jmig
SOH-CM-2025
Ok, that's funny (sorry Mud!) :d
On adverse yaw. Did some “Googling”. Evidently the phenomenon is not limited to swept wing fighters of the 1960s. All airplanes experience it, as an effect of rolling, when the up wing, generating more lift, also produces more induced drag, than the down wing, which causes the nose to yaw in the direction of the up wing. But if you were using the rudder to coordinate your turn, wouldn’t the rudder input, “towards” the down wing, compensate for this? I’ve read that one method airplane designers use to eliminate adverse yaw is to couple the rudder to the aileron, a feature that was built into the Wright Flyer, for this very reason!
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I’m wondering why the effect would be worse at high AOA. Perhaps because at high AOA, the aileron pushing the wing up is at more or a right angle to the wind than it would be at low AOA, which would create more of a drag offset?
OK Paul, let me see if I can remember correctly. At very high AOA the wing is basically stalled. If I remember correctly, the wing stalls from the fuselage outward. So only the wing tips are holding the airplane up. Now, introduce additional drag by moving the aileron up into the wind and you can imagine what happens.
Modern fighters, i.e., F-16, F-18 have automatic flaps, leading and trailing edge that will deploy in high AOA conditions to provide better performance. that is why the Blue Angels and Thunderbirds can come by at 130 kts with the nose so high. That and ample excess thrust