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Speed to Fly Theory
Using the Polar Curve
The polar curve
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
-6
-5
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
1
2
Horizontal Speed (km/hr)
Vertical
Speed
(m/s)
●
Shows rate of sink for a
given horizontal speed
– In equilibrium
●
Speed is constant
– Air is still
– Shape of the curve is
dependent on the aircraft
design
In a moving air mass
●
Mostly concerned with
motion relative to the ground
●
Add the air mass movement
to the polar
– Sinking air moves the polar
down
– A headwind will move the
polar to the left
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
-7
-6
-5
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
1
2
Effect of 1 m/s sink on the polar
Still Air
-1 m/s sink
Horizontal Speed (km/hr)
Vertical
Speed
(m/s)
Glide Ratio
●
Vector sum of the horizontal speed and
vertical speed (sink) gives the cruise
speed
– In still air, cruise speed ≈ TAS
●
Ratio of horizontal speed to vertical
speed gives the glide ratio
●
Glide ratio and lift/drag ratio are the
same
●
The angle between the horizontal and
cruise vector is the glide angle or glide
slope
⃗
vh
⃗
vs
⃗
vh
⃗
vc
⃗
vh+ ⃗
vs= ⃗
vc
|⃗
vh|:|⃗
vs|=GR :1
Glide Angle
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
-7
-6
-5
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
1
2
Still Air
-1 m/s sink
Horizontal Speed (km/hr)
Vertical
Speed
(m/s)
Max Lift/Drag
●
Max lift/drag is max glide ratio or
minimum glide angle
●
Speed to fly given by the tangent to
the polar curve passing through the
origin
– In still air, max L/D at 89 km/hr with
sink of 0.8 m/s
– In 1 m/s sink, max L/D at 134 km/hr
with sink of 2.4 m/s
●
Note if moving the polar, the speed at
the tangent point is ground speed,
not airspeed
Minimize angle
Alternate method
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
-6
-5
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
1
2
Horizontal Speed (km/hr)
Vertical
Speed
(m/s)
●
To read the glider air speeds
in headwind conditions, move
the origin instead of the polar
– Headwind moves origin right
– Sink moves origin up
●
1 m/s sink and 25 km/hr
headwind implies 148 km/hr
speed to fly to achieve max
L/D
1 m/s sink, 25 km/hr headwind
STF
Thermal Flight
●
Two phases
– Cruise (c) & Thermal (t)
●
Cruise follows the polar curve performance
●
Thermal is vertical only
– No horizontal movement (assuming no wind)
●
One cycle is a cruise followed by a thermal climb back to
the starting altitude
– Zero height lost or gained
– Distance covered is x
●
The cycle repeats to cover task distance
– Frequency doesn’t matter
●
Overall time to cover the distance determines the average
speed
●
What cruise speed gives the fastest average speed?
Cruise (c)
Thermal
(t)
Distance (x)
⃗
vt
⃗
vh
⃗
vs
⃗
vc
Speeds
⃗
vavg ?
Thermal Flight
●
Some relations we can deduce from the
model
1 Total time (t) of the cycle is the cruise time (tc) plus the
thermalling time (tt)
2 Distance (x) covered is the horizontal speed times the
cruise time
3 Average speed is the distance divided by the total time
4 Substituting 1 & 2 into 3 gives another form of average
speed
5 Distance climbed must equal total sink during cruise
– Or total vertical distance in one cycle is zero
– Average speed vector must lie along the x-axis
t = tc+tt (1)
x = vh
⋅tc (2)
vavg =
x
t
(3)
(1)(2)→(3) vavg =
vh tc
tc+tt
(4)
vt⋅tt = vs⋅tc (5)
The Relation of Climb and Sink speeds
●
Rearranging (4) and (5) gives
(4) vavg =
vh tc
tc+tt
vavg⋅(tc+tt) = vh tc (6)
(5) vt⋅tt = vs⋅tc
tt =
vs⋅tc
vt
(7)
(7)→(6) vavg⋅(tc+
vs⋅tc
vt
) = vh⋅tc
vavg +
vavg⋅vs
vt
= vh
vavg⋅vs
vt
= vh−vavg
vavg
vt
=
vh−vavg
vs
(8)
Not related to
time or
distance!
