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Wing Shapes Investigations

If so instructed by your teacher, print out a worksheet page for these problems.

Slide showing the wing geometry definitions

An airfoil is the shape of a wing or blade (of a propeller, rotor or turbine) or sail as seen in cross-section.

FoilSim is a computer program that lets you investigate how an aircraft wing produces lift by changing the values of different factors that affect lift. Here are some exercises using FoilSim that will help you understand airfoils better.

Start the FoilSim program.


  1. Camber, in aerospace engineering, is the asymmetry between the top and the bottom curves of an airfoil in cross-section.

    Click the Reset button in FoilSim. Then set:

    Angle-deg ( Angle of attack ) to 0.0
    Camber-%c to 0.0

    Notice how Lift is zero. Increase the angle of attack to some positive value. Is there lift now? This proves you don’t need the wing to be curved to make lift!

  2. Now set the thickness ( Thick-%crd) to 0.0. Do you get positive lift? A flat plate makes lift !
  3. Does making a curved airfoil help increase the lift? What do real wings on planes look like?
  4. Click the Reset button again. From the Input menu select Flight Test. Increase the speed from 100 mph to 200 mph. Does the lift double? What does it do?
  5. Leave the speed at 200 mph. Increase the Altitude slowly. What happens to the lift? Let’s say the plane needs 2000 lbs of lift to stay aloft. At what altitude will the airfoil not be generating enough left to keep the plane aloft? This is the flight ceiling. It is the highest altitude you can fly with this wing.
  6. Click the Reset button again. Adjust the thickness of the airfoil (Thick-%crd). What happens to the lift? Does changing the thickness have a big effect on the lift?
  7. Click the Reset button again. If you make the camber negative what happens to the lift? Can you think of a situation where it would be good to have negative lift?

 


Related Pages:
Standards
Worksheet Lesson Index
Aerodynamics Index

 

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Editor: Tom Benson
NASA Official: Tom Benson
Last Updated: Thu, May 13 02:38:38 PM EDT 2021

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