rbogie
Aerospace
- Aug 28, 2003
- 19
Hi, I'm trying to help my teenage daughter with a science project where we take 2D airfoil lift and drag curves and relate them to to the actual wings of real airplanes and see how close we can calculate stall speed and max speeds of the real world airplanes. We went to a lot of trouble picking out the CL's and Cd's of the airfoils used by reading off the graphs in the "Theory of Wing Sections", but now I can't find any way of relating those CL's, Cd's to 3D values. I know that I can estimate the 3D CL from Prandtl's Lifting Line theory CL=CLalpha x (AR/AR+2) x alpha and that at least uses the slope of the CL vs alpha line and the alpha at the stall speed for that airfoil. I also know from Lifting Line theory that Cd=Cdmin +(CL^2/pi x AR x e--Oswald's efficiency factor), but you see that that formula doesn't make any use of the 2D value for Cd from the charts--the only thing it relates to again is the CL vs alpha slope.
In other words what can we actually do with the wonderful numbers charted in "Theory of Wing Sections" and any other CL vs AoA or Cd vs CL graphs??
In other words what can we actually do with the wonderful numbers charted in "Theory of Wing Sections" and any other CL vs AoA or Cd vs CL graphs??