Airfoils

carneyf1d
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Re: Airfoils

Post by carneyf1d »

get some really dense and hard wood, and carefully cut out a rib template. you can find rib simplex foils online at indoornews.com. Use this to cut a ribs upper surface, slide it down a bit and make another cut. you have to use sheets of balsa to do this.

Ribs should be medium density.

Wing ribs around anywhere from 3-6 % simplex. Stab ribs are a bit smaller around 2-5%.

Tissue tubes: get a drill bit around the size of your spar, roll a small strip of paper around it in a circle once. glue the paper with a small amount of CyA, and then make one more wrap. Then cut the excess off.
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Re: Airfoils

Post by gh »

By the way, the percentage for the shape of the rib is the ratio of the thickness of the airfoil to the chord. "Simplex" is the name given to the shape resulting from plotting the log function. The percentage can apply to any airfoil.

An interesting property of the "simplex" airfoil (and the reason why we use it) is that you can produce a rib of say, 5%, cut it in half, and the half that contains the previous leading edge will still be 5%. This would clearly not work if you had, say, an elliptical-shaped airfoil.

That's why you can use a simplex template to slice ribs of any chord to that percentage, instead of needing a special template for e.g. 8cm wing ribs or 6cm stab ribs.

But anyways, my point was that it's not important "what simplex" the ribs should be, but what percent thickness they should be (generally higher for low ceilings and vice versa), which is more significant. That they have the simplex shape is a matter of convenience in construction, not an issue of aerodynamic performance.
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Re: Airfoils

Post by blue cobra »

A lower simplex makes your plane fly higher. So would having a relatively high simplex on the tail give it less "real lift" (as in vertical distance), which could make it easier to trim?
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Re: Airfoils

Post by erbach »

blue cobra wrote: >How do you slice ribs?

The easiest way is to create a template of the desired shape from either thin balsa (about 1/16 inch) or matboard. The edge should be sanded to ensure a smooth curve, because the slightest kink will be transferred to all ribs. Once the shape is right, glue a thin wire (about .020 inch) along the edge. When this is done, sand the edge of the profile with very fine sandpaper to remove any glue lumps. Then use this profile to cut ribs carefully with half a double-edge razor blade, or an exacto knife with a pointed blade.

> Should ribs be low or high density?
Doesn't matter much. Make them from the same wood as your spars.

>Approximately what simplex should the ribs be? And the ribs on the tail?
The exact profile is not very critical for SO purposes. But common would be a thickness of 4-6% compared to the chord, with a high point about 40% of the way back. An ordinary French curve can be used to obtain a reasonable shape.

How do you roll tissue tubes?
> It takes a little practice. One way is to start with a strip of straight wire of the desired diameter, say 1/16 inch. Make some thinned glue. (I use Duco thinned 50-50 with acetone.) Cut a strip of japanese tissue the needed shape; say 3/8 inch by about 2 inches long. Gently spread a drop or two of the glue on about 2/3 of the strip, and wrap it around the wire wet end in. Then wait a bit until the glue is half dry. With care the rolled tube can be slid off the end of the wire. This is where the practice is needed. If you wait too long, the tube will stick on the wire. If not long enough, the tube layers will slide. Depending on how much glue you use, about 2-3 minutes is likely to be about right, but you can test gently to find the moment. Once the tube is free, let it dry. Then cut strip wood (say 1/16th square) and gently sand off the corners to make the wing post. If you check every few strokes, you can make the post just small enough to have a snug fit.
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