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-   -   Wing loading... (https://www.rcuniverse.com/forum/beginners-85/197014-wing-loading.html)

CEH 07-15-2002 07:13 PM

Wing loading...
 
what does this term mean?

crosswind 07-15-2002 08:37 PM

Wing loading...
 
It is simply the amount of weight each square foot of wing surface must carry. If you had a ten pound airplane with ten square feet of wing area, the wing loading would be one pound per sq. ft. It's usually given in ounces for our models. A sailplane may have a wing loading of 10 or 12 ounces, where a scale warbird's loading may well be over 30 ounces. Just divide the weight by the wing area.

MinnFlyer 07-15-2002 08:38 PM

Wing loading...
 
Weight of the plane divided by sq. inches of the wing area.

a 12.5 lb plane (200oz) with a 100sq inch wing will have a wing loading of 2 oz per Sq inch.

JayParke 07-15-2002 11:48 PM

Wing loading...
 
Also these could be of some help.

There's 16 ounces in a lb. And there's 144 sq. in. in a sq. ft.

So figure your area by multiplying span by chord. Ex. 12"chord 48" wingspan = 576 sq. in. Now divide by 144 to get sq.ft. which equals 4 sq. ft.

Then figure your weight in oz. So lets say 3 lbs 9 oz. 3x16 = 48 oz. added to 9 oz. = 57 oz.

Now that you have those two numbers you can find your wingloading in oz./sq.ft. Which would be 57 oz. divided by 4 which comes to 14.25. So your wingloading is 14.25 ounces per square foot.:D

Hope that made it simple.:D

Josh

Mike James 07-16-2002 12:04 AM

Whoa!
 
MinnFlyer,

Your calculation is correct, but that's 288oz/sq ft. That one won't fly, unless you're going about 150 mph!

bgi 07-16-2002 12:34 AM

Wing loading...
 
Wouldn't it be nice if the wing loading was expressed in the same units as the plane's units?

When was the last time you saw a plane spec like this:

Wingspan 7.5 feet
Wing Area 7.80 sq ft
Weight 175 oz

Or when did you ever see?

Wing loading: .00980 lb/sq in

:-/

crosswind 07-16-2002 01:00 AM

Wing loading...
 
I think we're so used to ounces per square foot we'd have to do a conversion before we'd have any idea what our wing loading was! I know I have to mentally convert kilometers to miles before I can get a feel for how far it "really" is. I also tend to convert ounces to pounds if the ounces get much over 60 or I'm lost. Tell me a plane weighs 128 ounces and I've got to change it to eight lbs. Same with millimeters. I have to do a quick rough headspace conversion before I can sense a 12 mm something is a bit less than half an inch. I wish I'd grown up metric, as it IS much simpler!

Hanger Rat 07-16-2002 01:07 AM

Wing loading...
 
If you grew up in the U.S. you DID grow up metric. 100 cents = 1 dollar. :D

ReallyUglyStick 07-16-2002 11:47 AM

Wing loading...
 
mike james,
57/4=14.25, like minn said...
57*4=288, like you said...
it's oz/ft^2, not oz*ft^2, so minn was right...
just had to point that out ;)

MinnFlyer 07-16-2002 03:09 PM

Wing loading...
 
I was just using easy numbers to keep it simple.

Cyclic Hardover 07-16-2002 06:21 PM

Wing loading...
 
One point here is the higher the number the more of a missle it will be and size does not matter. I had a Lanier Stinger 120. Wingloading was somewhere aroun 9 or 10. Although a large plane it floated around and also on landings. I have a little DC F-20 Tigershark with numbers in the 30's. It is a flying bullet with no glide ratio and lands hot and fast or you will stall and crash.

crosswind 07-16-2002 08:49 PM

Wing loading...
 
I find size DOES matter. The larger the plane, the higher the wing loading can be and still retain good flying characteristics in my experience. I can imagine the smaller Tigershark with a high wing loading would be quite a handful.

Cyclic Hardover 07-16-2002 11:36 PM

Wing loading...
 
Yeh, I have watched them all fly to include my own. Turbines, DF, and props. Jets of any kind are no more than a flying brick. If that engine quits, everything else after that is luck.

Geistware 07-16-2002 11:43 PM

Wing loading...
 
Wing loading is of importance to some aircraft and not so important to others. For Jets and some WWII aircraft high wing loading is expected and is not a big issue. For gliders and sail planes, wing loading is very important and the lighter the better!

crosswind 07-17-2002 01:13 AM

Wing loading...
 
I find it rather amazing that a fully loaded modern fighter/bomber has a wing loading about like a manhole cover! (ok.. personhole for the politically correct?) Raw power overcomes a lot.

downunder-RCU 07-17-2002 04:20 AM

Wing loading...
 
I think when it comes to full size then it's a matter of Reynolds numbers, sort of a scale affect. The bigger the wing the more efficient it becomes for the same air speed.

For models though I find that the lower the wing loading the better which is why I use quite large wings and build as lightly as I can (within reason :) ).

Geistware 07-17-2002 11:03 AM

Wing loading...
 
I have had a Extra with a 72 inch wing and I now have one with a 80 inch wing. Their weights were about the same but I find that the 72 inch flys and lands better and the 80 inch presents better when flying sequences. The difference is slight and could be attributed to the engine.


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