In the "Brain Dead" thread Eric V. asked me a question that sort of begs a separate thread. Thought I'd start fresh on the subject.
Eric's post was: "Thanks for the most thorough reply Ted! I really do appreciate your thoughts. As long as your in the mood to type, if I may be so bold to post one follow on hypothetical question.
Let's say you had a plane that exhibits the barbell effect, say it came out tail heavy due to the nose is too short, so you add a bunch of lead to the nose and now it balances well on the CG, grooves well, corners sharp enough, but is hard to stop and start the turn consistently. If the airframe is still reasonably light at this point, could adding weight to the CG reduce the barbell effect? Am I making any sense?
Thanks!
EricV"
First of all, I gotta make it clear. I don't necessarily advocate adding weight to an airplane for its own sake. Sparky and I can at least agree with the basic principle that airplanes have to have a reasonable wing loading to do the stuff we do. We just disagree on how high or low that loading has to be to be competitive.
Eric's question, though, is a good one and something like it was actually begging to be asked as we worked through the numerous threads started or continued at length based on Sparky's design philosophies and his concern about motor mass and MOI. That, in fact, is the underlying aerodynamic question asked by Eric above; in essence, requesting an in depth discussion of what the effects of weight masses at the ends of the barbell are in the pitch axis.
In theory, the simple answer to Eric’s question is, yes, increasing the overall weight of the airplane will reduce the MOI of a given concentrated mass at the end/s of a given “barbell”.
Is that a good idea? Better yet, are you apt to encounter the problem Eric postulates in the first place?
I think the second question is the one that needs to be answered first. Let me give a real life, empirical, example and then expound on what the experience might teach us.
Back in the ‘70s I built and published the Imitation, a “complex” profile – if there is such a thing. Among other adjustable features built into the ship was the ability to switch engines easily, using an RC style engine mount on a flat firewall mounted to the nose. I did, in fact, try about six or seven different engines (this was just about the start of the use of schnerle ported stuff in stunt), the last of which was a rear intake Enya .46 four cycle. This was by far the heaviest of the engines used and, because of the rear intake etc. had to be located further forward than any of the lighter two strokes. That, of course, required adding lead to the tail to bring the airplane back to the preferred CG location.
In other words, I did exactly what Eric was postulating. The overall weight of the airplane was then around 62-3 oz, by far the heaviest wing loading of its long career; and it had a lot more weight in the nose and tail than originally envisioned.
To make a long story short, it was by far my favorite set-up for the airplane and the only configuration I recall actually flying in a contest environment. There was no noticeable effect of the added weight at both ends of the longitudinal barbell. If anything, the pitch response seemed just a bit more controllable and easier to start and stop “reliably”, the key word being reliably (as opposed to "quickly").
And, no, in response to Eric’s ultimate question,there was obviously no reason to add weight to the CG to battle any ill effects of the increased barbells.
The following discussion may be a bit controversial to those who embrace long standing convention. I certainly understand that there might well be some rebuttal to the following theory. I look forward to reading it.
To be specific, I’m going to take exception to Bob Gialdini’s suggestion that we actively minimize barbell effect in the pitch axis; a concept that became stunt gospel almost instantly upon publication of his excellent Olympic article published in American Aircraft Modeler back in 1963. This convention is, of course, at the heart of much of the differences between Sparky and me.
As Eric’s question suggests, the concern of Bob (Gialdini) -- and most every stunt flyer since -- has been that concentrated weight in the nose and tail will act like concentrated weights at the end of a barbell and make pitch changes harder to start as well as harder to stop once they are started. The theory is, of course, true. The question becomes one of degree. How much of the barbell effect will there be and what will be the consequence of it.
Let’s look at an obvious barbell effect that doesn’t really concern us a lot in a controlline airplane but is a very big deal with free flying ones. That is the barbell effect of concentrated masses at the wing tips on the roll axis. Then we can compare what happens there to what happens in the pitch axis and see how they are different and how any difference may modify our concern about it.
Mass at the tips of the wing (like tip tanks) when accelerated acts about a “fixed axis of rotation”. If you do a complete roll there will 360 degrees of rotation around that axis in whatever time it takes to complete the roll. The greater the concentration of weight at the ends of the rotating mass the greater will be the control forced necessary to both start and stop it. All the while the roll is taking place it is occurring about that fixed axis running from the nose to the tail. Almost like spinning a bicycle wheel while holding onto the axle.
No matter what we do with that axis, the weight spinning about it will act in the same manner (there will be other effects, like gyroscopic precession of course, but that will have no effect on the ease or difficulty of starting and stopping the “roll about the longitudinal axis”). The affects are large and they are real.
IMHO, the barbell effects in the pitch axis are only a small fraction of those encountered in the roll. This is for the simple reason that the actual “rotation of the ends of the barbell” about their axis of rotation – from wingtip to wingtip in this case – is only a matter of a few degrees. The airplane's rotation about the pitch axis is quite literally only enough to establish the angle of attack required to develop the lift necessary to support the “g” loads in the pitch maneuver being performed. Once that angle of attack is achieved, "rotation" stops and there will be no further “rotation of the concentrated masses” about the spanwise axis. Thus, no sustained barbell effect.
Once the airplane achieves that necessary condition it simply tracks around the circumference of the desired maneuver arc. The CG now becomes the only mass of concern, primarily in terms of where it is relative to where the lift which supports it is developed. Once again, if the CG and that “center of lift” are separated by a significant amount the amount of control input necessary to maintain the desired rate of turn may change BUT there will be little or no change of the angle of attack that results. You still are looking for the same amount of lift which will require roughly the same angle of attack around the loop (for instance).
There is actually some school of thought that says a flapped airplane doesn’t even need to change the body angle to achieve the A of A necessary to maneuver. That the mere deflection of the flaps increases the angle of attack to that required without ever “pitching the airplane around the pitch axis”. If that point of view is accurate (and, in theory in could be) there would be NO barbell effect whatsoever in the pitch axis.
To the extent that barbell effect in the pitch axis is real in a stunt ship, I think (as in the Imitation example above) it could, within reason, be beneficial to performing maneuvers that get good scores. Given the modest amount of pitch rotation necessary to achieve the necessary angle of attack, it is safe to say that any reasonably competent stunter would have the control effectiveness necessary to achieve that AofA. It might take a bit more input if there is a “larger” MOI, but it would almost certainly be well within the ability of both the pilot and the airframe. (This is part of the reason that many modern designers advocate the use of larger axis control systems, four inch B/C and long horns, for instance).
Were you to minimize the MOI in the pitch axis to zero (mount the engine, etc. at the desired CG, like the Bell Aircobra), for instance, pitch inputs would be instantaneously effective (no dampener) and very difficult to start and stop at a precise 90 or 120 degrees which is essential to flying high scoring maneuvers. I don’t think that would be desirable for a stunt ship.
An increase in MOI due to a modestly greater barbell effect could (and likely does) act sort of like a shock absorber in corners, allowing (requiring, really) more positive control input by the pilot and, therefore, a more controllable pitch change. This is another example of dampening not unlike the discussion of pitching moment from flaps and the slightly out of trim conditions used by the Blue Angels, Thunderbirds, etc. to allow greater precision in flight track.
Eric, that’s my “take” on this stuff. I know it is somewhat heretical and could generate some opposing opinion and theory (maybe even some actual facts from some of our more competent contributors.
Ted