fly_tornado Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 its has to be very wide to accommodate a large prop your control cables and pulleys have to travel a long way, out the wings, then down the booms. you have to coordinate 2 rudders the wings need to support the tail From a manufacturing stand point you are building a lot more stuff into your airframe without a lot of benefit. Lot of little inefficiencies add up after a while. The conventional lower boom with T tail is a lot less engineering.
flyvulcan Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 Generally fair points FT. Again, pros and cons. The examples that you have given relate to design or manufacturing whereas the ones I have given relate to aerodynamics and handling. One set of examples is relevant to designers/maintainers and one to pilots. At the end of the day, the designers/maintainers may have a preference for the single boom as being the "best" configuration (due to designability/maintainability) while the pilots may have a preference for the twin boom configuration (due to performance and handling characteristics). I was simply questioning the validity of your statement that "The best pushers are single boom with the prop above the boom" . Perhaps your statement should have been predicated with "In my opinion,..." in order to differentiate opinion from fact. 2
pylon500 Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 its has to be very wide to accommodate a large prop[/color=black] Generally your tailplane would be between the booms, and most tails are wider than your typical prop diameter.[/color=red] your control cables and pulleys have to travel a long way, out the wings, then down the booms.[/color=black] Only a couple of extra turns, usually not much more than going down a single tube.[/color=red] you have to coordinate 2 rudders[/color=black] If your rudders are run by cables, it's a closed loop requiring an just extra cable to join the two, or a slave pushrod from the driven one to the other.[/color=red] the wings need to support the tail[/color=black] Hopefully, the wings are usually pretty strong, an offset is that usually twin booms associate with a centre section which should fairly stiff, and generally has outboard wing panels which, if un-strutted, have a lower attach point load.[/color=red] From a manufacturing stand point you are building a lot more stuff into your airframe without a lot of benefit.[/color=black] On the Vampire, the twin boom concept allowed a more rigid, self supporting jig system, just by adding one more tube, the tailplane could be built lighter as it was not so much of a cantilever structure, AND you get all the aerodynamic benefits of bigger prop, better thrust line arrangement, less torsional problems than a single boom, and finally a public protected prop![/color=red] Lot of little inefficiencies add up after a while. The conventional lower boom with T tail is a lot less engineering.[/color=black] [/color=red]Much as I like the Aeroprakt products, the A20 had torsional stiffness problems with the T tail on a single boom.[/color=red] I think the ION tail system is more for show than any real practical reason, I guess it stops it being called a Vampire?[/color=blue] I was simply questioning the validity of your statement that "The best pushers are single boom with the prop above the boom" . Perhaps your statement should have been predicated with "In my opinion,..." in order to differentiate opinion from fact. Here, here.(that means I agree)[/color=blue] ? OK, don't know what's happening here, all the HTML coding is going strange? 2
fly_tornado Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 I would think you could reinforce a boom based off a single tube without too much difficulty. I think the A20 was limitted by its design being held to 450kgs and a tail dragger. get rid of the tail wheel and one cause of flex is gone.
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