Parasite drag calculation of cylinder

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Tasos Seitanidis

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Jan 2, 2024, 12:42:10 PM1/2/24
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Hello and happy new year,

I am trying to validate OpenVSP's parasite drag results by using a circular symmetric cylinder stemming from the StackGeom. As I understand it, the tool always assumes that the geometry is facing the flow direction (which in my case should have been perpendicular to the cylinder) and for this reason I can't get the correct results. My question is how do I use the tool correctly in my case? Is the geometry selection wrong? The answer could be simple I guess, but I am really new here.

Thanks in advance,
Tasos
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Rob McDonald

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Jan 2, 2024, 1:29:44 PM1/2/24
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Not only does OpenVSP assume the flow is generally aligned with the original orientation of the StackGeom -- the form factor equations are based on non-separated flow.  So, even if you made something that oriented properly looked cylinder like, it would still not have the right drag.

Rob

Tasos Seitanidis

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Jan 2, 2024, 1:34:33 PM1/2/24
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Thank you for the answer. Is it possible to do this another way or should I use a different tool?

Rob McDonald

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Jan 2, 2024, 1:44:37 PM1/2/24
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You should use a handbook method such as Hoerner's Fluid Dynamic Drag to estimate the drag on the cylinder.

If it is a part of an aircraft model in OpenVSP, you should then add it to the rest of the buildup as an excressence.

Rob


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Rob McDonald

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Jan 2, 2024, 3:00:43 PM1/2/24
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In this case, the parasite drag tool is treating the cross section as an attached airfoil with t/c=1.0 -- there is little reason to think this corresponds well to a cylinder.

Rob


On Tue, Jan 2, 2024 at 11:44 AM Tasos Seitanidis <tasos...@gmail.com> wrote:
For anyone interested I think I solved the issue by using a wing and circular coordinates in the airfoil file. This way the parasite drag tool gave me correct results for the cylindrical geometry. Thank you again for your answers.
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