Actually, there are NOT "many theories". It has been well established what causes lift for about 100 years now. There is no controversy outside of discussions among lay people (which I include many in this group).
Let me start by saying, I do not fully understand many of these theories but I will post them to show you what I was referring to. Also what causes lift has been understood, that is the difference of pressure, I am not claiming it is not. What has been under constant debate is all the intricacies involved and how to calculate for each to be able to accurately measure lift.
We have discussed two here, equal transit and the more correct theory with circulation accounted, does this have a name?
We also have the
Thin Airfoil Theory.
Here is someones attempt to improve that theory:
Improved Thin Airfoil Theory.
Here are some theories that are believed to have some effect in lift production, in no particular order:
In my search/readings I stumbled upon discussion on a physics forum with regards to newtons third law. Some of you may find it interesting,
Forum Link.
The point here isn't to say that we don't know how lift is formed, on the contrary, we do. We just don't know all the factors involved in it and digging into aerodynamics, for each question I answer I stumble upon 5 more I cannot answer. Members on this forum have criticized me up and down for not always following the KISS method of teaching. Well when it comes to lift, this is one area where I believe the simpler the explanation the better the result.
In one of your links you gave
fish explained lift as he would to a student. Notice, no mention of equal transit or the more correct theory. The point is, and my question still stands unanswered, what better insight does this knowledge give a student with regards to making them a safer/better pilot?
IMHO all that needs to be known about lift for a pilot is what the FAA requires so they can past the test and a thorough understanding of what they can do to control it. Anything beyond that, to me, is nothing more than a CFI trying to show the student how much they know.
E_Dawg, for the mere fact that most of the books they will read will contradict what your saying if you teach it "the right way." All this will do is provide confusion which you will need to spend time and brain power explaining away. Wasting brain space on knowledge that, barring any new insight, will not give the student any greater ability to fly the aircraft.
By all means, if the student is curious about lift and wants to delve deeper, start them in the right direction as best you can. If they get hung up on an area with regards to flight, try to explain it away in the most truthful way possible. But to offer unnecessary information, just doesn't seem prevalent, to me.
What I do to explain lift:
I show bernoulli the typical way with a narrowing pipe, then erase the top half and make the bottom half into a wing. I then show the low pressure compared to the high pressure. Next I show the lift formula, tell them that is too complex and to ignore it giving them Lift = Speed + AOA. Then we discuss how these two things are what we can control and how they interact.