1 / 33

From Theory?

From Theory?. A better understanding and the basis to learn more quickly. Concepts, Figures and Explanations. Primarily concerned with understanding the detail of how a balloon goes up and down. Some surprising facts and reasons why. Some practical stuff.

trish
Télécharger la présentation

From Theory?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. From Theory? A better understanding and the basis to learn more quickly.

  2. Concepts, Figures and Explanations • Primarily concerned with understanding the detail of how a balloon goes up and down. • Some surprising facts and reasons why. • Some practical stuff. • Understanding the principles allows you to work it out for yourself.

  3. Equilibrium Temp • What is ET at take-off for a 77,000 with an all up weight of about half a metric tonne and ambient temperature of 16 °C ? • Stand-up temperature approx. 40°C (200 Kg) • Maximum envelope temperature is ???

  4. 77,000, 519 Kg: 86°C • Exact conditions • All up weight: 519 Kg • Temperature: 16 °C • Altitude: 120 ft (ground amsl) • Lift is 10 grammes (0.01 Kg) • From Liftcalc/MiniSim (website) • Warmer & Heavier • Temp 23 °C, AUW: 564, ET = 105 °C

  5. *30 Kg fuel used, based on 500 ft/min. What can you take from this? Eq. Temp with Altitude

  6. Net Forces, 86°C, 86.5°C • Equilibrium Temperature • neutral buoyancy • Half a degree increase • small net force upwards

  7. False Lift Aerodyamic effect of a curved surface

  8. Net Forces, 86°C, 86.5°C • Equilibrium Temperature • neutral buoyancy • Half a degree increase • small net force upwards • Take care • need to overcome inertia

  9. * Ascent rates which will be maintained. What two points can take from this? Ascent Rates

  10. Through an Inversion H T

  11. * Ascent rates which will be maintained. If you know the envelope temperature can you predict what the balloon will do? Ascent Rates

  12. Heating: 77,000 Cu ft • Rule of Thumb 1 second of burning increases average envelope temperature by 1 °C

  13. Cooling: 77,000 Cu ft • Rule of Thumb 10 seconds of not burning decreases average envelope temperature by 1 °C

  14. Staying at Equilibrium Flying straight and level • How often do you burn? • This is replacing heat due to cooling. • What affects this frequency? • Differentiate between those things that give you a higher equilibrium temp. at take- off • and those that affect heat input or loss.

  15. Normal Response Times • Attaining but without haste. • From neutral to 100 fpm up • 10 seconds (2 second burn) • From neutral to 100 fpm down • 30 seconds (cooling) • From 300 fpm down to zero • 40 seconds (6 seconds of burner) • From neutral to ascent of 500 fpm • 50 seconds (16 seconds of burner)

  16. Emergency Response Times • Achieved by leaving burner full on, attaining and exceeding the target • From 100 fpm down to 100 fpm up • 10 seconds • From 200 fpm up to 200 fpm down • 20 second (two 5 second dumps) • From 300 fpm down to 300 fpm up • 25 seconds • From 500 fpm down to 500 fpm up • 32 seconds

  17. What have you learnt? • Temperature control !! • Short burns • Fast ascents – overheat. • Fast ascents if very high – more overheat. • Now we’ll look at what happens during a descent.

  18. Cooling? Descent!

  19. Descent Resistance is proportional to the velocity squared. Descent Up

  20. Descent of 100 ft/min • What Av. Envelope Temp? • How to maintain ? 85.5 °C 3 Kg

  21. Descent of 500 ft/min • What Av. Envelope Temp? Temperature control not so critical 78 °C 50 Kg

  22. Slowing a Descentby increasing envelope temperature Equilib T Reached Exceeded Temp Up Downward force Deceleration rate increases Descent rate

  23. Above ET slows more quickly • Foot off the accelerator v. foot on break

  24. Question • From 300 fpm down to 0 fpm from 150 ft agl • 40 seconds (about 4 seconds of burner) • Does it matter when you put the burn in? • How do you avoid over burning? • Is the ET Exceeded? • How would you stop the balloon more quickly?

  25. What have you learnt? • You may be falling but accelerating upwards. • Once you reach the equilibrium temperature your rate of deceleration will increase. • If you continue putting in the same burns all the way down you will over-burn. • Half as much is a good rule. • Now look at landing.

  26. Landing • Tony Brown – Concorde • Always aim for the field before • Line to the ground • Adjust all the way down – under control • Stop descent slightly above ground • When ready, rip out in air and lock. • Get ready for landing.

  27. Which Field ? (slow) 600 ft Steep descent (45°) possible 3 knots

  28. Which Field ? (fast) 1,000 ft Steep descent not possible – why? 10 knots

  29. Final Slides

  30. Adrenalin • You are in a 1,000 ft / minute descent, there is only 400 ft before you hit the ground. If you put the burner on and leave it on will you avoid hitting the ground?

  31. Control • Never do anything else (except fly the balloon) for more than 10 seconds. • If you are 500 ft above the ground a controlled descent rate is 500 ft/minute. • 400 ft: 400 fpm • 300 ft: 300 fpm • Etc.

  32. To Control a Balloon (Safely) • Need to know what is happening at any point in time and understand why. • Need to know what the balloon is capable of and its limitations. • Understand the basic concept of the equilibrium temperature and the wide range (60 – 120) and how these relate to what the balloon does.

  33. End

More Related