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TAS and VNE

 
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wnorth(at)sdccd.edu
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PostPosted: Sun Mar 25, 2007 7:28 pm    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

I also don't entirely agree with the Kruger article.
Flutter is not a function of velocity directly, it is a function of force acting upon the components which may flutter. While the air molecules are going by at a faster rate there are far less of them so the resultant force doesn't nearly increase at the rate TAS does with gains in altitude.
Flutter is properly called negative dynamic stability and it requires positive static stability to occur. Positive static force pushes the control back to its neutral condition. When it's coupled to inertia and the resultant forces are able to move the control beyond that to a position greater then the original upset than that is negative dynamic stability AKA flutter. Mass aft of the pivot line adds to the inertia, mass at or just fwd of it takes away from the inertia. However it is force that causes the initial positive static desire to return to neutral and beyond. And it doesn't change too much with changes in altitude. If it did you would be able to notice it in the feel of the stick as altitude changed.
This is one of the primary reasons we use VNE and all the other numbers in indicated units.
W [quote][b]


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dennis.glaeser(at)eds.com
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PostPosted: Mon Mar 26, 2007 6:39 am    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

I must respectfully disagree. Flutter and dynamic stability are vastly
different things. Flutter is NOT the trailing edge of a control surface
flapping in the breeze like a flag in high wind. Flutter is the some
portion of an airframe (wing, tail, fuselage) acting like a rubber band
due to forces in resonance with one or more of it's natural frequencies.
Since it is a frequency, not force, related phenomenon, that is why TAS
is key instead of IAS. At the right frequency, it only takes a small
force to start the process (think tuning fork).
The force that reacts to bring the airframe back after a disturbance is
the stiffness of the structure (again, like a tuning fork) not the
control surface. The reason for balancing controls is to minimize their
impact in increasing and/or maintaining the disturbing forces. Even a
wing without ailerons or flaps (a helicopter rotor blade for example)
can flutter. My first job was rotor blade design - I've seen wind
tunnel videos of it happening.
If you've never seen the bridge video mentioned in Ken's article - find
it and take a look. The Kruger article is accurate.

Dennis Glaeser
BSAE - building an RV-7A

------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Wheeler North
I also don't entirely agree with the Kruger article.

Flutter is not a function of velocity directly, it is a function of
force acting upon the components which may flutter. While the air
molecules are going by at a faster rate there are far less of them so
the resultant force doesn't nearly increase at the rate TAS does with
gains in altitude.

Flutter is properly called negative dynamic stability and it requires
positive static stability to occur. Positive static force pushes the
control back to its neutral condition. When it's coupled to inertia and
the resultant forces are able to move the control beyond that to a
position greater then the original upset than that is negative dynamic
stability AKA flutter. Mass aft of the pivot line adds to the inertia,
mass at or just fwd of it takes away from the inertia. However it is
force that causes the initial positive static desire to return to
neutral and beyond. And it doesn't change too much with changes in
altitude. If it did you would be able to notice it in the feel of the
stick as altitude changed.

This is one of the primary reasons we use VNE and all the other numbers
in indicated units.

W


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jconnell(at)rconnect.com
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PostPosted: Mon Mar 26, 2007 7:00 am    Post subject: TAS and Vne Reply with quote

Interesting comments on TAS, Vne, and flutter

Years ago when I was flying rescue helicopters for the Air Force,
a B-47 pilot and I had a discussion about TAS, Vne, and flutter.

A B-47 could operate high enough that the stall speed would
approach Vne. Too slow, the plane would stall -- too fast, the
plane would exceed Vne. If the B-47 stalled, it would exceed
Vne in recovery. The phenomena was called the "Coffin Corner..."
[quote][b]


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LessDragProd(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Mon Mar 26, 2007 7:40 am    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

Hi All,

IMHO, the purposed of the RVator (and the same article in Kitplanes) is to keep builder/pilots of RV's from killing themselves. Apparently there are a number of RV-10's being built with engine installations that caused this to be a very real concern to Van's Aircraft.

My thoughts:

There is no "design" flutter speed.


I have heard that the RV airframe structure is the least likely to flutter first, because of its structural stiffness. It is expected that the flight control surfaces would flutter first.
Inherent in this statement is the assumption that the airframe is built to the design documentation.

The flutter speed of the flight controls is dependent on the control system stiffness and rigging. Where loose fitting flight control surfaces and control attachments will flutter at a lower airspeed. Inherent in this statement, the manufacturer of the aircraft builds in a unique flutter speed for that airframe.

