Jim, What is your occupation? Lots of people don't understand boundry layers and Reynolds numbers. Bobby
> .This is absolutely nuts, comparing the flight of a golf ball to an > airplane is like comparing the weight of a bowling ball to a ballon. The > airplane with a laminar flow airfoil on the wing is the lowest drag you > can get and is the fastests, but to get laminar flow the surface must be > very smooth and free of waves even fly specks will trip the flow at high > Reynolds numbers above 15 million and bugs also will. the Reynolds > numbers on the KR-2 and most general aviation aircraft is in the range > from 2 million to about 4 million which is the real key to this anology > of the golf ball and the KR-2 the Reynolds number for the golf ball is > about 100 and the reason the drag is lower for the golf ball with the > dents in it is the flow becoms turbulent and reduces the seperation drag > because below a Reynolds number of 400,000 the drag of a laminar flow > airfoil is higher than turbulent flow and so it is with the golf ball, > the Reynolds number is much less than 400,000. ITS THE REYNOLDS NUMBER. > > Really > Jim > > _______________________________________ > Search the KRnet Archives at http://www.maddyhome.com/krsrch/index.jsp > to UNsubscribe from KRnet, send a message to krnet-le...@mylist.net > please see other KRnet info at http://www.krnet.org/info.html >