Spencifer_Murphy wrote:While the angle of incidence is the primary variable for stalling, airspeed does have an influence as higher speed flow is more likely to remain laminar.
Higher speed flow is more likely to have a turb B.L which will result in less seperation.
Spencifer_Murphy wrote:
I recently performed some windtunnel tests on an aerofoil (NACA 23012) at university as part of a much larger investigation for a final year project.
When running the windtunnel at 8m/s the stalling angle of the aerofoil was 11degrees.
When running the same aerfoil at 28m/s the stalling angle was almost 16 degrees.
I knew there would be some difference with speed (due to lam/turb BLs as I mentioned), but I thought it would be under a degree! Certainly nothing like that!!!
Edit: Out of interest, how did you measure the loss of lift? Pitot probes or by weight balance?
(I'm wondering is the "stall" actually a result of an unwinding of the starting vortex rather than seperation)
If you used pitot probes, was there any kind of relationship when the BL tripped to turbulent and the seperation point moving down the chord length?