The RVator (and Kitplanes) article does seem like a better way to provide a warning about Vne and flutter speed, than to provide a fixed number for a flutter speed that could lead to someone's death.


What I didn't like about the RVator article is the misleading statement Vne being a TAS.
Part 23 defines Vne as an Equivalent Airspeed (EAS). This is a calibrated and corrected Indicated Airspeed. If an aircraft is NOT designed to Part 23, I suppose Vne could be defined anyway they want.  Smile

Actually, an awareness of TAS is a very good thing. Especially with the GPS readout of your ground speed. On a cruise climb in the direction of your destination, you can monitor the TAS and the GPS ground speed. The difference being your headwind, or tailwind. During your climb to your preferred cruise altitude, you can calculate the actual headwind, or tailwind, at the different altitudes. If you get to your preferred cruise altitude and find you have a greater headwind, or a lesser tailwind, than a lower altitude, you could decide to descend back down to a more favorable altitude.

Jim Ayers
RV-3 sn 50
33 years of learning about RV's Smile
PS Van used to recommend that the RV-3 be flutter tested to 10% over Vne at 10,000' or higher. Vne being stated as an IAS! Some things do change. Smile

In a message dated 03/26/2007 6:41:28 AM Pacific Standard Time, dennis.glaeser(at)eds.com writes:
Quote:
--> RV-List message posted by: "Glaeser, Dennis A" <dennis.glaeser(at)eds.com>

I must respectfully disagree. Flutter and dynamic stability are vastly
different things. Flutter is NOT the trailing edge of a control surface
flapping in the breeze like a flag in high wind. Flutter is the some
portion of an airframe (wing, tail, fuselage) acting like a rubber band
due to forces in resonance with one or more of it's natural frequencies.
Since it is a frequency, not force, related phenomenon, that is why TAS
is key instead of IAS. At the right frequency, it only takes a small
force to start the process (think tuning fork).
The force that reacts to bring the airframe back after a disturbance is
the stiffness of the structure (again, like a tuning fork) not the
control surface. The reason for balancing controls is to minimize their
impact in increasing and/or maintaining the disturbing forces. Even a
wing without ailerons or flaps (a helicopter rotor blade for example)
can flutter. My first job was rotor blade design - I've seen wind
tunnel videos of it happening.
If you've never seen the bridge video mentioned in Ken's article - find
it and take a look. The Kruger article is accurate.

Dennis Glaeser
BSAE - building an RV-7A




AOL now offersle="http://www.aol.com?ncid=AOLAOF00020000000339" href="http://www.aol.com?ncid=AOLAOF00020000000339" target="_blank">AOL.com.
[quote][b]


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3edcft6(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 27, 2007 12:25 am    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

LessDragProd(at)aol.com wrote:
Quote:
What I didn't like about the RVator article is the misleading
statement Vne being a TAS.
Part 23 defines Vne as an Equivalent Airspeed (EAS). This is a
calibrated and corrected Indicated Airspeed. If an aircraft is NOT
designed to Part 23, I suppose Vne could be defined anyway they want. Smile

I can't see anything misleading about it. The article clearly states
that Fluter is a function of TAS, and therefor Vne should also be a TAS
number. The article then went on to offer a very plausible explanation
on why part 23 didn't use TAS for Vne. Further the article gave
empirical evidence as to the fact the TAS, and not IAS or CAS, is the
value that is critical to flutter. So what is misleading?

--
Chris W
KE5GIX

"Protect your digital freedom and privacy, eliminate DRM,
learn more at http://www.defectivebydesign.org/what_is_drm"


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rtitsworth



Joined: 16 Jan 2006
Posts: 76
Location: Detroit, Mi

PostPosted: Tue Mar 27, 2007 5:49 am    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

What can be misleading is "assuming" that critical flutter speed (TAS based)
is quantitatively related to a published Vne speed.

Vne could be based on a structural deformation safety margin (dynamic
pressure / IAS related). The critical flutter speed for a given aircraft
design could be much higher (some are, some aren't). It's a design
parameter that is typically related to the intended operating altitude
(envelope).

Without "knowing" your critical flutter speed (TAS based), you're at a loss
for really understanding your operating envelope. The safe/conservative
assumption then is that TAS must remain below the published Vne.

