by GordonTurner » Thu Nov 13, 2014 9:21 pm
First a few terms...
The percent is a percent of "MEAN AERODYNAMIC CHORD" (MAC). In a straight wing airplane like the sonex this is easy, the aerodynamic chord is the distance from the leading edge to the trailing edge. Since not all wings are straight (delta, swept, double swept, ellyptical, etc), the MEAN is the average of the chord over the whole length.
For a basic aeroplane the CG needs to be somewhere around 25% of MAC for the aeroplane to balance. This means 25% of the distance from the leading edge to the trailing edge. There is always some acceptable range depending on the characteristics of the airfoil and a few other factors, in this case anywhere from 20% to 32% is acceptable.
The aerodynamic engineers are mostly concerned with w/b in this way, as a function of the wing. But once that range is determined, it can sometimes be more understandably expressed as a range of distance from some DATUM point like the nose cone or the pilots relief tube, whatever is a convenient point to measure all ARMS to calculate the MOMENT of each MASS, which is it's effect on the CG. Regardless of how it is expressed, any of the methods of w/b calculation are calculating the same thing.
Waiex 158 New York. N88YX registered.
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