« first day (553 days earlier)      last day (3528 days later) » 

06:21
Morning :)
 
7 hours later…
13:20
Anybody want to expalain to me why I keep asking questions where I can't completely understand the answer? I'm having a hard time judging who is right. I was going to jus follow the votes, but there's a huge debate...
12
Q: How do wings generate lift?

Jay CarrJust the basic question that every aviation enthusiast must be curious about: exactly how does a wing generate lift?

@DanHulme Who is more correct, you or Peter Kampf?
You certainly picked an interesting topic...
Well, it felt relevant to the stack you know...
And I do like physics, I just don't have a formal grounding in it, so I get confused sometimes.
In many year's people will say: "Do you remember the start of scientific WW3?" - "Wasn't that caused by the guy who asked how wings generate lift?"....
3
lolz, that seems quite likely at this point.
@SentryRaven I did try to warn him ;)
13:26
There is a correct answer though, right? Or is this kind of like gravity and all we can do is correctly figure out how a wing will work, but we don't know exactly how it does.
Didn't succeed much there, did you? :D
@JayCarr It's science. There will be a correct answer at the time it's posted, which will be superseded once science finds a new theory or a new attempt to answer something...
I daresay, judging the way the boys are arguing in that question, we are probably somewhere in between of Answer A being correct and Answer B superseding A...
user image
2
To what are you assigning to A and what are you assigning to B? I assume A = Bernoulli and B = Flow turning?
I for one believe this is still the most correct explanation, although my FI disagreed...
13:29
You should just post that as and answer so I can accept it.
Do not lead me into temptation...
Oh come on, it's not like you could make me any more confused.
And I'm curious about this anyway. One of my favorite parts of history was historiography (or how our perception of history changes), this seems a bit similar.
When I did my PPL, I learned it was Bernoulli. But I wouldn't say that this is and will remain the only possible answer. For now I am content that airplanes fly and make a nice hobby... if anybody asks why they fly I say magic and explain that there are different explanations, of which I only understand one currently.
Fair enough
If all fails, I can still claim I did my PPL at Hogwarts School for Wizardry and Witchcraft...
13:34
lolz, yeah, that would help with the explanation of why you use that theory.
To be fair, NASA seemed pretty certain about flow turning, which makes me a bit more confident in them since they did, and do, help run the X-Plane program. I have to assume they know.
@JayCarr Why don't you draft up your own answer which explains it to a layman?
I might...
@Farhan the problem with all of the misinformation with lift production is because people try to reduce it to be understandable to laymen and resulting explanation is no longer a good one. generally.
I'm disappointed to not see any complicated tensor equations in any of those answers
or even some actually writing the Bernoulli effect
something like $\frac{\partial\mathbf{u}}{\partial t} + \nabla (\frac{1}{2}q^2 + \int\frac{dp}{\rho} + gz) = \mathbf{u} \times \mathbf{\omega}$
13:51
@casey So this principle isn't simple enough to be explained in simple words?
That's not hard to believe.
14:20
So I guess the questions is if someone actually has the time and talent to write a succinct definition of how it works. Starting with the simpler bits and building into the more complex bits... Granted, that would have to be paired up with a more general question: is this site even the place for that sort of explanation?
14:40
@JayCarr We do have a blog site :)
@Farhan Does anybody read it? I don't think I've ever actually seen it before if I'm honest...
http://aviation.stackexchange.com/a/16093/1467 && http://aviation.stackexchange.com/a/16092/1467

same user, two answers, double upvotes and the second answer was intended as edit of the first, result:
http://aviation.stackexchange.com/review/low-quality-posts/9264
the community thinks that everything is fine
I am confuse
@Federico interesting
On the review panel it doesn't show the other answer
@DeltaLima should show my comment though, doesn't it?
Not sure it did
14:54
There, I selected the answer to that question (about how wings generate lift) in a controversial manner. I'm feeling fulfilled now... But honestly, I just felt like I got the best picture of what was going on from that particular answer. I'll keep an eye on the comments though, to see if there is any significant disagreement on the quality of the answer...
I think the comment was there, I didn't notice it when I reviewed.
15:10
@JayCarr I don't know how many, but some people do read it.
@Federico @DeltaLima The longer answer is older than the accepted answer.
I initially thought that the comment by mins triggered the user (who is new to SE) to write another answer explaining it further.
@DeltaLima The review panel/queue didn't show the shorter one because that user's first/earlier answer was already reviewed.
15:56
@Farhan I admit I have not checked the timestamps
 
