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George wrote:Your figure is excellent, thanks for posting that!
George wrote:I would add to your explanation that the weight of the disc affects the disc flight in (at least) two different ways. One is the moment of inertia (which you explain)—a lighter disc of the same shape will have a smaller moment of inertia, and, if the angular velocity is the same, will have a smaller angular momentum and therefore be subject to greater precession.
George wrote:The second manner in which the weight enters is in the angle of attack. If two discs, identical except for mass, are thrown level with the same speed and the same angular velocity, the lift on the two discs will be the same, but the force of gravity will be smaller on the lighter disc. The net upward force will therefore be greater on the lighter disc, and it will rise faster. A level disc that is rising has a negative angle of attack. (I’m considering angle of attack to be slightly different from nose angle in that angle of attack is with respect to the air whereas nose angle is with respect to the horizontal ground.) Because of its faster rise, the angle of attack of the lighter disc will be more negative (than that of the heavier disc), causing the center of pressure to move farther behind the center of the disc, and thereby creating a greater torque and more precession. When a level disc is falling, the reverse is true: the center of pressure moves forward. In airfoils, I believe this effect is largely characterized by the pitching moment coefficient, which also changes with angle of attack, but I could be wrong.
George wrote:Jonny Potts (who founded Discwing) measured the pitching moment of a disc (I don’t think it was a golf disc) in a wind tunnel and measured the change of pitching moment with angle of attack and described it in this paper:
http://www.discwing.com/research/flowOverRotate.html
George wrote:Although the initial turn and the final fade are generally thought of solely in terms of speed by disc golfers, I think the changing angle of attack (negative in the first part of the flight, and positive in the final part) plays a major role in causing the typical S-curve flight. Of course since lift increases with increasing speed, the angle of attack and the speed are closely related.
George wrote:Disclaimer: I am not an aerodynamicist but I am a physicist (and a mediocre rec masters disc golfer).
George
sleepy wrote:I sleepy, do hereby commit to use the Comet as my main midrange disc for a period of no less than one (1) year; commencing 11/24/09 and ending (if I so choose) on 11/24/10.


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dgdave wrote:Will this be available for blackberries?
sleepy wrote:I sleepy, do hereby commit to use the Comet as my main midrange disc for a period of no less than one (1) year; commencing 11/24/09 and ending (if I so choose) on 11/24/10.

JimW wrote:If the answer isn't PD you asked the wrong question.
George wrote:The aerodynamics is indeed much tougher than the basic mechanics. Have you seen this work?
http://www.microcfd.com/download/pdf/dissertation.pdf
George
tigel wrote:Have you and beto tested the vision yet? I'm curious what its numbers are
Smyith wrote:what are the halo's flight ratings? also what plastic/weight did you test it in? what where the different ratings based on distance?
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