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come-planes-can-endure-more-positive-than-negative-gs-i-e-
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How come planes can endure more positive than negative g's? I.e. how come V-n diagrams are not
symmetric?
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16
In this question A380 reverse thrust on only half the engines some doubts were raised about the strength of structures in certain directions. Specifically, Peter
Kämpf states:
Aluminium and Carbonfiber are almost as good in compression as in tension, so the direction of the load is secondary. This is not true if buckling stiffness is
not sufficient, but in case of wing in-plane bending, buckling is of no concern.
From the image it can be seen that the structure at 150 knts can only cope with -1.8g, but +3.8g. Where does this difference come from, is it coming from
difference in buckling stifnesses in different directions?
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ROIMaison
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16
The lines start at zero load factor because with no speed there is no lift. If you move further right, the upper line is determined by the maximum lift, while the lower
line is determined by the minimum lift. Both have the same value only for symmetric airfoils - regular airfoils are optimized for creating lift in only one direction.
The upper and lower maximum load factor limits of the v-n-diagram are mostly determined by maximum gust loads in level flight, and in this condition they are
represented by lines emanating from +1 g, such that the distance from +1 g in terms of positive and negative load factors should be the same. Add to this that
your wings will create approximately 50% more force until they reach their maximum lift as compared to the minimum ( = maximum negative) lift (the details
depend on the airfoil, of course), and then your load factor limits will be 1 + 1.5 ⋅ gust load factor in positive and 1 - gust load factor in negative direction.
For an example I have uploaded the polar of a supercritical airfoil which I calculated years ago with Mark Drela's ISES. It's the best I could find quickly - most
polars only show the positive maximum lift, not the limit at the opposite end.
As you can see, the maximum c L is +1.3, while the minimum c L is only -0.8.
Let's look at a practical case: Utility category airplanes must be certified for +3.8 gs and -1 g. In level flight a positive vertical gust (updraft) might add +2.8 g. The
same gust strength in negative direction (downdraft) will cause a load change of only -1.9 g (because the wing will stall earlier), which, when added to the regular
1 g at level flight will translate into a -0.9 g load factor. Close enough for limiting the negative load factor at -1 g.
At higher speed the gust will not stall the airfoil in either direction, and now we can simply assume that a gust will produce a positive load of 1 + gust load factor
and a negative load of 1 - gust load factor. Let the gust load factor be 2.8, and your limits will be +3.8g and -1.8g, like in your example at 150 kts.
So far, I have looked at the rationale behind the load limits for certification. But also in real life there is a difference between positive and negative load factors:
The wing spar has to carry the bending moment due to lift minus the wing weight. If it would need to carry the same aerodynamic loads in both directions (up and
down), the wing weight would reduce the total positive load, but would make the total negative load greater. This is why the structure cannot endure the same
load factors in both directions: You need to give the wing some margin to carry its own weight in addition to the aerodynamic loads.
Things look differently if you take the v-n-diagram of aerobatic category airplanes. Now you cannot readily assume that the plane will only fly straight, but you
need to assume that it will be hit by a gust while flying upside down. Add to this that the symmetric airfoil will create the same lift in both directions before it stalls,
and your envelope needs to be limited at ±6 g, making the envelope symmetric.
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Peter Kämpf
162k 12 411 656
Hi Peter, I've changed the image to the better image you recommended, so perhaps your comments relating to my example are not correct anymore. – ROIMaison Mar 16 '15 at
11:45
Do you also know the reason why the region of structural damage is different for positive and negative? The region of structural damage goes from +3.8 to +5.5 (where structural failure
starts), so that's 1.7g difference. At the negative g range, the structural damage goes from -1.8 to -2.6, which is only 0.8g's difference. Do you know what the reason is for this (large)
difference? – ROIMaison Mar 31 '16 at 15:36
@ROIMaison: The shaded area with structural damage is unusual already, and I guess the limits are artificial. Someone probably wanted to add that at 150% of limit load the structure
is at its ultimate load and will fail. They just took the nominal g value and added 50% for the failure limit, without calculating exactly where the real limits are. – Peter Kämpf Mar 31 '16
at 21:59
9
To put it simply, it is because the aircraft is designed to be stronger in the +G direction. It is not required to be as strong in the -G direction (since it will not
experience high negative G loads during operations), so it is not designed that way. To do so would cause much unnecessary structural weight.