McCready Theory
vt
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
-7
-5
-3
-1
1
3
5
Horizontal Speed (km/hr)
Vertical
Speed
(m/s)
vavg vh−vavg
vs
●
Relation of speeds implies that the
blue line is straight
– Similar triangles
– Average speed determined by the
intersection of the blue line with the x-axis
●
Maximizing average speed requires the
blue line be as flat as possible
– Best speed to fly given by line from the
expected thermal climb rate tangent to
the polar
– This is McCready Theory
vavg
vt
=
vh−vavg
vs
STF
Speed to Fly in Thermals
vt
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
-7
-5
-3
-1
1
3
5
Horizontal Speed (km/hr)
Vertical
Speed
(m/s)
vavg
●
Vt is the expected average climb speed
– An educated guess (and another presentation!)
– Based on start to stop times of thermalling – not the best
climb rate
●
Speed to fly given by the tangent point on the polar
●
Glide slope between thermals determined from the
origin
●
Note: STF on this chart is horizontal speed, not cruise
speed
– You’d need to convert to cruise speed if doing this
manually
●
Difference is <8% for glide ratios of 20:1 or better
– Flight computers and the instrument rings should have
this factored in
STF
Glide slope
Speed to Fly
●
For a given thermal strength,
there is a range of workable
speeds
– Very small impact on the
average speed within this
range
– Means you don’t have to
follow the MC STF too closely
●
Consider a dead-zone around
the indicated STF
vt
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
-7
-5
-3
-1
1
3
5
Horizontal Speed (km/hr)
Vertical
Speed
(m/s)
vavg
STF
Glide slope
STF
Range
And on a Ridge?
●
Ridge flying does not follow
the McCready theory as
there is no stopping to climb
●
Climbing isn’t as important as
staying at the ridge height
– Accelerate in strong ridge lift
to not gain height
– Slow down in weaker lift to
not lose height
●
BUT the glider still flies along
the polar curve and there is
an equivalent in the average
speed
●
So which is better: a working
ridge or a thermal?
The Polar on the Ridge
●
Ridge lift will cause the polar
to move up
●
Assuming a flat straight
ridge, speed to fly is the
fastest speed that has zero
sink
●
Average speed will be equal
to the speed to fly while on
the ridge
vavg
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
-6
-5
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
1
2
Still Air
1m/s lift
Horizontal Speed (km/hr)
Vertical
Speed
(m/s)
STF =
So Ridge or Thermal?
●
In deciding to fly a ridge or
thermal, consider the average
speed
●
Using the MC theory, what is
the equivalent thermal strength
required to match the speed
along the ridge?
– For this glider, 1 m/s ridge lift is
equivalent to a thermal of 3.5
m/s 0 50 100 150 200 250 300
-7
-5
-3
-1
1
3
5
Still Air
1m/s lift
Horizontal Speed (km/hr)
Vertical
Speed
(m/s)
Equivalent Thermal
Polar in 1 m/s
ridge lift
vavg
Ridge or Thermal?
●
If the ridge is working enough to
glide at or better than the smooth
air max L/D speed, ridges will do
better than thermals most of the
time
– Small increases in ridge lift match
much stronger thermal lift
– It doesn’t take a very strong ridge to
match the avg speed of MC 5m/s!
●
A strong ridge is better than the
strongest thermal
MC Setting
(m/s)
Avg Speed
(km/hr)
Equivalent
Ridge lift
(m/s)
0.5 36.2 0.61
1 56.0 0.61
1.5 70.3 0.66
2 81.7 0.73
2.5 91.4 0.82
3 100.0 0.90
3.5 107.7 0.99
4 114.8 1.09
4.5 121.4 1.18
5 127.6 1.28
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Slide design makes use of the works of Mateus Machado
Luna.