However, TAS only = IAS at STP (sea level). At every altitude above that,
TAS is > IAS (approx 15% per 10k ft). Thus, if you assume that TAS must
remain below Vne, then your IAS must remain below Vne at ANY altitude
(unless you're in the pattern at death valley). That may be more
conservative than necessary (depending on the aircraft). It also implies
that the pilot must continuously convert IAS to TAS (EFIS, E6B, placard
chart, or SWAG).

The real key is "knowing" the critical flutter speed (TAS) versus "guessing"
it's the same (or near) the published Vne.
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 27, 2007 7:25 am    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

Nicely stated.

Jim Ayers


--


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renewhall2



Joined: 22 Mar 2007
Posts: 7
Location: Boulder, CO

PostPosted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 7:34 am    Post subject: Re: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

If flutter is based on TAS, how does Spaceshipone go supersonic with a Vne of 195kts? I recall from the Discovery documentary, Rutan said Vne is based on IAS. See excerpt below:
"With both engines running (800 lb thrust total) and maximum propellant load, takeoff roll is 500m (1650 ft) for 20 seconds. After pulling up, climb is established at constant airspeed at Vne, or 195 knots. Burnout is, after a maximum of two minutes, still at 195 knots indicated, which equals Mach 0.4. The maximum altitude that can be attained is 1.91 miles (10,000 ft). The maximum climb rate is 52 m/sec (10,000 ft/min). It is likely we will never take the plane to the maximum altitude capability. None of the operating limitations of a standard Long-EZ are exceeded in this airplane, although a steep climb is needed to keep from exceeding Vne with both engines running."

From:
http://www.xcor.com/products/vehicles/ez-rocket_faq.html#performance


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_________________
Bob Newhall
N829RV
RV Transition Training
Raleigh, NC
renewhall2.googlepages.com
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jerry-hansen(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 8:09 am    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

That was a Long-EZ with two small rocket engines, not SpaceShipOne.

Do not archive

--


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Tim Olson



Joined: 25 Jan 2007
Posts: 2879

PostPosted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 8:30 am    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

You're mistaking SpaceShipOne for the EZ-Rocket. They're
two totally different things.

Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
do not archive
renewhall2 wrote:
Quote:


If flutter is based on TAS, how does Spaceshipone go supersonic with
a Vne of 195kts? I recall from the Discovery documentary, Rutan said
Vne is based on IAS. See excerpt below:


"With both engines running (800 lb thrust total) and maximum
propellant load, takeoff roll is 500m (1650 ft) for 20 seconds. After
pulling up, climb is established at constant airspeed at Vne, or 195
knots. Burnout is, after a maximum of two minutes, still at 195 knots
indicated, which equals Mach 0.4. The maximum altitude that can be
attained is 1.91 miles (10,000 ft). The maximum climb rate is 52
m/sec (10,000 ft/min). It is likely we will never take the plane to
the maximum altitude capability. None of the operating limitations
of a standard Long-EZ are exceeded in this airplane, although a steep
climb is needed to keep from exceeding Vne with both engines
running."

From:
http://www.xcor.com/products/vehicles/ez-rocket_faq.html#performance

-------- Bob Newhall N829RV RV Transition Training Boulder, CO
renewhall2.googlepages.com




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khorton01(at)rogers.com
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PostPosted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 8:51 am    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

As the speed increases, there are many possible bad things that can
occur. Examples:

flutter,
windscreen loads (either from air loads, or requirements to withstand
bird strike by a certain weight bird),
wing structural divergence (usually only an issue on aircraft with
forward swept wings, such as HFB-320),
flight control hinge moments become too high for acceptable control,
engine or propeller anomalies (e.g. F-104 max allowable speed was
limited by engine compressor inlet temperature, which increased as
Mach increased),
aircraft static or dynamic stability (e.g. Global Express max
allowable speed at high limited by degradation in lateral stability)

Each of these bad things will have its own envelope of airspeed,
altitude, temperature, etc that you must remain clear of. The
aircraft designer will specify a VNE that remains clear of all these
bad things.

Kevin Horton

On 28 Mar 2007, at 11:34, renewhall2 wrote:

Quote:


If flutter is based on TAS, how does Spaceshipone go supersonic
with a Vne of 195kts? I recall from the Discovery documentary,
Rutan said Vne is based on IAS. See excerpt below:
"With both engines running (800 lb thrust total) and maximum
propellant load, takeoff roll is 500m (1650 ft) for 20 seconds.
After pulling up, climb is established at constant airspeed at Vne,
or 195 knots. Burnout is, after a maximum of two minutes, still at
195 knots indicated, which equals Mach 0.4. The maximum altitude
that can be attained is 1.91 miles (10,000 ft). The maximum climb
rate is 52 m/sec (10,000 ft/min). It is likely we will never take
the plane to the maximum altitude capability. None of the
operating limitations of a standard Long-EZ are exceeded in this
airplane, although a steep climb is needed to keep from exceeding
Vne with both engines running."

