mue wrote:And I don't mean that the AERORP is ignored by JSBSim. Of course the AERORP is used for computing the moment at the CG
With all due respect the discussion about AERORP has gone beyond anything useful.
bomber wrote:show me where 99% of JSBsim flight models are more complex in downwash
What other models do is irrelevant to this discussion; everyone is aware that there are a lot of simplistic aero models in FGAddon (and elsewhare).
bomber wrote:yes it does (take into account pitch rate and the damping due to pitch rate)
It is better if you explain the mathematics that you are using so that we can understand what you're doing and review it. Pasting XML snippets doesn't really help me understand what you're doing. For example it is unclear how you convert the angular velocities which are in rad/sec into the ft/s values.
Explaining the formulas is all part of an in depth discussion of flight dynamics - pasting XML is not really conducive to peer review.
bomber wrote:Angle is an angle... how fast the air is moving is a product of the qbar calculation.
Except when the angle is changing - and you're not taking into account the speed of the airstream and this can be significant; especially at slower speeds. I suspect that this is something that can be solved with a differential equation or integration - but I don't know how to do this because I don't understand the maths properly.
Richard wrote:The tailplane doesn't rotate through any freestream as the wing downwash effects the freestream
Freestream as in the airflow arriving at the tailplane; and if the aircraft is changing pitch angle then the tailplane will be moving in the airflow that arrives at the leading edge of the tailplane.
IAHM-COL wrote:...the moments are applied to the CG
Aerodynamic moments (except for Simon's method) already have the offset to the AERORP baked into them; which is why you can't mix coefficients from two different reference points without changing them to use a common reference point. The difference between AERORP and the actual CG then generates another moment in each axis.