Re: J-20... The New Generation Fighter III
I'm going to have to give this one to quikie, mig, especially when it comes to all the generalities about canards, short or long coupled, several of us are aware of those general principles, but they are general and generally about western aircraft and design. Now there are two reasons I believe the forward fuselage is making a lot of lift, Dr. Songs paper,along with Tianlongs paper, both very well written and scholarly, and more importantly the large downward deflection of the canard, the eng stated he estimated AOA at approx 40 degrees in these turn, due to the canard deflection and he contends the canard is aligned with the relative wind. Now both of you guys have opened my eyes here, but the real head scratcher was this large downward deflection of the canard, Indy cars have had front wings with large downward deflection since the late 1960s, to prevent body lift or nose up pitch. While this does cause some drag, it prevents the indy car from "over pitching and loss of control". Thats why Dr. Song speaks of an all flying or extreme angle deflection of the canards, which are pitching the nose down.
---------- Post added at 09:07 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:56 PM ----------
I made my statement in response to your #8 post in which you state the leading edge flaps decrease lift, did you mean they pitch the nose down? or am I missing something else. I think I still stand by my statement, but then I'm not the engineer, respectfully brat.
---------- Post added at 09:26 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:07 PM ----------
You are on it today Jr., and whats been in the back of my mind is, has anyone around Chengdu heard any sonic booms, I don't think we've even seen the J-20 at high subsonic speeds, now they've made 70+ or so flights, I think its a little odd if the tallman hasn't opened the tap a little, and guys this is my own dumb thinking, so if I'm wrong and you know of mach 1 flights, please straighten me out. Has anyone seen a fast dash say to Mach ,85-90? I may have missed it.
Repeating all those aerodynamic principles here, with some errors here and there, don't really get into the point of the discussion.
By this principle, the J-20 must be very longitudinal unstable since a few of the members here are puzzling over the seemingly pitching down of the canards in most of the maneouvres as seen in the pictures and videos.
Any which way, the article is still wrong in the way it determines the J-20's longitudinal stability by just considering the position of the wing's MAC with respect to CG, and by committing the error of neglecting the overall lift of the aircraft, escpecially the forebody lift enhanced by the few vortex generators at the inlet and LERX as describeed in Dr Song's paper.
I'm going to have to give this one to quikie, mig, especially when it comes to all the generalities about canards, short or long coupled, several of us are aware of those general principles, but they are general and generally about western aircraft and design. Now there are two reasons I believe the forward fuselage is making a lot of lift, Dr. Songs paper,along with Tianlongs paper, both very well written and scholarly, and more importantly the large downward deflection of the canard, the eng stated he estimated AOA at approx 40 degrees in these turn, due to the canard deflection and he contends the canard is aligned with the relative wind. Now both of you guys have opened my eyes here, but the real head scratcher was this large downward deflection of the canard, Indy cars have had front wings with large downward deflection since the late 1960s, to prevent body lift or nose up pitch. While this does cause some drag, it prevents the indy car from "over pitching and loss of control". Thats why Dr. Song speaks of an all flying or extreme angle deflection of the canards, which are pitching the nose down.
---------- Post added at 09:07 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:56 PM ----------
Not quite. The leading edge flaps allow you to go to a higher angle of attack without stalling and so reach a higher lift coefficient.
I made my statement in response to your #8 post in which you state the leading edge flaps decrease lift, did you mean they pitch the nose down? or am I missing something else. I think I still stand by my statement, but then I'm not the engineer, respectfully brat.
---------- Post added at 09:26 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:07 PM ----------
I think the fact that canards on J-20 has to pitch down more to hold the nose down makes it potentially more maneuverable. If you want tighter turns all you need is to do is to relax the amount of canard deflection downwards.
From what I saw in the video the J-20 is doing a whole lot of deflection could be due to:
-Turning at low speeds, therefore the rate of pitch of the nose needs to be limited, otherwise you are exposing more of the plane cross section to incomming air flow, increasing drag, makes the plane slow down more and eventually stall.
-Engine not at full power, therefore the aircraft is not accelerating enough and this will limit how fast it can turn. This is interrelated with the previous point.
-J-20 will due to have more powerful engine than it currently has, so with it the canard downward deflection could be relaxed, giving it faster response.
-As far as I see the video of J-20 shows it flying and doing maneuver at slower speeds than the F-22 videos.
-Using low speed performance to deduce supersonic performance may not be on track as the centre of lift shifts with different airspeed
Though I think I'll just wait for high performance revealing test flights like what we've seen with the F-22 demos to convince people
You are on it today Jr., and whats been in the back of my mind is, has anyone around Chengdu heard any sonic booms, I don't think we've even seen the J-20 at high subsonic speeds, now they've made 70+ or so flights, I think its a little odd if the tallman hasn't opened the tap a little, and guys this is my own dumb thinking, so if I'm wrong and you know of mach 1 flights, please straighten me out. Has anyone seen a fast dash say to Mach ,85-90? I may have missed it.