The Aerodynamics of Winglets

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 26 окт 2024

Комментарии • 33

  • @Leeooooooo...
    @Leeooooooo... 3 месяца назад +5

    I never understood why winglets were sometimes more efficient and sometimes were less effecient, until I watched this video. Great explanation

  • @afsaralim7
    @afsaralim7 Год назад +7

    It's criminal that you don't have many subscribers. Great Explanation sir.

  • @NelksLife
    @NelksLife 2 года назад +2

    Excellent job presenting winglets. Thank you!

  • @smesui1799
    @smesui1799 Год назад +2

    ENGINEERING education matters. Time for aviation enthusiasts to hit the books !

  • @saicharan7981
    @saicharan7981 3 года назад +2

    Excellent video! Thoroughly enjoyed it.

  • @hectormunoz659
    @hectormunoz659 2 года назад +3

    Lucas, great video, keep sharing this kind of information, the most modern winglets resemble more the natural shapes like the eagles wings!

    • @lucasferrando-english4512
      @lucasferrando-english4512  2 года назад

      Hector, thank you very much for the nice words. I'll start uploading more videos soon.

  • @lucasferrando-english4512
    @lucasferrando-english4512  3 года назад +2

    Thanks a lot for watching! I hope you enjoyed the video. Had you ever wondered what winglets were? What do you think of the most modern winglet designs?

    • @ShonMardani
      @ShonMardani 11 месяцев назад

      Parasite drag is produced by VERTICAL surfaces and Induced drag is created by HORIZONTAL surfaces, for example when the Flaps are at 0 degrees they produce Max Induced drag and Min Parasite drag, at 90 degrees Min Induced and Max Parasite drag and at 45 degrees in the middle of both, for a flap with no thickness. The fact that Lift and drag are both proportional to airspeed squared, means airspeed affects a 2 Dimensional surface, geometrically a Square plane. Wing Vortices are not the cause of Induced Drag but it is just a Visible Effect of it. I have developed a hypothesis to explain physical, atomic and subatomic (gravitational movements, Center of Gravity and Mass), however I need to validate my V & H surfaces theory first.
      It seems that Winglets reduce Lift and increase Drag, I also believe in turbance Winglets impose additional stress to wings and all other moving parts inside the wings like rods, joints and moving surfaces. Wingtips also decrease the stability and controllability in turbulent air.
      Please let me know what you think, thanks.

  • @onepairofhands
    @onepairofhands 2 года назад +2

    nice presentation

  • @lovelycarHossein
    @lovelycarHossein Год назад +2

    Perfect

  • @박수연-p6p
    @박수연-p6p 2 года назад +2

    Very Very much thank!!

  • @AR_434
    @AR_434 2 года назад +1

    A winglet doesn't really reduce the size of the wing tip vortex. It actually uses it to produce thrust and thereby reduces the overall induced drag. Al Bowers from NASA talks about that in one of his videos. Nevertheless, nicely done video!

    • @lucasferrando-english4512
      @lucasferrando-english4512  2 года назад

      Winglets can indeed produce thrust but their main purpose is to increase the effective wingspan and aspect ratio of the wing, thus reducing induce drag.

  • @tayeelshaikh9228
    @tayeelshaikh9228 2 года назад +2

    Good job man

  • @ShonMardani
    @ShonMardani 11 месяцев назад

    Parasite drag is produced by VERTICAL surfaces and Induced drag is created by HORIZONTAL surfaces, for example when the Flaps are at 0 degrees they produce Max Induced drag and Min Parasite drag, at 90 degrees Min Induced and Max Parasite drag and at 45 degrees in the middle of both, for a flap with no thickness. The fact that Lift and drag are both proportional to airspeed squared, means airspeed affects a 2 Dimensional surface, geometrically a Square plane. Wing Vortices are not the cause of Induced Drag but it is just a Visible Effect of it. I have developed a hypothesis to explain physical, atomic and subatomic (gravitational movements, Center of Gravity and Mass), however I need to validate my V & H surfaces theory first.
    It seems that Winglets reduce Lift and increase Drag, I also believe in turbance Winglets impose additional stress to wings and all other moving parts inside the wings like rods, joints and moving surfaces. Wingtips also decrease the stability and controllability in turbulent air.
    Please let me know what you think, thanks.

    • @lucasferrando-english4512
      @lucasferrando-english4512  11 месяцев назад

      I think this is completely inaccurate.

    • @ShonMardani
      @ShonMardani 11 месяцев назад

      I watched your video and realized that you too know the winglets are just a marketing scam. I thank you for your video and your reply. As a professional please explain scientifically and logically your reason(s) to invalidate my findings.@@lucasferrando-english4512

  • @SoloRenegade
    @SoloRenegade 8 месяцев назад +1

    there is almost no real aerodynamics in this video. you clearly do not actually understand winglets nor how they work. But that is common. Most people have no clue how they work. A person needs more than just a basic comprehension of basic aerodynamics to truly understand them.
    Your drag curves are weird for example. not sure why you added so much parasite drag, as the addition of winglets would be almost negligible.
    You talked a lot about induced drag, without every really explaining what it is, nor how winglets relate to it.

    • @lucasferrando-english4512
      @lucasferrando-english4512  5 месяцев назад

      @SoloRenegade thanks for your comment. When making this video, I tried to condense as much information as possible in a 7 min format while keeping it in a way that is easily understandable by people without an engineering background.
      With that said, I’m pretty sure I know how winglets work as I have worked in the design of winglets in the past as well as consulted for the FAA on the effects of wake turbulence.
      Regarding the drag curves, they are obviously not to scale and are there solely for the purpose of explaining the change of drag with respect the lift coefficient.
      Lastly, induced drag was defined at 1:55 as the square of the lift coefficient divided by pi, the Oswald efficiency factor, and the aspect ratio. If you look at some other comments, I explained how a winglet increases the effective wingspan (and aspect ratio) of a wing.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade 5 месяцев назад

      @@lucasferrando-english4512 "induced drag was defined at 6:00 as the square of the lift coefficient divided by pi, the Oswald efficiency factor, and the aspect ratio."
      Sure, that's an equation for Induced Drag, which matches the equation out of "Airplane Performance Stability and Control" by Perkins & Hage (other than the additional Oswald factor), but it is not the definition of induced drag, nor does it explain what Induced Drag is nor any explanation of what reduces or increases it.
      "If you look at some other comments, I explained how a winglet increases the effective wingspan (and aspect ratio) of a wing."
      exactly, it's not in the video. nobody is going to read all of the comments.
      "I tried to condense as much information as possible in a 7 min format while keeping it in a way that is easily understandable by people without an engineering background."
      you didn't do a good job. I teach aerodynamics to all ages (both as an engineer and as a CFI), and believe me, you're way will only confuse people or leave them with more questions. I can teach the engineering of such things to middle school kids and have them walking away with an intuitive understanding of such topics. Your video doesn't achieve that. If I asked someone who knows nothing, to watch your video, and then teach/explain it back to me, they'd fail miserably.
      "With that said, I’m pretty sure I know how winglets work as I have worked in the design of winglets in the past as well as consulted for the FAA on the effects of wake turbulence."
      you don't sound confident about that. But if you truly did understand how winglets work, you should have been able to draw the basic diagram that easily and visually explains to people how they work. But you didn't. Any discussion of winglets that doesn't include such a diagram is not an effective at teaching how they work.

    • @lucasferrando-english4512
      @lucasferrando-english4512  5 месяцев назад

      Thank you for your feedback.