by Hansmeister » Mon Apr 23, 2012 8:04 pm
Back in 1990, when I was a bit more "adventurous", I entered the Cafe 400 Triaviothon, which required a best rate of climb out of Santa Rosa, CA, followed by max speed at 6000 feet, then a 180 turn, and slowest possible speed. The score was ROC * max speed/min speed. I won in my weight class.
The ROC and speeds were determined by their pitot boom recording barograph. With the barograph temporarily mounted on the right outboard wing, I was handed a temporary airworthiness certificate by the FAA at the event.
Being temporarily experimental, I mounted my own vortex generators using double back tape. Their shape was like a 1/2 delta wing offset at 15 degrees to the airflow at the skin splice at the spar (40% chord). Empty weight of the plane was around 2850 pounds.
The results were: ROC was about 1850 fpm, top speed was 213 mph, and minimum speed was 59 mph. The minimum speed was a bit scary. Full power, gear down, flaps down, and the nose waaaay up. It took full right rudder to keep the ball centered. I might have gotten a little more out of it, but I was worried that if a stall occurred, the plane would go into a spin.
Previous to the event, I experimented with the vortex generator placement, including tufting the wing. My reduction in stall speed in the normal flight configuration was about 6 mph lower at a modest power setting. Since the vortex generators were at 40% chord, my speed reduction was minimal, since that is the location where the airflow turns turbulent anyway.
And yes, they do work in reducing the stall speed. The current STC configurations I have seen place the vortex generators on the leading edge, and in that configuration, cruise and top speed will suffer a bit since the forward section of the wing should be in laminar flow, and with the generators, turbulent flow is introduced. The difference in drag between laminar flow and turbulent flow on wings is 5 to 1.
In the intervening 22 years, more improvements have been made to the plane, and I now normally cruise at 208 mph (180 knots) in smooth air at altitude, provided the plane is clean.