|
Hi Wolfgang,
I would be surprised if we have an aeronautical engineer in the group
that specializes in determining Vne for composite aircraft. I believe
that it combines at least two specialties, materials science and
structural engineering - maybe more.
From this most recent thread, and from others on this and other forums,
I gather that Vne is determined by many things:
- Indicated airspeed causing compression loads on one or more areas of
the aircraft that exceed their compressibility strength, or causing
flutter on control surfaces, doors, or even unsecured aircraft skin
- Mach number likewise creating unusual stresses
- True airspeed, for reasons I don't understand
All of this has to be factored together with every kind of materials
strength (tensile; compressibility, torsional, fatigue, others?)
including layup alignment factors of the original glass (affects at
least torsional strength in given angles of twist); balance; harmonics;
aircraft stability and controllability (at least one aircraft I know
had Vne set because it ran out of elevator authority at high speed);
and probably many more factors I'm unaware of.
I'm quite certain that Lance used at minimum some baseline modeling to
set conservative Vne numbers - the proof of that is the lack of Vne
related accidents. I'm also quite certain that given a supercomputer
using the latest models (finite element analysis?) that a more accurate
Vne could be established, and also equally certain that because of the
inherent variability of fiberglass construction that relying on such a
model would be dangerous.
So what I'm saying is, Vne for a Lancair is probably somewhat science
and somewhat art (because of the variability of fiber and resin). Even
if you personally choose to be a test pilot and test YOUR airplane up
to 500KIAS successfully it is no guarantee that any other Lancair will
perform similarly.
For me, I'll stick to the published Vne unless some emergency (UFO
chasing me?) causes me to exceed it.
Cheers,
Bill Reister
Wolfgang wrote:
So . . . am I to conclude that
there's nobody on the list that can identify how Vne is determined ?
With all the experience of posters
on this list, I'm surprised to say the least.
Is this black magic art or is there
some real formula/procedure ?
All I've seen here so far is "is
that meadured in IAS, TAS OR Mach ?" or "what is the speed for xxx
airframe ?".
. . . but nothing about how the
number comes to be.
Wolfgang
|
|