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161

Thursday, April 10th 2008, 9:41am

The difference seems to be that planebuilder seems to assume climbed at full throttle whereas most data is for sustained rate of climb at lower power. It does seem a bit high.

Kaiser Kirk

Lightbringer and former European Imperialist

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162

Friday, April 11th 2008, 1:28am

Taking a, um, break, at work :

My 4,625lb max / 4273lt D.XIXC was originally based on the D.XIV airframe (printed out and scaled), converted to metal and with a 940hp Hispano-Suiza 12Y-49 slapped in it. The latest version cleaned up the airframe a bit more.

My D.XIXC is listed at a climb of 2,959fpm, and max speed of 359mph- likely sans bombs or half range performance, not light.

Well if I take D.XIXC, and do the following :
Drop user weight to just guns ~ 299lbs
Drop maximum designed airspeed to just 300 knots. Note that the airframe tab indicates in bold that this is the maximum indicated airspeed.
Drop failure G to 10G

Then the plane has a light weight of 3,728lbs, with a maximum speed of 314knots, a maximum indicated speed of 250 knots, and a rate of climb of 3,650 fpm.

Now, if I use the 1940 12Y-51 (which seems to be the engine weight I use for all the 12Ys), the HP climbs to 1,084, max speed raises to 381mph ( 263 indicated), and the rate of climb shoots to 4,265fpm.

This post has been edited 1 times, last edit by "Kaiser Kirk" (Apr 11th 2008, 1:28am)


163

Friday, April 11th 2008, 9:42am

Rate of climb in planebuilder seems to be very sensitive to changes in weight and power. I've had changes of about 2% in weight give much higher changes to the rate of climb.

Kaiser Kirk

Lightbringer and former European Imperialist

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164

Friday, April 11th 2008, 8:14pm

I can get a dramatic difference in performance just between max and light weights on the same plane.

For example, the G-1C I list the rate of climb as 2,852fpm or 2,991fpm sans bombs. That is however with a full gas tank, all ammo, etc.

If I just take "light" weight - which in my planes still includes the ammo because I stick that under userweight, the rate of climb rises to 3,446fpm.

Edit: I find best rates of climb are with low forward speeds and partial throttles. The numbers above are for a forward speed of 138kts.

This post has been edited 1 times, last edit by "Kaiser Kirk" (Apr 11th 2008, 10:17pm)