by NWade » Thu Jul 30, 2020 11:32 am
Speaking as a glider pilot and owner of a flapped glider (ASG-29): While reflex can be effective for some situations, it’s worth noting that glider airfoils are markedly different in shape than the Sonex airfoil.
After all, a glider’s wing needs to provide a high amount of lift at lower speeds (while climbing in lift, such as a thermal) and yet also create laminar flow across as much of the airfoil as possible (chord-wise) without any laminar separation bubbles - to minimize drag and support a high L/D (glide ratio). Given the metal skin and round-head rivets, a Sonex wing just isn’t going to be able to achieve the same laminar flow and low-drag state at high speeds (which is exactly what glider wings are trying to do with flap reflex).
Furthermore, gliders tend to have larger-span flaps than the Sonex wing planform- and modern gliders also tend to have interconnected ailerons and flaps so that all of the wing control surfaces move as ratios of each other (essentially making the entire trailing edge of the wing a multi-segment flaperon). The traditional flap & aileron division on the Sonex wing would lead to a discontinuity in lift and drag between the inboard and outboard sections of the wing with the flaps reflexed. In other words, you’d only be reducing drag (and lift) over a portion of the wing, and with the rest of the wing still experiencing higher lift & drag the overall improvement would likely be pretty small. It might allow you to use a bit less elevator trim in high speed cruise; but that reduction in trim drag won’t net you more than a few knots of speed. And given that discontinuity I’d also want to make sure that the change in span-loading wouldn’t be a problem (although given how beefy the Sonex spar is, I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s no sweat).
To be clear: it’s not a *bad* idea; but modifying the flaps & rear spar & wing skin to support reflex would be a heck of a lot of work for a very small gain. If you want to pursue that angle and see noticeable gains in either top end speed or a larger overall speed envelope, then you’d want to design a new wing (including selecting a different airfoil) with full-span camber-changing in mind.
Take care,
—Noel
Sonex #1339