- Washout (aviation)
Washout refers to a feature of wing design to deliberately reduce the lift distribution across the span of the
wing of anaircraft . The wing is designed so that lift is strongest at the wing roots and decreases across the span until reaching zero at thewing tip . This is usually to ensure that, at the stall, the wing root stalls before the wing tips, providing the aircraft with some resistance to spinning. Washout may also be used to modify the spanwise lift distribution to reducelift-induced drag .Washout is commonly achieved by designing the wing with a slight twist, reducing the
angle of incidence from root to tip, and therefore causing a lowerangle of attack at the tips than at the roots. This is sometimes referred to as structural washout, to distinguish it from aerodynamic washout.Wingtip stall is unlikely to occur symmetrically, especially if the aircraft is maneuvering. As an aircraft turns, the wing tip on the inside of the turn is moving more slowly and is most likely to stall. As an aircraft rolls, the down-going wing tip is at higher incidence and is most likely to stall. When one wing tip stalls it leads to wing drop, a rapid rolling motion. Also, roll control may be reduced if the airflow over the
aileron s is disrupted by the stall, reducing their effectiveness. Thus, a pilot may be unable to maintain control, perhaps leading to an unrecoverable spin.On aircraft with
swept wing s,wing tip stall also produces an undesirable nose-uppitching moment which hampers recovery from the stall.Washout may be accomplished by other means e.g. modified aerofoil section,
vortex generator s, leading edgewing fence s, notches, orstall strips . This is referred to as aerodynamic washout. Its purpose is to tailor the spanwise lift distribution or reduce the probability ofwing tip stall.Winglets have the opposite effect to washout. Winglets promote a greater proportion of lift being generated near the
wing tips . (This can be described as aerodynamic wash-in.) Winglets also promote a greaterbending moment at the wing root, possibly necessitating a heavier wing structure. Installation of winglets may necessitate greater aerodynamic washout in order to provide the required resistance to spinning, or to optimise the spanwise lift distribution.See also
*
Wing twist
*Stall (flight)
*Spin (flight) External links
* http://www.allstar.fiu.edu/aero/Wing32.htm
* http://www.fly-imaa.org/imaa/hfarticles/const/v1-4-10.html
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