Matt13C
Well-Known Member
My very basic understanding of ground effect is that as you get within a wings length of the ground, the wing tip vortex is reduced. So if the point of a winglet is to reduce the vortex, is the effect of ground effect also reduced?
Some background on my understand of flight which is how I came to that question, please correct me where wrong. I am not an engineer, just trying to piece together what I have read on circulation, Bernoulli and wing tip vorticies.
As a wing starts to generate lift, it creates a rotor or circulation of air behind it causing an opposite rotation around the wing, where air in theory rotates backwards under the wing and back over the top. This rotation over the wing is the same "height" above and below the wing as the length of the wing. As the higher pressure air below the wing spills over the side of the wing, it wraps up and over into the down washing air on top, causing drag, decreasing lift. As you get closer to the ground, less air spills out from under the wing, decreasing the drag, increasing lift. How far off, in a basic sense, is that?
Some background on my understand of flight which is how I came to that question, please correct me where wrong. I am not an engineer, just trying to piece together what I have read on circulation, Bernoulli and wing tip vorticies.
As a wing starts to generate lift, it creates a rotor or circulation of air behind it causing an opposite rotation around the wing, where air in theory rotates backwards under the wing and back over the top. This rotation over the wing is the same "height" above and below the wing as the length of the wing. As the higher pressure air below the wing spills over the side of the wing, it wraps up and over into the down washing air on top, causing drag, decreasing lift. As you get closer to the ground, less air spills out from under the wing, decreasing the drag, increasing lift. How far off, in a basic sense, is that?