I am a researcher. I have to complete thesis on it. But i am new with SciBud.
How can start it perfectly. What equipments are needed for this thesis.
Please explain it thoroughly. So that i can complete my thesis accurately.
Moderators: kgudger, Moderators
This got me wondering if the same principle would work for a push through wind tunnel rather than a draw through wind tunnel. My wind tunnel is a pusher. The way it is set up there is a fan which lows air into a contraction zone, then a settling chamber, and then the test chamber. I was wondering if adding a large collection chamber upstream of the fan would increase the airspeed in the test chamber. If I made this modification air would flow through the large collection chamber before entering the fan and the rest of the wind tunnel.Your question is a very good one, by the way. The collection chamber does in fact serve to increase wind speed in the test section. This is part of what I meant about the differences between the math and actual data you would collect: the collection chamber is much more voluminous than the test section so that a large volume of air is collected and compressed to fit into the test section volume. By the continuity and Bernoulli equations, the effect produced is that the wind speed in the test section increases without the need of power. In other words, the fan draws air into the tunnel, which speeds up as it is compressed into a smaller volume.
Thank you for at least trying, and mea culpa for not revisiting this thread sooner. To cut to the chase: after building a contraction (out of mat board) and correcting the anemometer readings based on Bernoulli's principle, I'm getting ~8 m/s even with a honeycomb and two anti-turbulence screens in place. So, all is well.AerospaceGuy wrote:To acoggan:
Unfortunately, I have not been able to get in touch with the teacher who has the tunnel, so I do not have the exact info on the specific fan I used.