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  • April 27, 2024, 11:17:23 AM

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Author Topic: Odd question on a profile model: Keep the inboard side without protuberances?  (Read 1098 times)

Offline Bill Schluckbier

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Hello,

I have another odd question.  Now that I am back flying C/L all of my models are electric.  To keep the look of the models tidy when viewed from outside the circle I place the battery, ESC and timer on the inboard side.  In terms of retention I think that it is a good idea for the battery to be on the inboard side, it is partially recessed into the fuselage and the centripetal force helps hold it in place.

At any rate, having all of those protuberances disrupts the airflow on that side of the fuselage; I am just wondering if model would fly better  if it were clean.  As the airplane flies around in a circle that is the side of the fuselage which first encounters the incoming air. On the outboard side I would expect the airflow to be more turbulent and hence less affected by having the battery et. all. hanging on that side.

Any thoughts?

Bill

Online Ken Culbertson

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Hello,

I have another odd question.  Now that I am back flying C/L all of my models are electric.  To keep the look of the models tidy when viewed from outside the circle I place the battery, ESC and timer on the inboard side.  In terms of retention I think that it is a good idea for the battery to be on the inboard side, it is partially recessed into the fuselage and the centripetal force helps hold it in place.

At any rate, having all of those protuberances disrupts the airflow on that side of the fuselage; I am just wondering if model would fly better  if it were clean.  As the airplane flies around in a circle that is the side of the fuselage which first encounters the incoming air. On the outboard side I would expect the airflow to be more turbulent and hence less affected by having the battery et. all. hanging on that side.

Any thoughts?

Bill
I don't think it makes a whole lot of difference on a profile.  They are really drag buckets with all of the things that have to be exposed.  Making them presentable is a good idea.  Neat wiring, etc.  I do a similar thing on mine.  I use soft thick doublers around the nose to let me blend into a spinner.  I make a rather large battery cutout through both sides and put a 1/16" plywood divider in the center.  I mount the ESC on the inboard side, the battery on the outboard side and the timer in a tunnel on the inboard side.  The tunnel hides all those ugly wires under a hatch.  Everything is exposed but it is orderly.

The reasons I put the battery on the outside is balance.  With it on the inboard you need more tip weight.  On my contest profile I have tunnels covered by hatches all over the nose for hiding various wires, the timer, the telemetry port and for cooling.  None of the wiring is exposed except where it connects to the ESC.  If you are worried about spectators/judges looking at the nose as it goes by add some trim to distract them. LL~

Ken
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If it is not broke you are not trying hard enough.
USAF 1968-1974 TAC

Offline Bill Schluckbier

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Hello Ken,

Thank you for your reply.  I agree that profiles will be draggier than full fuselage models; in this case I was wondering if it had an effect on the "lift" that the fuselage might generate when the model is up high on the circle.  I have a modified Oriental with reasonably significant side area that seems to fly fairly well; even when it starts to get a little windy (say 10-15 mph).  It is a small and reasonably light model so you would expect it to be more affected by the wind.  At any rate, I was wondering if the side area would be more effective had the stuff been mounted on the other side.

Thanks,

Bill

Online Ken Culbertson

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Hello Ken,

Thank you for your reply.  I agree that profiles will be draggier than full fuselage models; in this case I was wondering if it had an effect on the "lift" that the fuselage might generate when the model is up high on the circle.  I have a modified Oriental with reasonably significant side area that seems to fly fairly well; even when it starts to get a little windy (say 10-15 mph).  It is a small and reasonably light model so you would expect it to be more affected by the wind.  At any rate, I was wondering if the side area would be more effective had the stuff been mounted on the other side.

Thanks,

Bill
That is a good question.  I may be off here but I have found the best cure for overhead line tension is momentum and as much tip weight as you can carry without hinging.  I have a really dirty inboard side on the one in the pix but gobs of side area.  It has an active timer so I get a huge boost when I am upstairs.  I don't think the lift produced by the fuselage amounts to much.  Even with an airfoiled shape, which I have tried, the prop vortex seems to kill it. 

Ken
AMA 15382
If it is not broke you are not trying hard enough.
USAF 1968-1974 TAC

Online Howard Rush

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I wouldn’t expect much aerodynamic difference between having stuff on one side of the fuselage vs. the other, but the mass distribution may matter. I suspect the airplane would trim out with leadouts farther aft for the case with stuff on the side toward the center of the circle. I hope to calculate something, but it’s a race with dementia.
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Offline Brett Buck

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I wouldn’t expect much aerodynamic difference between having stuff on one side of the fuselage vs. the other, but the mass distribution may matter.

   That is one likely issue here, putting all that weight centered ~1" from the centerline of the airplane may overdo the "save tip weight" effect, and require some added to the inboard wing.

     I am not sure I would assume the leadouts are going to fix the thrust offset. I know you are skeptical about my assertions about thrust vectors, but I would kick in, or at least make provision for, a good bit of right thrust. Unfortunately the thrust varies all over the place, so no guarantees that you can completely resolve it with thrust offset.   

   Same effect makes putting the motor straight ahead likely to make for exciting takeoffs, immediate left turn on launch, like an All-American, just not as bad.

    Brett

Online Howard Rush

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   That is one likely issue here, putting all that weight centered ~1" from the centerline of the airplane may overdo the "save tip weight" effect, and require some added to the inboard wing.

     I am not sure I would assume the leadouts are going to fix the thrust offset. I know you are skeptical about my assertions about thrust vectors, but I would kick in, or at least make provision for, a good bit of right thrust. Unfortunately the thrust varies all over the place, so no guarantees that you can completely resolve it with thrust offset.   

   Same effect makes putting the motor straight ahead likely to make for exciting takeoffs, immediate left turn on launch, like an All-American, just not as bad.

I was thinking of the effect of skewing the principal axes.  If that causes the leadouts to move aft to trim the airplane, I guess that would give more thrust offset.  I hadn't thought of thrust offset.  I've been using 2 degrees of motor offset, copying you-know-who. 
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Offline Brett Buck

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I was thinking of the effect of skewing the principal axes.

     I think putting a bunch of weight well to the right would skew it to the right (positive around geometric Z), which suggests you might need the leadouts further forward, rather than back, wouldn't it? I still think you would ideally line up Y with the circle "r vector". Or were you thinking of something else?

     Brett

Online Howard Rush

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     I think putting a bunch of weight well to the right would skew it to the right (positive around geometric Z), which suggests you might need the leadouts further forward, rather than back, wouldn't it? I still think you would ideally line up Y with the circle "r vector". Or were you thinking of something else?

You are correct.  I was off a little on the sign.
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Offline Carl Cisneros

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Bill
here are a couple pics of the front end of my 60 size profile electric Time Machine I built last fall.

flies a treat. No wierd stuff and pulls pretty dang good on the lines in all maneuovers.

The battery box and motor mount area is for a 38 special electric conversion from Bodaks.

Carl
Carl R Cisneros, Dist IV
Control Line RB

Offline Ty Marcucci

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Trust me, nobody will care what a profile model looks like in the air.. They only wait for the crash, at least they do mine.   LL~ LL~ LL~ LL~ LL~ H^^
Ty Marcucci


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