From:
http://www.xcor.com/products/vehicles/ez-rocket_faq.html#performance

--------
Bob Newhall
N829RV
RV Transition Training
Boulder, CO
renewhall2.googlepages.com


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rv7(at)b4.ca
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PostPosted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 9:09 am    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

On 9:50 2007-03-28 Kevin Horton <khorton01(at)rogers.com> wrote:
Quote:
Each of these bad things will have its own envelope of airspeed,
altitude, temperature, etc that you must remain clear of. The
aircraft designer will specify a VNE that remains clear of all these
bad things.

You forgot to add... That Vne will be expressed as an INDICATED airspeed.

-Rob


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n5lp(at)warpdriveonline.c
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PostPosted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 10:59 am    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

On Mar 28, 2007, at 11:18 AM, Rob Prior wrote:

Quote:


On 9:50 2007-03-28 Kevin Horton <khorton01(at)rogers.com> wrote:
> Each of these bad things will have its own envelope of airspeed,
> altitude, temperature, etc that you must remain clear of. The
> aircraft designer will specify a VNE that remains clear of all these
> bad things.

You forgot to add... That Vne will be expressed as an INDICATED
airspeed.

-Rob

Maybe, but not necessarily a constant IAS. I have a PW-5 glider where
VNE is expressed as a fixed figure in IAS up to a certain altitude.
Above that altitude there is a table indicating what the different
VNE is in IAS at that altitude.

Larry Pardue


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khorton01(at)rogers.com
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PostPosted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 12:53 pm    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

On 28 Mar 2007, at 13:18, Rob Prior wrote:

Quote:


On 9:50 2007-03-28 Kevin Horton <khorton01(at)rogers.com> wrote:
> Each of these bad things will have its own envelope of airspeed,
> altitude, temperature, etc that you must remain clear of. The
> aircraft designer will specify a VNE that remains clear of all these
> bad things.

You forgot to add... That Vne will be expressed as an INDICATED
airspeed.

Not necessarily, but it should be expressed in some way such that the
pilot has an indicator in the cockpit that he can use to comply with
the limitation. Yes, in type certificated aircraft the only
indicator that the pilot has is an airspeed indicator, that reads in
IAS. Some other aircraft have max allowable speeds that are
expressed as indicated mach number at high altitudes. The SR-71 has
a max allowable speed that is expressed as EAS.

There is no point in providing a limitation if the pilot has no means
at his disposal to comply with the limitation. The last time I
checked Van didn't require that RVs be equipped with air data
computers that provide a true airspeed indication. I have no idea
how Van's expects pilots to comply with a VNE in TAS.

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


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seiders(at)bellsouth.net
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PostPosted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 3:51 pm    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

Kevin, my 6A is equipped with an airspeed indicator that has ability
to determine TAS by setting the temp/alt in window provided. I
purchased it from Van's when building my RV.
Dick
At 04:52 PM 3/28/2007, you wrote:

Quote:


On 28 Mar 2007, at 13:18, Rob Prior wrote:

>
>
>On 9:50 2007-03-28 Kevin Horton <khorton01(at)rogers.com> wrote:
>>Each of these bad things will have its own envelope of airspeed,
>>altitude, temperature, etc that you must remain clear of. The
>>aircraft designer will specify a VNE that remains clear of all these
>>bad things.
>
>You forgot to add... That Vne will be expressed as an INDICATED
>airspeed.

Not necessarily, but it should be expressed in some way such that the
pilot has an indicator in the cockpit that he can use to comply with
the limitation. Yes, in type certificated aircraft the only
indicator that the pilot has is an airspeed indicator, that reads in
IAS. Some other aircraft have max allowable speeds that are
expressed as indicated mach number at high altitudes. The SR-71 has
a max allowable speed that is expressed as EAS.

There is no point in providing a limitation if the pilot has no means
at his disposal to comply with the limitation. The last time I
checked Van didn't require that RVs be equipped with air data
computers that provide a true airspeed indication. I have no idea
how Van's expects pilots to comply with a VNE in TAS.