Presentation by Michael McKay

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Speed to Fly Theory in High-Performance Gliding

  • 1. Speed to Fly Theory Using the Polar Curve
  • 2. The polar curve 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 Horizontal Speed (km/hr) Vertical Speed (m/s) ● Shows rate of sink for a given horizontal speed – In equilibrium ● Speed is constant – Air is still – Shape of the curve is dependent on the aircraft design
  • 3. In a moving air mass ● Mostly concerned with motion relative to the ground ● Add the air mass movement to the polar – Sinking air moves the polar down – A headwind will move the polar to the left 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 -7 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 Effect of 1 m/s sink on the polar Still Air -1 m/s sink Horizontal Speed (km/hr) Vertical Speed (m/s)
  • 4. Glide Ratio ● Vector sum of the horizontal speed and vertical speed (sink) gives the cruise speed – In still air, cruise speed ≈ TAS ● Ratio of horizontal speed to vertical speed gives the glide ratio ● Glide ratio and lift/drag ratio are the same ● The angle between the horizontal and cruise vector is the glide angle or glide slope ⃗ vh ⃗ vs ⃗ vh ⃗ vc ⃗ vh+ ⃗ vs= ⃗ vc |⃗ vh|:|⃗ vs|=GR :1 Glide Angle
  • 5.
  • 6. 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 -7 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 Still Air -1 m/s sink Horizontal Speed (km/hr) Vertical Speed (m/s) Max Lift/Drag ● Max lift/drag is max glide ratio or minimum glide angle ● Speed to fly given by the tangent to the polar curve passing through the origin – In still air, max L/D at 89 km/hr with sink of 0.8 m/s – In 1 m/s sink, max L/D at 134 km/hr with sink of 2.4 m/s ● Note if moving the polar, the speed at the tangent point is ground speed, not airspeed Minimize angle
  • 7. Alternate method 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 Horizontal Speed (km/hr) Vertical Speed (m/s) ● To read the glider air speeds in headwind conditions, move the origin instead of the polar – Headwind moves origin right – Sink moves origin up ● 1 m/s sink and 25 km/hr headwind implies 148 km/hr speed to fly to achieve max L/D 1 m/s sink, 25 km/hr headwind STF
  • 8. Thermal Flight ● Two phases – Cruise (c) & Thermal (t) ● Cruise follows the polar curve performance ● Thermal is vertical only – No horizontal movement (assuming no wind) ● One cycle is a cruise followed by a thermal climb back to the starting altitude – Zero height lost or gained – Distance covered is x ● The cycle repeats to cover task distance – Frequency doesn’t matter ● Overall time to cover the distance determines the average speed ● What cruise speed gives the fastest average speed? Cruise (c) Thermal (t) Distance (x) ⃗ vt ⃗ vh ⃗ vs ⃗ vc Speeds ⃗ vavg ?
  • 9. Thermal Flight ● Some relations we can deduce from the model 1 Total time (t) of the cycle is the cruise time (tc) plus the thermalling time (tt) 2 Distance (x) covered is the horizontal speed times the cruise time 3 Average speed is the distance divided by the total time 4 Substituting 1 & 2 into 3 gives another form of average speed 5 Distance climbed must equal total sink during cruise – Or total vertical distance in one cycle is zero – Average speed vector must lie along the x-axis t = tc+tt (1) x = vh ⋅tc (2) vavg = x t (3) (1)(2)→(3) vavg = vh tc tc+tt (4) vt⋅tt = vs⋅tc (5)
  • 10. The Relation of Climb and Sink speeds ● Rearranging (4) and (5) gives (4) vavg = vh tc tc+tt vavg⋅(tc+tt) = vh tc (6) (5) vt⋅tt = vs⋅tc tt = vs⋅tc vt (7) (7)→(6) vavg⋅(tc+ vs⋅tc vt ) = vh⋅tc vavg + vavg⋅vs vt = vh vavg⋅vs vt = vh−vavg vavg vt = vh−vavg vs (8) Not related to time or distance!
