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russ_watters
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As you probably remember, I don't agree with your interpretation of the Venturi analogy, but regardless it is a fact that the path that the air over the top surface takes requires it to move faster than the air over the bottom surface in order to satisfy continuity. If one wants to call it an inside-out Venturi, an obstruction, or just a longer path, the fact that the air is displaced requires an increase in speed, otherwise it would have to compress. I'll say it again another way: the only way to get around an obstruction without compressing is to move faster in the vicinity of the obstruction. Rather than nitpicking the limitations of the analogy, one should amplify what it gets right. In either case, my biggest complaint both about the particular chosen analogy and the unsolicited equal transit time debunking is that so much time is spent pointing out things that aren't quite exactly right that people (not just you) never get around to explaining what actually happens.boneh3ad said:Honestly, the sentence in the video is perfectly fine. As I mentioned in my original post in this thread, if you say the longer path is the reason the air moves faster and pressure goes lower, there are really only two ways to interpret that as working, and both of them are incorrect. The most obvious of those two is the equal transit time fallacy, and the one that requires slightly more of a stretch is the Venturi fallacy. Either way, it's wrong. The most common one is what he addresses in the video.
And one day, I'm going to build an adjustable area Venturi to show that no matter how far apart you move the sides, there never ceases to be a lower pressure at the throat. But even without me building it, I think you know it is true: The A2/A1=V1/V2 ratio may break down as they move apart, but the principle that the curved surface squeezes the air and causes it to accelerate never goes away.
That's the same cop-out as in the article: the less the curve and less the angle of attack, the less the lift. Of course. "Nearly" the same gets further and further from being the same the greater the curvature and greater the aoa, thus greater the lift. Or more directly: the difference in the path lengths is directly related to how much lift is generated.I have to respectfully disagree with you here. The distances will be quite nearly the same as long as the sail doesn't have too extreme of a curve.
The piling-up and stretching-out of the streamlines is quite evident in flow visualizations:In reality, barring flow separation or speeds high enough for compressibility to be a factor, most of the flow does follow the surface of a shape and the flow does not "pile up" at all.
The streamlines start-out nearly uniformly distributed, but in the area of the stagnation point (one streamline is just a touch below the stagnation point) they look to me to be about 10x further apart than at the top of the airfoil. If one isn't getting squeezed perpendicular and the other smooshed lengthwise, I'd like to hear what you would call that!
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