HarvardIV wrote:
However, you've got to consider the torsional reaction load on the wing from a deflected aileron.
Your patch does not change the torsional forces from the aileron. They are the same with or without the patch. Also, torsional load is primarily reacted by shear in the wing skins. Your patch with a doubler ring is stiffer than the original skin, so torsional deflection should be reduced- although this should not be significant enough to be noticable.
HarvardIV wrote:
Also, my other question along these lines is in regards to the lift differential caused be a minor flush patch out near the wingtip. Would this low differential be enough to result in a tendency for a wing to drop during a stall?
If the patch is truly flush the airfoil will not know it is there. The leading edge shape contributes the most to lift at the stall. Any disturbance there has a large effect. As you go aft, the T-6 airfoil sees turbulent flow so roughness or deviations from loft have a lesser effect. I have been told by someone who did it that his well Bondoed T-6 wing exhibited much gentler stall characteristics because the flow stayed attached to the wing much further aft.
HarvardIV wrote:
The question above relates to my friend who won the Reno races 3 yrs in a row. He had ballast in the tail of his plane to contribute some extra speed. Anyway he plane was spin prohibited, and a passenger decided to spin it, and they nearly bought the farm. Well, the reason why they didn't is that the PIC opened the canopy to bail out, and the pressure differential from the opened canopy recovered the aircraft!
Well, maybe. Either the plane was on the verge of recovering and the time it took to open the canopy was enough to finally gain control, or the opening of the canopy changed the airflow over the tail enough to regain control.