Hi Brett,
Thank you for your comments.
22-24" is a veeery loong tail.
Could you , please, check your archives?
What do you mean "check my archives"? You think I am making it up? You want me to post pictures of a ruler next to the fuselage of a 31-year-old airplane!?
And in any case, I said earlier that this is probably too long, and that most people have settled on something around 18", which after converting your metric to conventional units, is about what you showed - "485 mm" is about 19".
All else being equal, you would not be able to tell the difference between 17.5, 18, and 19, it's just not that critical or important. In most cases, other factors that you are not considering would dominate the performance. I caution you again about jumping to conclusions - just because you and others are doing experiments with tail moments, does not mean the differences you note from airplane to airplane are due to that change, and not the 1000 other things that are probably different. It took *a long time* with *many competent experimenters* and a *vast number of carefully-evaluated results* to come to the current level of understanding.
Would you agree that the corners of the world's, say, fifteen best stunt pilots are becoming progressively sharper when considering the period 1978 -2020?
To put it differently: sharp corner in 1978 is no longer considered sharp in 2020.
I am not sure how you are determining the "world's 15 best pilots" without seeing most of them fly, but it's not that important.
At the FAI level, people are flying tighter than they were because that appears to win contests, but *the reason people are doing it better* is largely because of what was started in 1978, i.e. longer tail moments. The other factor is getting much better power systems, starting in 1988. It simply wasn't possible to do what people are doing now with 1978 engines, still isn't, which is what drives me nuts about the "Engine Forum" - because people are still trying to thrash away with something has been obsolete for 40 years.
In any case, the original Imitation with the original ST46 probably still turns sharper than most people are doing or are capable of handling, and would be a tremendous upgrade for most people. Most of the competitive west-coast airplanes, in particular the Trivial Pursuit, Infinity, and Thundergazer, are attempts to replicate the original performance of the Imitation with a full fuselage. The Thundergazer, in particular, is about as close as you can get without a Xerox machine - except with a piped 75.
The current standards were set, effectively, in 1990 or so, with the combination of genuinely sharper corners, and the very superior ability to start and stop the corners that make it look sharper whether it is or not. Paul Walker set the standard to such a degree that he won the NATs 5 years in a row, to the point he got bored with it. A few of us caught on and became competitive, far more people never got it, still don't, and some of them came the conclusion that the contests were rigged. Nothing has changed all that much since then, there was a brief degeneration during the 4-stroke "revolution" that proved to be a dead end, now Paul is back setting the standards again, along with his cohorts, with even better propulsion systems.
Throughout that time, one of the big knocks on the FAI was that the Chinese were winning contest after contest doing square 8s you couldn't tell from round 8s, they were so soft. Now, particularly since Igor demonstrated it (
since nothing is ever real to the FAI until Europeans do it...) in spectacular fashion, the pendulum has swung the other way dramatically, now, cornering is the only thing that seems to matter. Either approach is wrong for reasons that seem rather obvious.
Point being, something isn't new just because you happened to notice it. This has been going on a very long time.
Brett