azpilot
Line Up and Wait
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azpilot
In another thread, the topic of glide distance came up. James comments that two identical airplanes can glide the same distance, in the same conditions, even if one of the airplanes is heavier than the other. I did some reading on this topic, but it still baffles me. This is how the conversation went:
So, I am not going to deny that this is true, but I wonder if someone can help me understand this more clearly. I can understand the best glide speed going up with weight, but I can't understand how the glide distance will remain constant. If the weight goes up, and the glide speed goes up, there will by definition be more wind resistance, which will chew up energy more quickly. I am just not getting this.
The one question a remember from my commercial checkride, quite some time ago...
If you have two identical airplanes at the same altitude and location, one at minimum flying weight and the other at Maximum gross weight, which one will glider farther?
BrianSpoiler alert, they both glide the same distance, the fat one just goes faster.
As for CPL, my initial was in a seaplane, but it was a easy ride, just a fancy PPL ride with tighter landing tolerances.
So, I am not going to deny that this is true, but I wonder if someone can help me understand this more clearly. I can understand the best glide speed going up with weight, but I can't understand how the glide distance will remain constant. If the weight goes up, and the glide speed goes up, there will by definition be more wind resistance, which will chew up energy more quickly. I am just not getting this.