Chao,
Let's play some more with these charts, shall we ?
You can have a look at other two pictures ..
First off, a generic comment. Both charts look to be the old DCA format. However, the specific equations which went into them are not disclosed so there is the possibility that they are neither quite the same nor, even, the same as the equations in the DCA Report. That makes it a little difficult to be very specific for the particular charts.
the take-off distance chart. Why does the spacing between each line get narrowed?
The upper left region of the distance grid is associated with higher density heights and higher AUWs .. ie the thrust/weight ratio decreases and overall performance decreases. As a consequence, the variation of TODR with increasing density height (or weight) is more rapid and the lines start to bunch up.
To see this a bit clearer, take a look at a few notional examples -
(a) a low AUW (say at nil wind, nil slope, short dry grass) comes into the distance grid as a horizontal line towards the bottom of the grid. Moving to the left (ie increasing density height) has the distance lines bunching up as the thrust decreases with increasing density height ie the degraded performance shows up as a more rapidly increasing distance requirement.
(b) if you repeat the exercise for a high AUW (for the same conditions), you see a similar effect with increasing density height but, due to the increased weight (further reducing t/w) the effect is more pronounced than for the lower weight.
(c) similarly, entering with low/high density heights, as you move vertically up the distance grid, you see much the same sort of effect as the weight increases.
In one of charts from FTA, the lines look not straight, they look like curves. Should they be straight or curve?
Generally, I would expect curves. The other chart appears to have been linearised .. and not terribly well. This is not the school’s fault or concern at all .. just what was done by the person who drew the chart originally.
All those lines are plotted diagonally. Could they be plotted horizontally?
Not quite sure what your point is here .. you can use drafting tricks to make the charts look whatever .. but at the expense of complicating their use needlessly and for no useful gain.
Secondly, for the slope chart, in picture of Bob's(Figure3), why is the level line close to up-slope rather than a diagonal line which divide the chart into two same parts?
The positioning of the nil slope line comes from the equation numbers and has nothing to do with dividing the grid into two halves. That is just an artefact of the way the grid was drawn by the originator.
the spacing between 2%up and level is bigger than 2%down, why?
If you come up from the weight grid, 2% down will give you a lower TODR than 2% up. An easy way to figure this out is
(a) for the acceleration, the downslope puts a gravity component of weight on your side and the net acceleration is higher than for the upslope where the gravity component of weight reduces your acceleration. As a result you get to the liftoff speed much quicker (and in a shorter distance) on a downslope than an upslope
(b) for the climb to 50ft, an upslope (assumed to be constant for the whole takeoff) means you take a longer air distance to get to 50 ft above the upsloping ground. Alternatively, for a downslope, you get there much quicker .. ie a geometric consideration.
(c) End result is that the downslope gives a significantly shorter TODR. I note that the effect is different between the two charts .. it would take knowledge of the specific equations to sort that out.
In the FTA's chart(Cessna type take-off chart), the level line is the diagonal line
Forget the diagonal line’s bisecting the grid .. that’s just a co-incidental artefact of the drafting. No reason why it should or shouldn't
but why is the spacing between each other getting narrow from top to bottom? which of them is more accurate?
I would need the equations for both charts to see exactly what is going on for this question.
Thirdly, as far as the wind chart, why is not the line of zero wind a diagonal line? why is it on the left of diagonal line?
Again, the lines do not divide the grid into two halves .. just an artefact of the drafting layout
how to define the tilt rate of each lines? they look like not 45 degree.
The slope follows from the specific equations and how the grid drafting work is done. I would need the specific equations to be much more informative.
where they are from, those charts? coming with manuals of aircraft or from airport or some where?
Takeoff and landing charts are developed either by the OEM’s flight test/aerodynamics sections, Regulators (DCA used to produce most of this format P-chart for the old flight manuals), or Industry engineering consultants who used to do this progressively more in the latter part of the period as DCA (and its descendants) devolved increasing amounts of work to Industry. I don’t remember just how many I would have designed .. probably several dozen, I guess .. the only ones which come to mind at the moment are the Commander singles after the 112A (that was done by Rudi Paspa as I recall). All involve the development of flight mechanics equations (examples can be found in the engineering and flight test texts) and flight test data to baseline the equations. Put the two together and you end up with a bunch of numbers which are either tabulated or plotted for flight crew use.
The data (as tables or graphs) either will be in a flight manual or a pilot operating handbook for most newer aircraft. If you go back a LONG way to the old machines, there may just be a single strip length requirement in the Certificate of Airworthiness. Going back to the early 50s and prior, there was very, very little in the way of real data. For the heavy aircraft civil world, the regulatory approach changed when ICAO issued their Provisional Means of Compliance document for performance in the early 50’s. Not many copies floating around these days .. although I have one on the bookshelf, courtesy of a retired CASA test pilot mate.
If there are not charts, does pilot need to draw them himself?
Can’t see the pilot ever having to do that .. you can presume reasonably that you will always have some appropriate and usable data available in the aircraft documentation.