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




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khorton01(at)rogers.com
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PostPosted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 4:57 pm    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

Is the red line on the Vans-supplied ASI on the IAS scale, or the TAS
scale?

Kevin

On 28 Mar 2007, at 19:47, Richard Seiders wrote:

Quote:


Kevin, my 6A is equipped with an airspeed indicator that has
ability to determine TAS by setting the temp/alt in window
provided. I purchased it from Van's when building my RV.
Dick
At 04:52 PM 3/28/2007, you wrote:

>
>
> On 28 Mar 2007, at 13:18, Rob Prior wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On 9:50 2007-03-28 Kevin Horton <khorton01(at)rogers.com> wrote:
>>> Each of these bad things will have its own envelope of airspeed,
>>> altitude, temperature, etc that you must remain clear of. The
>>> aircraft designer will specify a VNE that remains clear of all
>>> these
>>> bad things.
>>
>> You forgot to add... That Vne will be expressed as an INDICATED
>> airspeed.
>
> Not necessarily, but it should be expressed in some way such that the
> pilot has an indicator in the cockpit that he can use to comply with
> the limitation. Yes, in type certificated aircraft the only
> indicator that the pilot has is an airspeed indicator, that reads in
> IAS. Some other aircraft have max allowable speeds that are
> expressed as indicated mach number at high altitudes. The SR-71 has
> a max allowable speed that is expressed as EAS.
>
> There is no point in providing a limitation if the pilot has no means
> at his disposal to comply with the limitation. The last time I
> checked Van didn't require that RVs be equipped with air data
> computers that provide a true airspeed indication. I have no idea
> how Van's expects pilots to comply with a VNE in TAS.
>
> Kevin Horton RV-8 (finishing kit)
> Ottawa, Canada
> http://www.kilohotel.com/rv8


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aerobubba(at)earthlink.ne
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PostPosted: Thu Mar 29, 2007 8:03 am    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

Hi Rob et al-

While it's true that Vne is published in IAS, there are some mitigators
that we need to keep in mind. First, the roots of the certification rules
go back to a simpler time. This leads to an airspeed indicator, not a TAS
indicator, being req'd to be installed by the regs and V speeds being IAS.
These speeds are guaranteed accurate only when operating at SL and ISA.
Some speeds, such as indicated stall speeds, by their nature continue to be
accurate with a change in altitude. However, that particular data point
has nothing to do with the certification process. Likewise, the fact that
many of us can read TAS directly off of our panels has nothing to do with
the process or intent of determining Vne.

Another point is that our planes might just have a flutter onset speed in
the many hundreds of knots. It could well be that at any max altitude an
RV might reasonably be expected to operate, the flutter margin decreases
from 200 to 100 knots. Then again, high alt ops at published indicated Vne
could make the margin negative. We just don't know, although the Flyin'
Tiger would lead me to suspect that this is never going to be a real
concern for a properly built and maintained RV.

To make an extreme illustration, if we were to operate an RV-8 at it's
published Vne of 200 KIAS in a standard atmosphere at, say, 67,000 feet
(Plz don't ask how we got there- it's still in development...) we would be
at the published Vne limit. We would also be slightly in excess of Mach 1.
Now, I don't have any personal experience to draw upon here, but I'm
guessing something bad would happen to the plane and, by extension, it's
occupants. Clearly, operating at Vne at SL is okay, so there is going to
be some transition altitude where it ceases to be okay.

The most important point to be taken from all this is that we don't know
what the limiting factor is under any given set of conditions, only that
Van's has published a value for Vne at SL ISA. It is logical to assume
that there is a good pad built into that number, but we have no idea what
that pad is, what the "real" Vne could be, or how it is affected by
conditions. Hence, anyone exceeding those published limits is truly
playing test pilot and should proceed with proper respect for the potential
outcome.

FWIW-


Quote:
On 9:50 2007-03-28 Kevin Horton <khorton01(at)rogers.com> wrote:
> Each of these bad things will have its own envelope of airspeed,
> altitude, temperature, etc that you must remain clear of. The
> aircraft designer will specify a VNE that remains clear of all these
> bad things.

You forgot to add... That Vne will be expressed as an INDICATED airspeed.

-Rob



glen matejcek
aerobubba(at)earthlink.net


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 29, 2007 8:33 am    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

Kevin & the List: Please note Van's ASI has the RED line on the IAS scale
(doesn't move).