share improve this answer
Porcupine911
2,923 13 30
And the reason for this is probably that there are humans on board who tolerate a decrease of blood pressure in the brain better than an increase. – vsz Dec 28 '15 at 0:28
There are many engineering factors that determine g ratings. The cumulative fatigue damage from dominant operations primarily determine g-ratings. When
landing, this contributes heavy fatigue positive g's. When flying, the natural forces of gravity and turbulence (to include gusting winds) contribute to fatigue
damage. These stresses are felt throughout the control systems. Therefore, the plane is engineered to be stronger in all its considerations to support and counter
the greater fatigue concerns.
http://adg.stanford.edu/aa241/structures/structuraldesign.html
V-n Diagrams tend to visually reflect some of the more dominant fatigue considerations. Engineered considerations that influence g ratings also are reflected in
the V-n Diagrams for similar reasons. Notice the sharp changes in shape in the following Vn diagram and its explanations:
http://adg.stanford.edu/aa241/structures/vn.html
So why not strengthen everything to have higher g limits? Cost and useful return on investment. There is little practicality to have an aircraft stressed to +/- 100
g's if it has little useful load, is too heavy to fly, or costs so much very few customers can afford buying it and pay for its operation.
Balances in weight, cost, strength... are in constant flux throughout design to provide an overall useful and affordable aircraft. Equal g ratings is not a priority,
however, meeting regulatory minimums is a priority.
https://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/avs/offices/air/directorates_field/small_airplanes/media/CPS_Part_23.pdf
There are normal and abnormal conditions in which an airplane is stressed for negative g's.
Normal negative g's include: in-flight turbulence, recovery from a bounced landing, down drafts / wind shear ... and other engineered limits that are reflected in
negative g ratings.
Abnormal negative g's include: walking on or otherwise loading the top of a wing, unrated aerobatics, excessive snow loading while parked, excessive pilot
induced control moments causing negative g's, excessive road bumps while in transport ...
Conditions violating negative g design considerations include: improperly secured or excessively worn folding wing hardware, worn or warped wing gusset or
related fastening hardware, fatigued or weak weldments, corrosion ...
As a point of reference. Fatigue failures are usually more significant at gross weight, and therefore utility and ultimate g ratings (regulatory) are usually given at
gross weight.
Strength of Materials is a particular area of science and engineering that characterizes properties of materials, including fatigue. Computer simulations can run
thousands of tests using variations in parameters to anticipate fatigue failures before they actually occur in flying aircraft.
An aircraft can be engineered to have greater negative g limits than positive g limits; however the cost for this non-useful engineered feature would likely be
unacceptable to customers. Lower useful weight to have the higher negative g support structure as an example.
How come planes can endure more positive than negative g's?
However, the FAA over many years of experience has set standards for minimum g ratings to help control accident outcomes.
As an example, see Part 25 AIRWORTHINESS STANDARDS: TRANSPORT CATEGORY AIRPLANES Subpart C--Structure Fatigue Evaluation Sec. 25.571
Damage-tolerance and fatigue evaluation of structure.
http://lessonslearned.faa.gov/Comet1/25.571.pdf
https://www.faasafety.gov/files/gslac/library/documents/2011/Jul/55585/FLYING%20LESSONS%20110623.pdf
In terms of engineering to meet regulatory requirements, the cumulative probability of fatigue failure resulting from negative g's is less than the cumulative
probabilities of fatigue failure from positive g's. The design limits reflect these failures through probability equations relating likeliness to occur and level of impact.
The information provided in these links are to show the effort involved is no small task for aircraft designers. Many thousands of failure modes accumulate when
every part, joint, human error, environmental, and every other factor potentially part of a failure is considered.
So when asking a designer what the effect would be on g-rating based on a specific failure mode of a part, is not a reasonable question to ask because of the
extensive interactions with the total system to be considered.
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Toni
41 3
@SMSvonderTann Personally, I think it's fine. It's not the brightest, to the point answer, but it's also not something I would want to see gone. Toni, perhaps you could improve the
answer, and directly address the OPs points? – Zizouz212 Mar 30 '16 at 23:30
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