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"AC" wrote in message ...
The answer to your question, is yes. Sails are made from dacron for ease of handling & shortening, and cost. Many examples of rigid-wing vessels exist, I suggest doing a search on that. They often use fairings at the leading edge, or movable trailing edges to fine tune the foil. An aircraft can fly inverted, because its angle-of-attack changes to suit the correspondingly lower efficiency of the foil in this position. As others have noted, acrobatic craft often employ nearly symmetrical foils for this reason. A normally profiled foil will fly inverted, but inefficiently, and at a much lower VMG due to the increased drag from the higher angle of attack. The profile of the wing only handles the Drag, not Lift. Angle of attack handles Lift (see the Cl/Alfa diagram)! Try some "Bernoulli experiments for kids",and you will reach a better understanding. Bernoulli experiments are all due to other physical effects like boundary layer (asymmetric) separation, entrainment of air, Coanda effect etc. The thought that " a change in air velocity will change the pressure" is not real, only mathematic relations. Jan-Olov Newborg |
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