Wing cuffs give the wing two AoAs. They reduce the AoA on the outboard edge similar to wing washout which, during a stalled or near stalled condition, allow the wing to stall at the root and work its way out towards the tips. As a result, pilot is able to maintain better control of the aircraft during slow flight and/or near stalled situations. Think of it as when the wing is stalled, the outboard section of the wing, due to its lower AoA, is still flying which is supposed to prevent or reduce the possibility of a spin and make the ailerons more effective.
This design was primarily a result of NASA's tests by Jim Patton, who developed such a concept.
Cirrus makes a big deal about the safety and spin resistence on their website. Is this a Marketing ploy (makes it sound revolutionary)? Is there a big differnce between a Cirrus wing and a Cessna wing in terms of warping the wing?
What you aere refering to, I forget what its called exactly but its common in GA aircraft to have a higher AOA at the root than at the tip. This is to increase aileron effectiveness when in a near stall condition thus giving you more controlability.
does anyone know how leading edge cuffs, like on a Cirrus, work? Just exactly how does it tame stalls and spins?
B) "Traditionally, most pilots have been taught to control roll with aileron until they're near a stall. At that point they're supposed to use only the rudder, but that's not intuitive so it causes problems. Also, if they use too little or too much control input, they can have a rapid break into an inadvertent spin which may not be recoverable, especially if it happens anywhere near the ground."
C) "An aircraft with a cuff designed wing will shake nearing a stall, the controls will get mushy, and the stall warning horn will be blowing but the outboard section of the wing is still flying. The segmented leading edge creates a natural stall fence which helps to keep the ailerons effective.
is the break the point at which the airplane begins the leading edge cuff? If so why such a dramatic change (instead of a gradual change like a Cessnas).
Because the "break" creates the vortex from the spanwise flow to keep the boundary layer from separating.
Cessnas don't have cuffs, they have drooped leading edges.
O.k. so the air striking the wing of the inboard segment flows laterlly to the wingtip and upon striking the blunt "break" (leading edge cuff) creates a vortex that keeps the boundary layer from separating on the outboard section of the wing thus delaying the stall on the outside of the wing and keeping the ailerons effective?
Am I close?
Is there a fixed change in angle of attack between the inboard section and the outboard?
How is the vortex created?