1 / 33

Warm-Up – 11/18 – 10 minutes

Warm-Up – 11/18 – 10 minutes. Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions: What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur?

onawa
Download Presentation

Warm-Up – 11/18 – 10 minutes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Warm-Up – 11/18 – 10 minutes Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions: • What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur? • In a turn what must be applied to the yoke/stick to increase the aircraft AOA and if excessive AOA occurs in a turn what may happen to the aircraft? • To balance an aircraft aerodynamically, what is located aft of CoG and what does this make the aircraft “naturally feel?” • What happens to the airfoil shape if ice, snow or sleet is allowed to form on the airfoil and what effect does this have on the airflow? • If ice is allowed to form on the airfoil what is increased and what is decreased as a result?

  2. Questions / Comments

  3. Warm-Up – 11/18 – 10 minutes Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions: • What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur? • In a turn what must be applied to the yoke/stick to increase the aircraft AOA and if excessive AOA occurs in a turn what may happen to the aircraft? • To balance an aircraft aerodynamically, what is located aft of CoG and what does the make the aircraft “naturally feel?” • What happens to the airfoil shape if ice, snow or sleet is allowed to form on the airfoil and what effect does this have on the airflow? • If ice is allowed to form on the airfoil what is increased and what is decreased as a result?

  4. Aerodynamic Forces in Flight ManeuversStalls • There are three flight situations in which the critical AOA can be exceeded: low speed, high speed, and turning.

  5. Warm-Up – 11/18 – 10 minutes Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions: • What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur? • In a turn what must be applied to the yoke/stick to increase the aircraft AOA and if excessive AOA occurs in a turn what may happen to the aircraft? • To balance an aircraft aerodynamically, what is located aft of CoG and what does the make the aircraft “naturally feel?” • What happens to the airfoil shape if ice, snow or sleet is allowed to form on the airfoil and what effect does this have on the airflow? • If ice is allowed to form on the airfoil what is increased and what is decreased as a result?

  6. Aerodynamic Forces in Flight ManeuversStalls • In a turn, additional lift is acquired by applying back pressure to the elevator control. • This increases the wing’s AOA, and results in increased lift.

  7. Aerodynamic Forces in Flight ManeuversStalls • If during a turn the AOA becomes excessive, the aircraft stalls.

  8. Warm-Up – 11/18 – 10 minutes Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions: • What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur? • In a turn what must be applied to the yoke/stick to increase the aircraft AOA and if excessive AOA occurs in a turn what may happen to the aircraft? • To balance an aircraft aerodynamically, what is located aft of CoG and what does this make the aircraft “naturally feel?” • What happens to the airfoil shape if ice, snow or sleet is allowed to form on the airfoil and what effect does this have on the airflow? • If ice is allowed to form on the airfoil what is increased and what is decreased as a result?

  9. Aerodynamic Forces in Flight ManeuversStalls • To balance the aircraft aerodynamically, the CL is normally located aft of the CG. • This makes the aircraft inherently nose-heavy, downwash on the horizontal stabilizer counteracts this condition.

  10. Warm-Up – 11/18 – 10 minutes Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions: • What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur? • In a turn what must be applied to the yoke/stick to increase the aircraft AOA and if excessive AOA occurs in a turn what may happen to the aircraft? • To balance an aircraft aerodynamically, what is located aft of CoG and what does the make the aircraft “naturally feel?” • What happens to the airfoil shape if ice, snow or sleet is allowed to form on the airfoil and what effect does this have on the airflow? • If ice is allowed to form on the airfoil what is increased and what is decreased as a result?

  11. Aerodynamic Forces in Flight ManeuversStalls • Airfoil shape and degradation of that shape must also be considered in a discussion of stalls. • If ice, snow, and frost are allowed to accumulate on the surface of an aircraft, the smooth airflow over the wing is disrupted.

  12. Warm-Up – 11/18 – 10 minutes Utilizing your notes and past knowledge answer the following questions: • What are the three flight situations in which a stall may occur? • In a turn what must be applied to the yoke/stick to increase the aircraft AOA and if excessive AOA occurs in a turn what may happen to the aircraft? • To balance an aircraft aerodynamically, what is located aft of CoG and what does the make the aircraft “naturally feel?” • What happens to the airfoil shape if ice, snow or sleet is allowed to form on the airfoil and what effect does this have on the airflow? • If ice is allowed to form on the airfoil what is increased and what is decreased as a result?

  13. Aerodynamic Forces in Flight ManeuversStalls • If ice is allowed to accumulate on the aircraft during flight the weight of the aircraft is increased while the ability to generate lift is decreased.

  14. Questions / Comments

  15. THIS DAY IN AVIATION • November 18 • 1930 — The Boeing XP-9 monoplane fighter makes its first flight in Dayton, Ohio.

  16. THIS DAY IN AVIATION • November 18 • 1949 — A United States Air Force Douglas C-74 “Globemaster” carries a record number of 103 persons.

  17. Questions / Comments

  18. November 2013

  19. Questions / Comments

  20. Chapter 4 – Aerodynamics of Flight FAA – Pilot’s Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge

  21. Today’s Mission Requirements • Mission: • Identify in writing the forces acting on an aircraft in flight. • Describe how the forces of flight work and how to control them with the use of power and flight controls essential to flight. • Describe the aerodynamics of flight. • Describe in writing how design, weight, load factors, and gravity affect an aircraft during flight maneuvers. • EQ: Describe the importance of Aeronautical Knowledge for the student pilot learning to fly.

  22. Basic Propeller Principles • The aircraft propeller consists of two or more blades and a central hub to which the blades are attached. • Each blade of an aircraft propeller is essentially a rotating wing.

  23. Basic Propeller Principles • The propeller blades are like airfoils and produce forces that create the thrust to pull, or push, the aircraft through the air.

  24. Basic Propeller Principles • The blade element is an airfoil comparable to a cross-section of an aircraft wing. • One surface of the blade is cambered or curved, similar to the upper surface of an aircraft wing, while the other surface is flat like the bottom surface of a wing.

  25. Basic Propeller Principles • The chord line is an imaginary line drawn through the blade from its leading edge to its trailing edge. • As in a wing, the leading edge is the thick edge of the blade that meets the air as the propeller rotates.

  26. Basic Propeller Principles • The pitch of a propeller may be designated in inches. • A propeller designated as a “74-48” would be 74 inches in length and have an effective pitch of 48 inches.

  27. Basic Propeller Principles • The pitch is the distance in inches, which the propeller would screw through the air in one revolution if there were no slippage.

  28. Basic Propeller Principles • The shape of the blade also creates thrust because it is cambered like the airfoil shape of a wing. • As the air flows past the propeller, the pressure on one side is less than that on the other.

  29. Basic Propeller Principles • The airflow over the wing has less pressure, and the force (lift) is upward. • Instead of a horizontal plane, the area of decreased pressure is in front of the propeller, and the force (thrust) is in a forward direction.

  30. Basic Propeller Principles • The reason a propeller is “twisted” is that the outer parts of the propeller blades, like all things that turn about a central point, travel faster than the portions near the hub.

  31. Basic Propeller Principles • Propeller blades are twisted to change the blade angle in proportion to the differences in speed of rotation along the length of the propeller, keeping thrust more nearly equalized along this length.

  32. Questions / Comments

  33. 1. Create (1) quiz question with answer about today’s lesson. 3. List 3 things you learned today. 2. List 2 things you have questions about today’s lesson. Lesson Closure - 3 – 2 - 1

More Related