by sonex1374 » Wed Jun 03, 2020 4:25 pm
The main wing is going to stall at whatever its critical angle of attack (AoA) is (based on its airfoil characteristics), and that happens irrespective of the horizontal tail (consider how a flying wing can stall even without a tail). The horizontal tail's job is twofold: counteract the airfoil's pitching moment (again, a characteristic of each airfoil) and command a desired angle of attack (within the capabilities of the horizontal tail).
If the tail is "effective" (meaning it has the ability to create sufficient lift in either direction to do it's two jobs), then it can adequately command an AoA sufficient to stall the main wing. If the tail is ineffective or marginally effective, it might not (e.g. the Ercoupe "stall-proof" tail).
Equally important is the ability to command AoA while the main wing is stalled. If the tail is ineffective during this flight condition (such as flying in disturbed or "dead air" coming off the main wing like with a T-tail), you might not be able to command a lower AoA necessary to un-stall the main wing. This deep stall condition might be unrecoverable.
In both of these cases, having a tail that is sufficiently effective is important to safety. Even though more tail is better from a control stand point, as with everything there is a trade off. Carrying around more tail than you typically need is draggy, heavy and wasteful, so designers minimize the tail effectiveness to only what they believe is required.
Vortex Generators (VGs) are one of several ways to make the horizontal tail more effective, and VGs have advantages: they're simple to apply, lightweight and low drag. Compared to some other methods of increasing tail effectiveness, they're a pretty good deal. Whether you need them or not is up to you and your demands on the plane.
On final thought is that increasing tail effectiveness might pose some unexpected risk. By increasing the effectiveness you might notice a sharper stall break because the tail can drive the main wing into the critical AoA quicker; you might be able to command a deep stall condition that you couldn't previously; and you might be able to generate greater loads on the tail as a result of improved effectiveness. These are the things that should be explored in flight testing, but I wouldn't tend to think they're likely a problem in a Sonex.
Jeff