on material like this?
Always learning...
Regards
The short story: Miper has posted in the past that a tail download must always be present to ensure adequate longitudinal dynamic stability. (My apologies if I've misinterpreted or misquoted)
The short question: Why?
The longer question: If static stability is present (neg slope on the dCm/dalpha curve for all configs), then shouldn't dyn stab depend on the relationship of the initial forcing function (crudely based on the slope of the stat stab curve? and, hence, tail volume?) to the damping coef (crudely based on what? a 'non-dimensional' tail arm?) If this is at all close to reality, I don't see how the absolute value of tail load (positive, neagtive, or zero) has any bearing on the matter.
It's obvious by now that I don't have the Perkins & Hage text. My current books have lots of material on stat stab determination (the easy stuff), but only a cursory overview of dyn stab, complete with those helpful little graphs. (Oh look, the divergent case diverges! How useful!) Would P&H sort me out on material like this?
Always learning...
Regards