×
Welcome to the CPL Aerodynamics question and answer forum. Please feel free to post your questions but more importantly also suggest answers for your forum colleagues. Bob himself or one of the other tutors will get to your question as soon as we can.
Ailerons and undercarriage.
florenceega@gmail.com
Topic Author
florenceega@gmail.com created the topic: Ailerons and undercarriage.
What is the difference between differential and Frise ailerons?
What is differential aileron?
What is frise aileron?
What does shimmy damper contain and how does it work.
Your help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks
Flo.
bobtait replied the topic: Ailerons and undercarriage.
Both differential ailerons and Frise ailerons act to remedy a problem called aileron drag (or adverse yaw). This is caused by uneven drag on each wing when ailerons are deflected into the airflow. The down-going aileron modifies the deflection of the airflow as it passes over the wing producing extra lift (which is what we want) and extra drag (which is what we don't want). The up-going aileron on the other hand produces less lift and less drag. The result is uneven drag that cause the nose of the aircraft to yaw away from the direction of turn. The pilot must counteract this by applying a larger rudder deflection into the direction of turn. This causes an unwanted increase in total drag acting during the turn. See attached images.