Logically derived from the other responses.
Logic is dangerous.
<<when you add flaps you change the shape of the wing, which changes the frontal profile of the airplane. >>
Not the best mental model...most of the drag is produced by the pressure differences around the aircraft, and those aren't necessarily related to the frontal area. Consider...when you go from cruise to best glide, you're increasing your AOA, increasing your frontal profile, but your overall drag decreases.
<<The air moving over the airplane forces the airplane to take the most efficient profile. This results in a pitch forward compared to the previous attitude.>>
The aircraft has no tendency to take the most efficient profile, otherwise it would assume best glide at all times. Rather, it assumes a profile whereby the pitching moments on the aircraft are zero.
<<This seems logical too. The back of the wing (where the flaps are) are now creating more lift (they are also producing more drag, but that is not the issue here). The back of the wing is behind the CG. >>
Several things here:
- Flaps affect the lift distribution *all over the wing*, not just where the flaps are, so the intuitive model isn't that accurate.
- Flaps don't increase lift, per se. Yes, there is an initial ballooning, but you control that with your elevators and retrim; once you're done, lift is equal to weight, just as it was before the flap deflection.
- Flaps produce a nose down moment no matter where the CG is located.
<<A logical extension of this thinking is that in order to counteract the increased lift from the wing, the horizontal stabilizer (which is pushing down / creating negative lift) is now flying with a higher angle of attack, creating more negative lift>>
Even though lift hasn't changed, the nose down pitching moment has increased, so yes there will be an increased tail down force. This doesn't always mean an increase in AOA, because an increase in tail down force can be achieved via the elevator. However, in this case it does, because at a given airspeed, the nose is lower (and the tail higher) when flaps are deployed. This is why you're more at risk in this condition for a tail stall in icing conditions.
<<The result is a more stable, lower performing airplane.>>
Not really more stable; flaps change the trim, but generally not the inherent static longitudinal stability of the aircraft, because that depends on the location of the CG with respect to the Aerodynamic Center (not the Center of Pressure). Fowler flaps
may increase static longitudinal stability, because they increase the chordline, but I haven't seen any data.