John in CR said:
Interesting. I didn't realize someone made it work first back in the '69.
Here is Bauer's article:
http://projects.m-qp-m.us/donkeypuss/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/Bauer-Faster-Than-The-Wind-The-Ancient-Interface.pdf
He claims to have achived ~1.2WS but it is a rough estimate based on a steamer. That's why they build the Blackbird and had NALSA confirm their records.
John in CR said:
I also didn't realize they were going to try to build one to travel up wind with a ground speed greater than actual wind speed. Going faster than the wind downwind was a lot simpler by comparison.
They went 2.8WS directly downwind in 2010 and 2.1WS directly upwind in 2012. DUWFTTW is more difficult than DDWFTTW. The symmetry is actually between DDWFTTW and DUW(at any speed). However DDWFTTW is more difficult to accept for many people, because of the zero apparent wind at windspeed.
John in CR said:
I still insist that explanations of how the Blackbird work using sailboats in examples is a terrible way to go about it.
To those familiar with the physics of sailing it is very intuitive. More importantly it is easier to accept that it can work in real life, because downwind VMGs > WS have been demonstrated for decades.
John in CR said:
Even the lift from the blades is an unnecessary component, because it would still work even with flat blades that had no aerodynamic lift such as on most ceiling fans.
You seem to have a misconception about what "lift" means in aerodynamics. It is the aerodynamic force component perpendicular to apparent wind (see vector diagram). Flat plates like ceiling fan blades can have lift too.
John in CR said:
with blades having no aerodynamic lift, the vehicle could still travel in 0 apparent wind
Not with a propeller axis that is parallel to true wind (and driving direction), like in the case of the Blackbird. See the vector diagram again, and set the blade lift force to zero. There is no way this would accelerate forward.
But if you rotate the rotor axis by 90° you get a paddle-wheel, that could theoretically achieve DDWFTTW with some fairing covering the top part. Practically it would be very difficult to achieve sufficient efficiency. Such paddle-wheels do not rely on lift.
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