Mtns2Skies
Final Approach
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Mtns2Skies
I've often wondered why large aircraft's noses do not come to a finely honed point, wouldn't it improve the aerodynamics of the aircraft?
I don't have a clue about the aerodynamics but that's where they usually put the radar and I don't think it would work too well if the nose was a point.I've often wondered why large aircraft's noses do not come to a finely honed point, wouldn't it improve the aerodynamics of the aircraft?
I don't have a clue about the aerodynamics but that's where they usually put the radar and I don't think it would work too well if the nose was a point.
I've often wondered why large aircraft's noses do not come to a finely honed point, wouldn't it improve the aerodynamics of the aircraft?
Nope. The air ahead of a subsonic aircraft begins to move out of its way well before the airplane gets there; the effect travels ahead of the airplane at up to the speed of sound. Sharpening the nose would achieve very little.
On the other hand, a flat nose would contribute a whole lot of drag. There's a happy medium in there somewhere, between flat and pointy.
I've often wondered why large aircraft's noses do not come to a finely honed point, wouldn't it improve the aerodynamics of the aircraft?
I was reading an older issue of Flying this weekend, and in an article about the new Cessna Citation whatever, the schnoz was talked about. In the article, they spoke about having significant icing issues if the nose was not round enough and it got too pointy. Here it is, page 40 of April '09's Flying:
"The shape of the nose and radome is critical on a business jet with aft-mounted engines because ice that forms on the nose can break off and fly back into the engines. Pointy objects are good ice collectors, meaning ice will accumulate faster on a sharp cone than a more blunted surface. The issue is so potentially important that the graceful pointy beaks of the Learjet 20 and 30 series even have an anti-ice fluid flow to the radome to prevent ice accumulation".
Tim