hawker111 1 Posted October 12, 2017 When an aircraft's weight increases, do the G stall line numbers increase, and when an aircraft's weight decreases, do the G stall line numbers decrease? Here are the G stall line numbers for the F-105D Thunderchief, obtained from the V-G diagram contained in the aircraft's flight manual. These numbers are for a clean aircraft: 1G: 160 2G: 220 3G: 275 4G: 320 5G: 360 6G: 400 7G: 440 8G: 470 9G: 500 Do these numbers increase when the aircraft is heavier, and decrease when the aircraft is lighter? For example, if the F-105D was really heavy, loaded down with external ordnance, would it still be able to achieve 7Gs at 440 KCAS, or would it have to be going faster in order to have the lift required to pull a 7G turn? Would it still be able to take off at 160 KCAS, or would it have to be going faster that that? Could it still pull 4Gs once it reached 320 KCAS, or would it need to be going faster? Thanks, hawker111 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Toryu 156 Posted October 12, 2017 (edited) Short answer: Yes. If your weight goes up, your required lift goes up. That means (all else being equal) you'll have to go faster to achieve the same amount of lift/weight relationship. Determining "g" is nothing but dividing your lift available by your current weight. If "lift = weight", we'll get 1g and so on. "G available" is your lift available (F_L = q*cl*S) divided by your current weight (F_W = m*g). That only works that easily "right side up" (for any other case, you'll have to figure out the components of your lift and weight verctors according to your cartesian system first), but it's a good starter for understanding what "g" actually is. It's nothing but an acceleration based on unequal forces (lift and weight, thrust and drag) acting on your airplane. "9g" means that the wings are providing enough lift to carry 9 times your current weight, or that your airplane accelerates at nine times the earth's free-fall acceleration (hence the term "g") into the lift-direction. All is relative _______ q = 0.5*air-density*v^2 cl = max available lift-coefficient at current Mach S = effective wing-area Edited October 12, 2017 by Toryu Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hawker111 1 Posted October 12, 2017 Toryu, If I knew what the F-105D's exact weight is when it could pull Gs at these airspeeds, would I be able to enter in a formula in Excel to give me the new airspeeds as I change the weight? 1G: 160 KCAS 2G: 220 KCAS 3G: 275 KCAS 4G: 320 KCAS 5G: 360 KCAS 6G: 400 KCAS 7G: 440 KCAS 8G: 470 KCAS 9G: 500 KCAS Thanks very much for your help, hawker111 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Toryu 156 Posted October 12, 2017 Yes. Just figure out your CLmax for each airspeed (it varies with Mach, but assume it to be constant for a first approximation) and apply it to your Excel table. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hawker111 1 Posted October 12, 2017 Toryu, Could you help me figure out the CLMAX for one of the airspeeds? Thanks, hawker111 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Toryu 156 Posted October 12, 2017 Sure. I'll do it in SI units, though. 1) We know that lift equals weight. Weight is mass times earth's gravitational acceleration. L = W = m*g 2) We know that L = 0.5*rho*v^2 * CL * S ==>> CL = L / (0.5*rho*v^2*S) m = your mass in [kg] g = earth's average gravitational acceleration, which is 9.81m/s^2 rho = air's density, which under ISA-conditions is approximately 1.225kg/m^3 v = airspeed in [m/s] CL = what we're looking for, dimensionless S = your reference wing-area in [m^2] Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hawker111 1 Posted October 12, 2017 (edited) Toryu, I am going to carefully study what you have written and then I will post a reply. Thanks very much, hawker111 Edited October 12, 2017 by hawker111 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hawker111 1 Posted October 19, 2017 Toryu, If a fighter aircraft is carrying a lot of external ordnance under its wings, will that affect its wing area and lift, thus affecting the G stall lines? Thanks, Delta Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JediMaster 451 Posted November 3, 2017 I'll just throw in that external ord will add weight and drag, but not affect area or lift. So the weight figures in directly, the drag of course just affects the speed. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites