autogyro46
Electrical
- Sep 23, 2009
- 35
I've not yet seen any reference to this, and it would seem so obvious that there must be something wrong with it.
However, it occurred to me that a 1/5 scale model affixed to a "ground plane" mounting on the roof of a passenger car tow vehicle, could achieve Reynold's numbers close to 1 X 10E6 at normal highway speeds, making it possible to provide reasonable esimation of CD, CL, etc. of a full scale version (chord ~ 4.25m)
One would need to confirm that the flow over the roof was reasonably laminar, ( which generally seems to be the case)and perhaps it might be advisable to enclose the model in a tube of sufficiently large dimensions to to avoid boundary effects, perhaps even adding a honeycomb flow straightener up front.
What am I missing here?
However, it occurred to me that a 1/5 scale model affixed to a "ground plane" mounting on the roof of a passenger car tow vehicle, could achieve Reynold's numbers close to 1 X 10E6 at normal highway speeds, making it possible to provide reasonable esimation of CD, CL, etc. of a full scale version (chord ~ 4.25m)
One would need to confirm that the flow over the roof was reasonably laminar, ( which generally seems to be the case)and perhaps it might be advisable to enclose the model in a tube of sufficiently large dimensions to to avoid boundary effects, perhaps even adding a honeycomb flow straightener up front.
What am I missing here?