Jon Kimmel wrote:

>> Something I found interesting with the new airfoil is that it
looks like the sweep is different than what is in the plans.<<

The sweep is different because the airfoil shapes (AS405x and RAF48) are 
different with regards to thickness vs coordinates, so to make the 
airfoil fit the stock dimensioned spars, a slight fore/aft adjustment 
had to be made to get the best fit compromise between airfoil and front 
and aft spar dimensions.  This was done at root and tip and then 
cross-sections were cut through the wing model at the Y-axis template 
locations  to define the scale and spar locations at those cross sections.

The term "new airfoil" seems funny now.  It's been so long since I made 
those templates I'm starting to forget the details!  It was inevitable, 
but time has proven that it's a worthwhile improvement, despite the 
naysayers....

It'll take a few beers to make me finish that sentence at KMMV!

Also, Richard Mole, an English aerodynamicist and good friend, did a 
"full blown" analysis of the KR2 at about the time of the new airfoil 
inception (20 years ago now!) and concluded that the aft 2" of the CG 
range was unsafe.  This was many years after the first KR2 pilots 
concluded the same thing, the hard way.  This was done in way more 
detail than is usual, including stability derivatives and considering a 
lot of characteristics specific to the plane.  I think his words were 
something like "I sure hope nobody's tried to fly one of these with the 
CG that far aft!".

Anybody wondering how far forward you can fly a KR, consider N891JF. 
Jim Faughn set the CG with him and full fuel right at the forward 
end...exactly on it.  It's not a handful in smooth air, and will do the 
phugoid thing all day, as long as it doesn't drift off left or right. 
Needless to say, it requires some nose-up trim to keep it level, but it 
still turns in some respectable speeds and efficiency, even with the 
RAF48 airfoil.

Mark Langford
ML at N56ML.com
http://www.n56ml.com


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