How should Winglets correspond with the wing?

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Chinwe
Posts: 9
Joined: Sun Sep 25, 2011 6:10 pm
Occupation: Student 9th grade
Project Question: Looking at wingtips and winglets and those silly vortices
Project Due Date: I wish my teacher would tell me
Project Status: I am just starting

How should Winglets correspond with the wing?

Post by Chinwe »

Please help.
I've to many different websites and forums and I haven't been able to find the answer for my questions.
You see I'm doing a project over winglets and I'm not sure whether there's a certain height or angle that a winglet should have. For the height I was wondering if the height of the winglets should correspond to the length of the wing or chord.
For the angle people have been telling me that it should be a 90 degree angle or a 60 or 50 or 40 degree angle, and I'm just utterly clueless about everything winglets.
If there are other requirements a winglet has to follow by please let me know.
Thank You.



p.s.If there isn't a certain requirement I could definitively use that as another experiment.
deleted-71588
Former Expert
Posts: 1297
Joined: Mon Oct 16, 2006 11:47 am

Re: How should Winglets correspond with the wing?

Post by deleted-71588 »

Chinwe wrote:I've to many different websites and forums and I haven't been able to find the answer for my questions.
Welcome to Science Buddies. The experts here probably can't answer your questions as stated; however, we can probably help you to construct a Science Fair project and experiments that will allow you to investigate on your own.
Chinwe wrote:I'm not sure whether there's a certain height or angle that a winglet should have
First, have you researched winglets and figured out their purpose? If not, you need to read up on winglets and why they were invented. Here is a reasonable definition of their purpose: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wingtip_device
Aeronautical engineers "play" with designs using computer modeling and wind tunnels to investigate these kinds of questions. Bottom line, the characteristics of the base wing design and the fuselage and the relative airspeed all affect how any wing tip modifiers behave.

Do you have access to a wind tunnel and smoke/fog to visualize the turbulence? Often it is much easier to experiment with a differnent fluid, water. The results obviously won't match air; however, the experimental process is similar and it might be easier to do the experiments.
-Craig
Chinwe
Posts: 9
Joined: Sun Sep 25, 2011 6:10 pm
Occupation: Student 9th grade
Project Question: Looking at wingtips and winglets and those silly vortices
Project Due Date: I wish my teacher would tell me
Project Status: I am just starting

Re: How should Winglets correspond with the wing?

Post by Chinwe »

:?:
Last edited by Chinwe on Sun Nov 20, 2011 3:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Chinwe
Posts: 9
Joined: Sun Sep 25, 2011 6:10 pm
Occupation: Student 9th grade
Project Question: Looking at wingtips and winglets and those silly vortices
Project Due Date: I wish my teacher would tell me
Project Status: I am just starting

Re: How should Winglets correspond with the wing?

Post by Chinwe »

Ok
well I've built a wind tunnel already and i know what winglets are and what they do
I just wanted to know how do Aeronautical engineers know which design and angle and height and ect to make a winglet according to the wing.
What exactly are they considering and looking at while making the winglet.
for instance what sort of winglets would you put on a wing with a rectangular planform?
deleted-71588
Former Expert
Posts: 1297
Joined: Mon Oct 16, 2006 11:47 am

Re: How should Winglets correspond with the wing?

Post by deleted-71588 »

Sorry, was hoping that an actual AE would respond.

Aeronautical engineers typically investigate the addition/modification of winglets to improve an airframe/wing in some specific way:
1) reduce drag at some air speeds
2) reduce turbulence at some air speeds
3) decrease fuel cost at some speed
4) increase stability under some conditions
5) reduce wing span needed

Winglets increase the cost of the airframe/wing design so there has to be some benefit to the total platform performance to add them. On most commercial aircraft applications, a winglet modification will be used to reduce the wing span needed, low speed air turbulence, reduce cruising speed drag, and decrease fuel costs.
-Craig
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