Please resolve a debate for us: If an aircraft travelling at 80mph goes into a 30degree co-ordinated turn, will the radius of the turn be greater or less than the same aircraft, under the same conditions at 160mph. ?
This of course applies to fixed wings and gyro's alike.
We've contemplated lift vectors and inertia and have no conclusive answer.... please help?
Quick Question
Is this a trick question?
If I understand your q properly executing a 30 degree bank Radius would be less, think about it you'd cover much more distance at 160 vs 80mph even if say the time taken to complete a 360 was the same the diameter or radius would be double if not that the circumference should be
.
Higher speed and same bank angle = bigger hole in the sky
What have I missed? Turn without bank? ie rudder...
If I understand your q properly executing a 30 degree bank Radius would be less, think about it you'd cover much more distance at 160 vs 80mph even if say the time taken to complete a 360 was the same the diameter or radius would be double if not that the circumference should be

Higher speed and same bank angle = bigger hole in the sky
What have I missed? Turn without bank? ie rudder...
- Rudix
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Re: Quick Question
For the same angle of bank the turn radius will be larger the higher the speed, that is why a microlight can "turn on a dime" while a jet fighter uses the whole sky for the same turn.JetRanger wrote:Please resolve a debate for us: If an aircraft travelling at 80mph goes into a 30degree co-ordinated turn, will the radius of the turn be greater or less than the same aircraft, under the same conditions at 160mph. ?
This of course applies to fixed wings and gyro's alike.
We've contemplated lift vectors and inertia and have no conclusive answer.... please help?
In your example double the speed will produce a turn +- double the radius, assuming a 1G, co-ordinated turn in both cases.
Fly safe,
Rudi
"Never be afraid to try something new. Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark. A large group of professionals built the Titanic." 

Unless of course you tried to turn with rudder only and are talking about a 30 degree angle when view from above, then you'd have to consider many things like aerodynamics, thrust vectoring etc, you'd also soon get to a speed where you'd just slide with such minimal actual turning that you'd run out of fuel and have to turn using banking to catch that topless merc... 

Check here for the calculation
http://www.pilotfriend.com/calcs/calcul ... ulator.htm
80mph 30 deg turn will take 40 seconds for a 360 at have a diameter of 1488 feet
160mph 30 deg will take 80 seconds for a 360 and a diameter of 5955 feet, much more.
http://www.pilotfriend.com/calcs/calcul ... ulator.htm
80mph 30 deg turn will take 40 seconds for a 360 at have a diameter of 1488 feet
160mph 30 deg will take 80 seconds for a 360 and a diameter of 5955 feet, much more.
Greg Perkins
Re: Quick Question
A 1G turn is not possibleRudix wrote:For the same angle of bank the turn radius will be larger the higher the speed, that is why a microlight can "turn on a dime" while a jet fighter uses the whole sky for the same turn.JetRanger wrote:Please resolve a debate for us: If an aircraft travelling at 80mph goes into a 30degree co-ordinated turn, will the radius of the turn be greater or less than the same aircraft, under the same conditions at 160mph. ?
This of course applies to fixed wings and gyro's alike.
We've contemplated lift vectors and inertia and have no conclusive answer.... please help?
In your example double the speed will produce a turn +- double the radius, assuming a 1G, co-ordinated turn in both cases.
Fly safe,
Rudi

The truth, nothing but the truth
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