rbogie
Aerospace
- Aug 28, 2003
- 19
Hi, I'm trying to help my teenage daugter with a science fair project. We want to take the plotted Lift/Drag curves of three different airfoils, use the lift and drag formulas (from 2D airfoil L/D graphs) convert to 3D actual wings, and see how close we can come to the actual stall speed and max Vne speeds for 3 different airplanes (Cessna 172, Lockheed C-130, Boeing 747). The thing is while the lift equation is for the wing alone (and its a reasonable assmuption that only the wing creates lift so therefore the lift equation represents the whole airplane), it appears that the drag equations only calculate drag for the wing alone. If the drag equation only calculates for the wing, how can we approximately calculate the fuselage drag? I'm thinking that there could be a fraction of total a/c drag is due to fuselage/empennage and the remaining fraction of total drag is from the wing. The total drag at max Vne is equal to the total thrust available, subtracting off the wing drag should leave the fuselage/empenage drag. As a crude example: Total thrust for C-130 equals, say, 25,000 lbs which would equal the total drag. At this point I don't know what speed we are at, if I assume that 1/3 of the total thrust is for wing drag (ie 8,333 lb) then I can work backwards to find the Velocity. Has anyone seen such a proportion of Wing drag to Total drag? It would probably be adjusted by the fuselage slenderness ratio, and Mach no. and air density.
Second note: The C-172 wing uses a NACA 2412 airfoil which I can get the L/D graphs for (I have the book "Theory of Wing Sections"), and the C-130 uses NACA 64A318 airfoil. But I don't understand the Boeing 747 wing. I looked it up and its listed as "BAC 463 to BAC 468" Does this mean it changes from root to tip? What does a BAC 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468 look like and how can I find L/D data of this wing?
Second note: The C-172 wing uses a NACA 2412 airfoil which I can get the L/D graphs for (I have the book "Theory of Wing Sections"), and the C-130 uses NACA 64A318 airfoil. But I don't understand the Boeing 747 wing. I looked it up and its listed as "BAC 463 to BAC 468" Does this mean it changes from root to tip? What does a BAC 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468 look like and how can I find L/D data of this wing?