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| General Questions & Help General & Advanced Orbiter flight questions, Orbiter installation questions, to all other help topics here. |
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#1 |
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Orbinaut
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Hello everyone.
Consider this situation. XR2 is flying in the atmosphere horizontally and the attitude hold autopilot is used. The autopilot uses the trim and other control surfaces to achieve certain attitude because the ship acts as a normal plane. No problem with that. But when XR2 is flying down reentry the ship is no longer acts as a plane but rather as a brick (because of high aoa). In this case the control surfaces are useless for changing the attitude. The main thing that is used by the XR2 to control the attitude is a centre of gravity shift. This sound reasonable. I presume this idea was borrowed from small submarines. The submarine batteries are usually put on the small cart which can move back and forth. So to change the submarine attitude you can move this cart. This is very nice solution because you dont need extra fins for the submarine. So here is my question. How the center of gravity shift works if there is no moving parts in the XR2. I know the XR2 is a model, you can do anything you want with the model. But still, we say that that thing is realistic, right? The only explanation I have is there is two tanks of fuel of whatever, and a pump is used change the liquid position to change the center of the gravity. Could you explain me please how this really work in the XR2 and real plane-like spacecrafts. |
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#3 |
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Donator
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I've never tried it, but would this mean that without fuel on board the CG shift is ineffective, since there's nothing to shift around?
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#4 |
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DGIV Captain
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![]() Some aircrafts are UNFLYABLE without gravity shift via fuel transfer like SR-71 blackbird and Concorde so yes its realistic and applicable to the xr2 |
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#6 |
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Spring of Life!
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#7 |
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Grounded since '09
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As well as the 'gravity shift' mentioned above, airline pilots also have to 'trim' their planes when they fly (to make sure that it's nicely balanced). Like getting all the passengers spaced out so that they're not all at the front/left etc. |
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#8 |
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Orbinaut
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#9 |
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Donator
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At 40° AoA and hypersonic practically everything flies like a brick.
My guess would be that the STS has a CoG so far aft that it's actually unstable enough that the computers can control it during reentry. Shuttles actually flew pretty well for an unpowered delta-wing, but the rate of descent was high compared to commercial airliners. The STS used the fly-by-wire to control the attitude, so it didn't have to shift the CoG forward. But if you used the real CoG in Orbiter it would be very hard to control with direct control, especially since Orbiter uses slow airfoil movements to make keyboard control possible. Programming a CoG shift is easier than the fly-by-wire you would need for a unstable CoG. But since XR-2 are fictional we can just say that the fuel indicator displays usable fuel, and you're not allowed to empty the tank for instability issues. It's a safety feature, OK?
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#10 |
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Donator
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The shuttle actually will backflip during reentry, when exceeding 50° AOA, the 40° AOA is near a small island of stability where only minimal control force is needed.
The CoG shifting of the Shuttle by dumping forward fuel simply ensures that this island of stability exists where it is needed. |
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#11 |
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Student XR2 Pilot
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Oh, CoG shifting. Well, I use it everyday. Isn't this the same thing as when taking a bus, if you're standing you lean forward while bus is accelerating, and the other way around? It works fine for me, helps me keep myself balanced with less energy.
As for XR2's CoG shifting, maybe it just uses another mass but the PAO was misinformed or misunderstood, so the public documents say a different thing than the actual thing. Or maybe the company tried to keep it as a tech secret, so they just tried to trick us into thinking that it shifts using fuel but it doesn't. (Maybe I'm taking things a little bit more serious than I should.) Last edited by fcn; 06-28-2012 at 01:56 PM. |
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