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How does control effectiveness change with density altitude?

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How does control effectiveness change with density altitude?

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Old 17th February 2012 | 06:52
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How does control effectiveness change with density altitude?

Some of you test-flight bods may be able to help me here:

I'm playing about with high-altitude flight simulation in X-plane and an external autopilot controller to control the simulated aircraft, but I'm coming up with a problem when tuning the autopilot at high altitudes (>FL500), where the gains that work at lower altitudes are increasingly unstable.

Now, as far as I understand, C_L is a function of alpha with an added component to account for control deflection that is approximately linear with deflection. For level flight, the 1/2.rho.v^2 and wing area components of the lift equation are consistent, even though TAS is through the roof at the higher flight levels. I can't see then why X-plane, which uses some form of physical aerodynamic modelling, would be simulating a higher system gain at higher TAS/Mach/FL. Is there a compressibility effect coming into play here, or have I misread the lift equation?

What's going on here? Anyone wise to this?

Thanks in advance for your help.

A
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Old 17th February 2012 | 14:18
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Hello,

You are right on the lift. It depends only on the EAS. for a given incidence (and mach number if relevant)

Though, the vertical acceleration (load factor) is a mechanical effect, it depends on the TAS, not on EAS. Which explains why, for a given elevator input (for example), you don't have the same load factor at sea level, at 20,000ft, or higher

regards
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Old 18th February 2012 | 00:03
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If I'm understanding your general question correctly?

The major effect of TAS at high altitudes is reduced aerodynamic damping of flightpath perturbations as a result of a lesser effective restoring force component...
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Old 18th February 2012 | 20:18
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You will need more fin area to kill the dutch roll.
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Old 18th February 2012 | 23:05
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Thanks for the attempts. Further thoughts lead me to believe it's not the steady-state lift generated according to the lift equation, but how quickly that lift develops when the configuration is changed by the controller. It is obviously not instantaneous, but possibly some function of the sonic velocity and possibly also to do with the (true) speed of the air passing over the wing.

I think it's a sonic velocity issue, from gut feel, as the pressure field around the wing can only change at the speed of sound

More research needed, I think
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Old 19th February 2012 | 18:49
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Andy

I may be misunderstanding your problem. If so I apologise.

At 40000ft your TAS is roughly twice your IAS/EAS. At sea level they are both the same.

Momentum is dependant on TAS. So the tendency for the aircraft to carry on in whatever direction is hugely greater at 40 than at sea level when if at the same IAS/EAS.

Control power and lift however are both IAS/EAS dependant.

So at 40 Mr Newton wants you to carry on in a staight line in spades while Mr Bernoulli has even less to play with to generate a distubing force than at SL thanks to mach effects.

BTW I was nearly thrown off the course at ETPS for writing that the controls were less effective in certain circumstances. It was explained to me that a control was either effective (if it caused something to happen) or was ineffective (if it caused nothing to happen) and that what I should have been talking about was a reduced level of response. Happy days.
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Old 19th February 2012 | 19:13
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John, touche,been there,red ink everywhere...!
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Old 19th February 2012 | 22:59
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From: somewhere in Oz
Thanks John, I see what you're saying there, but don't the control surfaces only control pitch. roll and yaw?

In level flight the average angular momentum is zero about any axis (not including the effects of the curvature of the earth) so if you're flying along up high S+L and you turn on your wing leveler which develops a limit cycle oscillation (in roll) that wouldn't have occured down at sea level, how is that related to the aircraft's momentum or kinetic energy in the translational sense?
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Old 20th February 2012 | 10:48
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Hmmm!!! Found my little problem and it was nothing to do with physics, but damn software!

The autopilot code was clipping the speed correction factor for the PID gains and so not allowing the gain to fall far enough at elevated TAS.

Nothing too complicated then!
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Old 20th February 2012 | 11:44
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Andy

Glad you are sorted.

I was trying to explain why you can't change your flight path as quickly at 40 as you can at SL. Like I said sorry if I misunderstood your question.
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Old 20th February 2012 | 11:46
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Do a Hover - it avoids G
 
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sycamore

........and I thought it was only me who struggled. I owe you a beer.
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Old 20th February 2012 | 20:29
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Not at all, John. Thanks for helping me think through the problem!

PS: I also learned about the existence of EAS, which I didn't know before!

Last edited by Andy_RR; 21st February 2012 at 01:02.
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Old 10th March 2012 | 10:11
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The tail of an aircraft that is rotating in pitch sees a change in apparent incidence relative to flying at a constant pitch angle. The resulting change in tail lift acts to oppose the rotation and is the main contribution to pitch damping. The magnitude of this rotation-induced incidence change is inversely proportional to TAS. So, using John's example, the same pitch rate at 40,000 ft will cause a change in airflow angle at the tail roughly half of that at the same IAS/EAS at sea level, halving the associated damping.

The same principles apply to the damping contributions of the fin due to yaw rate and the wing due to roll rate.
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Old 18th March 2012 | 06:08
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From: Delhi
Density of air is defined as mass per unit volume .
Density reduces with height .
To get the lift ,we need certain density .
To get that density we fly a present speed (IAS.)
So , if you fly the constant IAS , irrespective of your density altitude , the lift will not change .
It is just because of density being less , drag component will reduce thus the TAS will increase .
Now let's talk about control effectivity ..
Suppose there is no air , control will have no effect .
Similarly when aircraft is stationary , control will move but will not produce enough forces to create couple to move the aircraft along its axises .
To get that we need to increase speed , so that density which it is encountering or mass per unit volume of air will increase , that will make the controls effective .
The first speed, which we comes into existence after rolling for take off is VMCG .
We can also say that we need more density to increase control effectivity .
So if can say that with the increase in density altitude , which we would say decrease in density per unit volume ..
The control effectivity will decrease .
Please note that VMCG is not to get enough lift to get airborne .
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Old 18th March 2012 | 15:37
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It is just because of density being less , drag component will reduce thus the
TAS will increase .
Utter rubbish my friend.
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Old 19th March 2012 | 05:21
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Density reduces with height .
Agreed. By the time we reach the head it's mostly very low.
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Old 10th April 2012 | 14:46
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It is just because of density being less , drag component will reduce thus the
TAS will increase.

I think it is meant to be 'For a given IAS/EAS as the density reduces the associated TAS would increase'.
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