uwochris
Flightinfo's sexiest user
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2001
- Posts
- 381
Hey guys,
I got a Q regarding slips, and I hope some of you can shed some light on the issue.
Assume an a/c is coordinated and is flying S&L and there is no wind. If the a/c banks to the left, and uses opposite rudder, would the a/c technically still be slipping if the force produced by the rudder exactly balances the horizontal component of lift?
In a book I read, it says that the a/c will drift in this case. To me, though, it seems that a state of equilibrium will be established and thus, the longitudinal axis will be alligned with the relative wind, producing zero slip and no extra drag. I come to this conclusion based on the fact that all forces are balanced (i.e. no unbalanced side-ways force implies no drift).
Perhaps I am overlooking the fact that the moments/torques are not all balanced?? I understand that a state of equilibrium requires all forces and all moments/torques to be balanced. The issue with moments/torques is that if there is an imbalance, there will be a rotation, and not a sideways drift. So, if the a/c is still slipping in the case where the magnitude of the HCL balances the rudder force, what is causing the drift? Anyone care to explain?
Thanks a lot,
Chris.
I got a Q regarding slips, and I hope some of you can shed some light on the issue.
Assume an a/c is coordinated and is flying S&L and there is no wind. If the a/c banks to the left, and uses opposite rudder, would the a/c technically still be slipping if the force produced by the rudder exactly balances the horizontal component of lift?
In a book I read, it says that the a/c will drift in this case. To me, though, it seems that a state of equilibrium will be established and thus, the longitudinal axis will be alligned with the relative wind, producing zero slip and no extra drag. I come to this conclusion based on the fact that all forces are balanced (i.e. no unbalanced side-ways force implies no drift).
Perhaps I am overlooking the fact that the moments/torques are not all balanced?? I understand that a state of equilibrium requires all forces and all moments/torques to be balanced. The issue with moments/torques is that if there is an imbalance, there will be a rotation, and not a sideways drift. So, if the a/c is still slipping in the case where the magnitude of the HCL balances the rudder force, what is causing the drift? Anyone care to explain?
Thanks a lot,
Chris.