Dear Mr. Marz, I read your reply soon after you answered, but for some reason, I haven't had the push to answer it until today (as I was looking through my inbox). Please accept my apologies.
My partner and I used the formula "Speed = Distance over Time" to determine how fast the paper airplanes went. Here were our results:
http://goo.gl/bSNKoc We ultimately concluded, as we presented our board all day at the science fair, that even though winglets work on real airplanes, they do not work with paper airplanes. That's because the we decreased the size of the wing which, like you said, changed the lift. I also noticed that our winglets might not have been parallel (though my partner insisted they were and sometimes I thought they were as well). In my opinion, we could have been more careful and patient with the test flights and do the experiment once more to make sure results were more accurate. At the end of the day, the paper airplane wasn't, as you said, the best platform, but I felt pretty clever coming up with and executing the experiment. Unfortunately, I never got to see my official score for the science far, but
I think I got a good grade. We did a great job and I'm glad we pulled everything off!
One more question though - Why did the Science Buddies experiment measure if higher winglets would lead to longer distance if the purpose of winglets are to make the airplane go faster easier (by reducing the drag)?