Re: What happened to September Fury?
As I understand it, drag is produced by more than just the frontal area; the entire "wetted area" of the aircraft must be considered. A shorter fuselage will have less drag, due to less wetted area, than a longer fuselage of similiar diameter. With a shorter fuselage, designers must also consider the "tail volume" (square footage of the tail surfaces times the length from the center of gravity, thus the 3 dimensional label "volume"), but even a short fuselage can be made to fly well (think Questair Venture - not getting into the structural issues here, though - or the Venture's gear problems). In any design, it's all a trade-off, balancing "mission requirements" against cost, weight, etc. Speaking generally, a smaller airframe will have less drag than a larger one.
Weight is another key issue. Given equal horsepower, a lighter airframe will not only fly faster, but accelerate more quickly also, which would be important leaving a high G turn.
Having said all that, I still admire Mike Brown's efforts and wish him the best, but I've been a Rare Bear fan since the purple and white days...
As I understand it, drag is produced by more than just the frontal area; the entire "wetted area" of the aircraft must be considered. A shorter fuselage will have less drag, due to less wetted area, than a longer fuselage of similiar diameter. With a shorter fuselage, designers must also consider the "tail volume" (square footage of the tail surfaces times the length from the center of gravity, thus the 3 dimensional label "volume"), but even a short fuselage can be made to fly well (think Questair Venture - not getting into the structural issues here, though - or the Venture's gear problems). In any design, it's all a trade-off, balancing "mission requirements" against cost, weight, etc. Speaking generally, a smaller airframe will have less drag than a larger one.
Weight is another key issue. Given equal horsepower, a lighter airframe will not only fly faster, but accelerate more quickly also, which would be important leaving a high G turn.
Having said all that, I still admire Mike Brown's efforts and wish him the best, but I've been a Rare Bear fan since the purple and white days...
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