  • 11. McCready Theory vt 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 -7 -5 -3 -1 1 3 5 Horizontal Speed (km/hr) Vertical Speed (m/s) vavg vh−vavg vs ● Relation of speeds implies that the blue line is straight – Similar triangles – Average speed determined by the intersection of the blue line with the x-axis ● Maximizing average speed requires the blue line be as flat as possible – Best speed to fly given by line from the expected thermal climb rate tangent to the polar – This is McCready Theory vavg vt = vh−vavg vs STF
  • 12. Speed to Fly in Thermals vt 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 -7 -5 -3 -1 1 3 5 Horizontal Speed (km/hr) Vertical Speed (m/s) vavg ● Vt is the expected average climb speed – An educated guess (and another presentation!) – Based on start to stop times of thermalling – not the best climb rate ● Speed to fly given by the tangent point on the polar ● Glide slope between thermals determined from the origin ● Note: STF on this chart is horizontal speed, not cruise speed – You’d need to convert to cruise speed if doing this manually ● Difference is <8% for glide ratios of 20:1 or better – Flight computers and the instrument rings should have this factored in STF Glide slope
  • 13. Speed to Fly ● For a given thermal strength, there is a range of workable speeds – Very small impact on the average speed within this range – Means you don’t have to follow the MC STF too closely ● Consider a dead-zone around the indicated STF vt 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 -7 -5 -3 -1 1 3 5 Horizontal Speed (km/hr) Vertical Speed (m/s) vavg STF Glide slope STF Range
  • 14. And on a Ridge? ● Ridge flying does not follow the McCready theory as there is no stopping to climb ● Climbing isn’t as important as staying at the ridge height – Accelerate in strong ridge lift to not gain height – Slow down in weaker lift to not lose height ● BUT the glider still flies along the polar curve and there is an equivalent in the average speed ● So which is better: a working ridge or a thermal?
  • 15. The Polar on the Ridge ● Ridge lift will cause the polar to move up ● Assuming a flat straight ridge, speed to fly is the fastest speed that has zero sink ● Average speed will be equal to the speed to fly while on the ridge vavg 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 Still Air 1m/s lift Horizontal Speed (km/hr) Vertical Speed (m/s) STF =
  • 16. So Ridge or Thermal? ● In deciding to fly a ridge or thermal, consider the average speed ● Using the MC theory, what is the equivalent thermal strength required to match the speed along the ridge? – For this glider, 1 m/s ridge lift is equivalent to a thermal of 3.5 m/s 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 -7 -5 -3 -1 1 3 5 Still Air 1m/s lift Horizontal Speed (km/hr) Vertical Speed (m/s) Equivalent Thermal Polar in 1 m/s ridge lift vavg
  • 17. Ridge or Thermal? ● If the ridge is working enough to glide at or better than the smooth air max L/D speed, ridges will do better than thermals most of the time – Small increases in ridge lift match much stronger thermal lift – It doesn’t take a very strong ridge to match the avg speed of MC 5m/s! ● A strong ridge is better than the strongest thermal MC Setting (m/s) Avg Speed (km/hr) Equivalent Ridge lift (m/s) 0.5 36.2 0.61 1 56.0 0.61 1.5 70.3 0.66 2 81.7 0.73 2.5 91.4 0.82 3 100.0 0.90 3.5 107.7 0.99 4 114.8 1.09 4.5 121.4 1.18 5 127.6 1.28
  • 18. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. Slide design makes use of the works of Mateus Machado Luna. Presentation by Michael McKay