Для студентов по предмету Промышленность, производствоAirfoils and LiftAirfoils and Lift
2016-07-312016-07-31СтудИзба
Курсовая работа: Airfoils and Lift
Описание
Airfoils and Lift
Содержание
- Airfoils and Lift
- How Airplanes Fly: A Physical Description of Lift c
- David Anderson
- &
- Scott Eberhardt
- The popular explanation of lift
- Newton’s laws and lift
- The wing as a pump
- Air has viscosity
- Lift as a function of angle of attack
- The wing as air "scoop"
- Lift requires power
- Wing efficiency
- Power and wing loading
- Wing vortices
- Ground effect
- Conclusions
- Axis of Rotation
- DETAILS OF MODERN AIRSHIPS - 1927
- Army Non-Rigid Dirigibles. The non-rigid dirigible is the smallest of the three types as the largest now being built in the United States for the Army and Navy service have a gas capacity of about one-tenth that of the Los Angeles. Under ordinary conditions a 230,000 cubic foot non-rigid has a cruising radius of from 500 to 1,000 miles and an air endurance of from 18 to 24 hours. Such airships are essentially motorized free balloons and the engines are carried in a car attached to the lower side or bottom of the bag. The Pilgrim, a small non-rigid previously described with a gas capacity of 50,000 cubic feet has a speed of 50 miles per hour and is propelled by a Wright "Gale" three-cylinder engine as shown at Fig. 323. This small ship was built to carry four passengers. The gas in non-rigid ships, as in the army TC types, as shown at Fig. 324 is contained in a single bag, but an inner two compartment bag, called the ballonet, is filled with air to keep the main container properly distended because the air pressure can be made to compensate for variations in gas pressure in the bag. These ships have a capacity of about 200,000 cubic feet, are 196 feet long overall and 47 feet in extreme height. The hull diameter is 33.5 feet. The fineness ratio is 4.4 to 1. The total lift is 11,584 pounds of which the useful lift is about 4,000 pounds. The gross weight per horsepower is 38.6 pounds. Two Wright Type I water-cooled engines of 150 horsepower each were provided on the first ships of this series but these have been replaced on later types with two Wright J1 engines, which are nine-cylinder radial air-cooled types driving tractor propellers 9 feet 10 inches in diameter. It is claimed that the saving of 400 pounds over the water-cooled installation permits an increase of speed from 54 to 60 miles per hour; with an increase in range of 10 per cent.
- Flight Control Surfaces - Elevons
- Forces Acting on an Airplane
- Flight Control Surfaces
- Laminar Flow Airfoil
- The Swept Wing
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