1 hour later…
17:21
Interestingly, both Peter Kämpf's and my answer have two downvotes
also, there's one thing thinking about lift has made me think of
is the circulation caused by the Kutta condition the reason a wing stalls if the alpha is too great?
@DanHulme - I can't figure why either of yours would have any down votes... Other than there are a lot of people who are misinformed on how wings work, that might explain it a little bit...maybe. I wish people would leave comments.
-1 for wrong explanation of Kutta-Joukowski theorem and flow turning. One should remember that flow turning is the effect of the lift (Which was created by pressure difference), rather than the cause of lift. — Victor Juliet 12 hours ago
This is one of the down votes on @DanHulme answer.
Victor himself has 3 down votes.
@Farhan Sounds like we have a debate going there. Though I personally found @DanHulme responses fairly convincing.
that's because I cribbed them from the NASA website, as promised :-)
What I really don't understand is how Peter Kampfs is voted down. He grounded it pretty well in basic fluid dynamics. I was really happy to see such a simple explanation of how molecules function in the given situation. It's why I picked his (though this is another situation where I wish I could combine two answers together. I think @DanHulme's part is pretty critical to understanding the whole thing.)
@DanHulme Fair enough ;)
17:31
annoyingly one dude posted a really good link as a comment and hasn't responded to my suggestion he post an answer
Oh, and who would that be.
PS- I loved how one of your commentors (RononDex) used the fact that he's a physics student as the reason why he's right. Because, you know, you're answer was supplied by NASA, and Peter Kampf doesn't design wings for a living... (or some such)
yeah
I haven't the heart to break it to him that I did first-year physics at Cambridge and I still don't understand it fully
lol, life will teach him. If not, he isn't paying enough attention.
What do you think of Peter's explanation though? My first year of college was spent taking history classes so...yeah. Not super qualified.
17:36
My only complaint about Peter's answer is that it's a bit long and brings in molecules unnecessarily
I don't see anything factually wrong with it, for whatever that's worth
Mmmm, I'd disagree with the molecules being unnecessary. I think if you get it in your head that there are bunches of little objects hitting the bottom of the wing and not that many hitting the top, it helps make it all make sense.
lol, that's more what I was after.
This could be another situation where the oddities of my own ability to understand certain analogies is playing into what works well for me and what doesn't.
Though I will take a crack at reading the paper you linked....
@DanHulme Do you know who wrote the document on av8n?
@JayCarr that question is generation a lot of "this is wrong, my way is right" type stuff, so the DV on all (but one) of the answers isn't exciting
also remember, it isn't your job to decide what is right and wrong, accepting just means you found a certain answer most useful, not that it is necessarily correct
@casey I don't really think its exciting either, more troubling...
So, I had a colleague ask me a question today that I couldn't give a satisfactory answer to, and I might write it up.
17:44
And yeah, I understand that that is the way SE is designed to work. But since my general purpose is "understanding how this actually works", I tend to want the most correct answer. In this case though, both answers contained both ways of explaining flight, I just liked Peters analogy more.
@DanHulme Do it.
He asked what would happen if I were to accidentally overfly the local military aerodrome
I said the answer was probably "I'd get told off" but he thought they should shoot me down
depends on the airspace overlying the base and how low you intend overflying it
Oooh, that is an interesting one. I think there has been a question asked regarding restricted airspace, but it's not quite that specific.
yeah, the question is not really "what are the legal ramifications?" but "is there a military response?"
I used to fly PAR approaches at a local base with students
the only rule was don't let the rubber meet the concrete
otherwise it was a low pass down the runway and onto the missed
if you flew through without talking, you'd probably just get talked to when you eventually land
17:50
@casey Probably depends on the base though, right? And how active it is, or even what is stored at the base...
@casey PAR?
well, this one is active
if they wanted to intercept you, the fighters would be coming from there
I doubt they'd scramble for a class D bust, regardless of what was on the ground
Precision approach radar (PAR) is a type of radar guidance system designed to provide lateral and vertical guidance to an aircraft pilot for landing, until the landing threshold is reached. After the aircraft reaches the decision height (DH) or decision altitude (DA), guidance is advisory only. Controllers monitoring the PAR displays observe each aircraft's position and issue instructions to the pilot that keep the aircraft on course and glidepath during final approach. It is similar to an instrument landing system (ILS) but requires control instructions. One type of instrument approach that can...
in any case, they wont shoot for that
they scrambled a few months ago for an airliner that had radio failure
oh, of course
17:53
@Farhan yep, used to put sticky notes over most of the panel and let them bring us in
@casey well, that's what I said, and he was all, "It's a good job I don't work there, I'd just shoot you down"
@casey - it is entirely possible I have been watching too many movies. I keep thinking if you did an approach to edwards (or some other place they fly top secret stuff), you might be in some serious trouble, regardless of if you touch down or not.
@DanHulme to get shot at you need to be acting overtly malicious and posing a threat
e.g. taking off from runway 1 at DCA and not turning and not climbing. that allegedly will earn you a few rockets inbound
that is third hand info from a few crews I know that busted the DP at DCA and overflew the washington monument. They were supposedly told they only only reason they weren't considered hostile is that they maintained positive rate of climb
and there are missile batteries on certain rooftops in DC
there was a hoo-hah in the news before the 2012 olympics, because some blocks of flats in London allegedly got turned into SAM stations without first consulting the residents
Did that turn out to be true?
18:00
i'd bet the flaming debris of a blown up C172 would probably do more damage on the ground than the plane just crashing on its own
Unless it had been packed with several hundred pounds of explosives.
Which would be better if they went off in the air...I'd say.
Not likely, admittedly.
if thats the goal there isn't a lot of useful load in a 172 :)
TBH I think they courted the publicity to increase the deterrent factor
@casey I'd love to see the weight & balance calc for that flight
18:19
@casey yeah, same here, I've flown a PAR into Büchel air base. They had arresting cables across the runway, so touching down would probably have been a bad idea ;)
@falstro How should I do it? Lollipops, doughnuts, plush toys, what's your weakness?
 
5 hours later…
23:11
re -- places like Edwards
I know offhand that Palmdale/Plant 42 won't draw a blink -- after all, that facility does double duty as Palmdale's airport. :p
Edwards itself is similar to most airbases in that you have to call the base up and get permission to land there -- the big downside to Edwards is its rather out in the middle of nowhere, so there just isn't much in facilities there.
also: you need (and will get) an airspace briefing for Edwards as part of getting PPR there
@DanHulme -- which airbase are you speaking of, specifically, btw? (the AIP docs for that base should have everything you need to know about landing there)

« first day (553 days earlier)      last day (3528 days later) »