Morgan3820
Ejection Handle Pulled
If they are good enough for a 787, why not my Piper? Just curious.
It's a very different story in the airline world.
The 777 has/had a folding wingtip option to extend the span 20-25ft, but nobody ever ordered it. We'll see how it works out on the 777xAnd even in the airlines they'd just go with a longer wing on new aircraft if they weren't constrained by gate sizes. At least that was true until they started messing with tip vortices...
That said, when I put new wing tips on the 'kota to get landing lights out there the mould included upturned tips. They changed the float in ground affect and maybe a little better climb rate.
Winglets that actually do something add a lot of weight. Take the Falcon 900 for example, its nearly 250 additional pounds and around a 1000 man hours in sheet metal work.
Designing effective winglets is not an easy task. I would hazard a guess that most of the small GA winglets are more of a cosmetic and marketing feature than a functional one.That, and though they can reduce induced drag enough to provide a net drag reduction in some flight regimes, they also add profile and skin drag which adds up to a net drag increase in other flight regimes.
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I got 'em.If they are good enough for a 787, why not my Piper? Just curious.
The M2 added swooplets to the CJ1 and they called them bling-lets. Cessna claimed they were appearance only but the aircraft beats the book in performance. I'm guessing if they claimed a performance increase,they would have to do extensive testing for the type certificate.Designing effective winglets is not an easy task. I would hazard a guess that most of the small GA winglets are more of a cosmetic and marketing feature than a functional one.
See -- we can make our plane look like a big jet, too!
Neat. Spiroid winglets
They are considered critical surfaces on most aircraft and they will be heated.In general, is icing a problem for winglets?
I don't see any boots or heated leading edge. Not just the ones in this photo, but any of them. And they protrude out there.
In the grand scheme, winglets are pretty new, most pipers you see on the ramp were built decades before they became common. And as far as new pipers, well, compared to a 787, the speed isn't enough to matter.
When I was working at the FBO we had a few based Falcon 50/900/2000s. The tailplane (according to some of the mechanics) was deemed by Dassault as not critical for icing and do not have heat of any kind. One of the pilots said he landed with inches of ice back there and it handled just fine. He didn't notice until after landing.
Example:
Wings have it, tail does not. I think it is true across most Falcons.
The new Piper M600 has them. Might do something, since with the same engine and similar cruise power settings it is as fast or faster than the Piper Meridian/M500 even though it weighs 1000 lbs more.
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