I have the Vans-supplied ASI. The fixed face shows Knots and Miles. The
instrument has an adjusting knob which rotates a "disk" behind the face.
The window at the top of the disk has a scale which rotates. This causes the
window at the bottom of the disk to offset the fixed speed scale on the
face. SO, you would adjust the top window to align the altitude factor (5
for 5,000) opposite the fixed scale for temperature (+30 to -30). Look at
the needle - the fixed "black" scale shows IAS, the "white" disk shows TAS.
Spoken without my plane here so I burned some brain cells trying to think
this through.

---


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seiders(at)bellsouth.net
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PostPosted: Thu Mar 29, 2007 2:32 pm    Post subject: TAS and VNE Reply with quote

It's on the IAS scale. That is the indicator I am using most of the
time. I use the TAS scale only when flying at or above 4000msl.
Dick
At 08:56 PM 3/28/2007, you wrote:

Quote:


Is the red line on the Vans-supplied ASI on the IAS scale, or the TAS
scale?

Kevin

On 28 Mar 2007, at 19:47, Richard Seiders wrote:

>
>
>Kevin, my 6A is equipped with an airspeed indicator that has
>ability to determine TAS by setting the temp/alt in window
>provided. I purchased it from Van's when building my RV.
>Dick
>At 04:52 PM 3/28/2007, you wrote:
>
>>
>>
>>On 28 Mar 2007, at 13:18, Rob Prior wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>>On 9:50 2007-03-28 Kevin Horton <khorton01(at)rogers.com> wrote:
>>>>Each of these bad things will have its own envelope of airspeed,
>>>>altitude, temperature, etc that you must remain clear of. The
>>>>aircraft designer will specify a VNE that remains clear of all
>>>>these
>>>>bad things.
>>>
>>>You forgot to add... That Vne will be expressed as an INDICATED
>>>airspeed.
>>
>>Not necessarily, but it should be expressed in some way such that the
>>pilot has an indicator in the cockpit that he can use to comply with
>>the limitation. Yes, in type certificated aircraft the only
>>indicator that the pilot has is an airspeed indicator, that reads in
>>IAS. Some other aircraft have max allowable speeds that are
>>expressed as indicated mach number at high altitudes. The SR-71 has
>>a max allowable speed that is expressed as EAS.
>>
>>There is no point in providing a limitation if the pilot has no means
>>at his disposal to comply with the limitation. The last time I
>>checked Van didn't require that RVs be equipped with air data
>>computers that provide a true airspeed indication. I have no idea
>>how Van's expects pilots to comply with a VNE in TAS.
>>
>>Kevin Horton RV-8 (finishing kit)
>>Ottawa, Canada
>>http://www.kilohotel.com/rv8
>>




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aerokinetic(at)sbcglobal.
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PostPosted: Fri Mar 30, 2007 4:47 am    Post subject: TAS and Vne Reply with quote

Quote:
>>>I was told that the MU-2 has an airspeed indicator that shows the critical
airspeed for that flight altitude. The critical airspeed is shown as a moving

(red?) line on the IAS indicator.
<<<

Ain't just the MU-2... as also stated by another lister, ALL jets I know of, and most of the faster turboprops have the Vne marking on the airspeed indicator expressed as a *moving needle* (that the airspeed needle can still pass over -don't ask me how I know) commonly called a 'barber pole', because it's typically painted red and white like, well... a barber pole. Wink It changes position with altitude/air density to reflect the Vne (indicated) at the present situation.

Just for an example...

Yesterday, like most days I fly it, I was sitting in the Gulfstream at altitude seeing the airspeed 'bumping the pole' as they say, at M.80 ( i.e. we were *at* Vne) and the indicated airspeed (and the barber pole) was somewhere in the lower 200's. Our true was around 430 knots or so according to the ADC. We were at FL390 as I recall... sounds about right anyway.

If we had gone higher or lower the numbers would have been different... to an absolute limitation for this aircraft (GIIB) of M.85 at high altitude or 367 KCAS at low altitude. That's why the need for a 'moving redline'/barber pole

So you can tell all your friends that the Vne on a Gulfstream bizjet is at around 230KIAS (give or take) in cruise flight... and blow their minds... but of course that number only applies at around 40,000 feet or so... on certain days. Some restrictions apply. Void where prohibited.

And yes, flutter is real. And it's an aero-elasticity/natural-frequency sort of thing as stated by some already... and it can kill you as stated by many. And Vans knows what they are talking about.

Scott
N4ZW
[quote][b]


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