by Skippydiesel » Fri May 10, 2024 9:42 pm
Thanks T41,
Your, from life (not theory) comments are thought provoking.
From my early training, there are only three practical ways to increase the wheel "footprint":
# Increase the width - you have referred to this. This is often the direction that performance cars will go in, when space (wheel arches, etc) limits fitting a larger diameter wheel
# Increase the diameter - what you call taller. Larger diameter confers not just a larger footprint but also reduced rolling resistance. Rolling characteristics will affect the tendency of the wheel to damage/break through the ground surface.
# Lowering tyre pressure (only applicable to pneumatics). This allows the tyre to flex/distort, presenting a larger area (footprint) to the ground. Minimal application when talking tailwheels.
The above can be summarised as flotation - the ability of the wheel to remain on the ground surface, rather than cut through (make a furrow or bogging down)
Pneumatic V Solid Tyres:
Pneumatic -
# As a general rule, a correctly inflated tyre (Peter Anson tailwheels) will have a lower surface pressure (better flotation) than a solid one of the same diameter (API ). This is due to the ability of the pneumatic tyre to distort/flex and present a larger surface area to the ground than that of the solid. The pneumatic also has the advantage of tyre pressure adjustments (within a small range). Pneumatics likely are less noisy on sealed surfaces compared with solid tyres.
Solid -
# The advantage of the solid tyre is wear and puncture resistance. Speculation: A solid tyre may last longer than pneumatic. Puncture resistance is a significant factor, here in Australia, for aircraft operating on grass (runway/taxiway) due to thorns that can puncture tyres.
For aircraft there are other factors:
# Weight - may change the handling characteristics of the aircraft. The tailwheel being at one extreme of the aircraft dimension could have a significant effect.
# Drag - may reduce the aircraft's performance. Probably not significant for your average pilot - racing pilots may see this differently.
So back to my Sonex larger diameter tailwheel:
Weight Changes
# In cruise, my aircraft flies with some up elevator (down force). A heavier (larger?) tailwheel may reduce this tendency & drag, thereby marginally improve aerodynamic efficiency (speed/fuel). Peter Anson claims his tailwheels are actually lighter than solids. API 6" is only about 1 kg (2lb) slightly heavier than the 4"
Drag Changes
# A larger tail wheel, shape & surface area, may increase drag thereby marginally reducing aerodynamic efficiency (speed/fuel).
Cost Benefit
# Nill cost, do nothing - I will just have to put up with going flying a day or so later/less than my chums with fat tyres/nose wheels.
Spend the inheritance - Hmmm! To go to 6" would have to purchase the whole castering mechanism. About $600 from API (will fit) and $400 from PA (may need further modifications to fit).
Subject to further advice, the combination of your observations & my BS above - I think I will live with the 4" . At least until it wears out.