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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 11:18 
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Max range for the CJ is just over 1300 nm in the best of cases... by yourself. With the winglets, TAG has been getting north of 1750 nm with max range settings.

That's BS.

Winglets do not increase the range of an airplane by 35%.

They don't increase cruise speed by 35%, they don't reduce fuel flow by 35%, or any combination of the two that results in 35% more range.

Mike C.


That max range increase is based on being able to climb to max altitude FL410 much quicker. Once up there you get much less FF.

It requires ATC cooperation in getting an unrestricted climb and staying high as long as practical.

And those flights landed with very marginal fuel reserves. They are not flying an NBAA IFR profile.

It is not going to work in and out of busy complex air spaces. And you need that long range mission continuously to make economic sense. I'd rather get a CJ2 if I needed that range consistently.
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Last edited on 29 Aug 2015, 11:26, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 11:19 
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Username Protected wrote:
Max range for the CJ is just over 1300 nm in the best of cases... by yourself. With the winglets, TAG has been getting north of 1750 nm with max range settings.

That's BS.

Winglets do not increase the range of an airplane by 35%.

They don't increase cruise speed by 35%, they don't reduce fuel flow by 35%, or any combination of the two that results in 35% more range.

Mike C.


Wow - nice and courteous post Mike! Always good to read your editorial comments.

Nobody said these winglets increased speed by 35%, reduced fuel flow by 35% or increased range by 35%. Winglets typically offer 3-5% fuel savings across the board. What these winglets do is allow the CJ to climb to altitude (where you consume less fuel) in half the time. They also do not carry the weight penalty of having to beef up the wing structure due to the load alleviation surfaces. This is something worth watching - at least Cessna thinks so - otherwise they wouldn't have signed up to the program as they have. At this point it is all speculation.

http://www.tamarackaero.com/tags-world- ... light.html

Having said that, there is no way a straight CJ would have been able to go this distance (1853 nm) no matter how much you try to throttle back.

Last edited on 29 Aug 2015, 13:37, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 11:48 
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Username Protected wrote:
Cessna has signed a deal with them to be the exclusive installer/reseller (something that speaks volumes about the solution).



I would not read more into Cessna's deal with Tamarack then that Cessna wants to make the money on the installs. I don't believe it says anything about the benefits or the performance claims. It does say that Cessna is willing to support the mod in their Service Centers.

It is no lose to Cessna. If the market rejects this mod they lose little. If owners buy the mod for the sex appeal or claimed benefits Cessna drives customers and revenue into the Service Center. And I will bet that any plane that comes in for that mod will have other work done delivering incremental revenue.

Cessna needs to drive business into their Citation Service Centers. This is an economic deal. Cessna also locked out other shops from doing installs at lower cost.

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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 12:57 
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Username Protected wrote:
Cessna has signed a deal with them to be the exclusive installer/reseller (something that speaks volumes about the solution).



I would not read more into Cessna's deal with Tamarack then that Cessna wants to make the money on the installs. I don't believe it says anything about the benefits or the performance claims. It does say that Cessna is willing to support the mod in their Service Centers.

It is no lose to Cessna. If the market rejects this mod they lose little. If owners buy the mod for the sex appeal or claimed benefits Cessna drives customers and revenue into the Service Center. And I will bet that any plane that comes in for that mod will have other work done delivering incremental revenue.

Cessna needs to drive business into their Citation Service Centers. This is an economic deal. Cessna also locked out other shops from doing installs at lower cost.


Fair enough Allen. You probably have a better feel for these things than most. It remains to be seen how this evolves.

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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 13:06 
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$300K for winglets? Am I reading that right? Wow.


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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 13:15 
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Username Protected wrote:
$300K for winglets? Am I reading that right? Wow.


Their solution is more than some bolt on wing tips. It includes active flight controls and electronics.

It is still pricey but I am sure their certification was not cheap.

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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 13:23 
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Username Protected wrote:
Their solution is more than some bolt on wing tips. It includes active flight controls and electronics.

It is still pricey but I am sure their certification was not cheap.

The performance enhancement is amazing.


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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 13:45 
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The performance enhancement is amazing.

Look like it...but won't help you much VFR at 17,500' :D

Glenn


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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 13:47 
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Username Protected wrote:
Nobody said these winglets ... increased range by 35%.

Alex did:

Max range for the CJ is just over 1300 nm in the best of cases... by yourself. With the winglets, TAG has been getting north of 1750 nm with max range settings.

That's a 35% increase. That's what I questioned.

Quote:
Winglets typically offer 3-5% fuel savings across the board.

That's believable.

Quote:
What these winglets do is allow the CJ to climb to altitude (where you consume less fuel) in half the time.

Understood, but most of that time savings is in the last bit of climb where you are already at fairly low fuel flows. It isn't, as one might superficially assume, providing twice the climb rate over most of the climb profile. The little bit extra effective wing area from a winglet provides the lower induced drag at high altitude to make the climb rate at TOC better.

Quote:
They also do not carry the weight penalty of having to beef up the wing structure due to the load alleviation surfaces.

Winglets eat into the design margin of the wing structure. That's a given. They function by moving the center of lift further outboard, essentially making the wing tip area generate more lift, thus lowering the effective wing loading. If you don't change the structure, but move the center of lift out board, the wing is less strong. That's inescapable. Now there may be enough margin in the wing to still meet FAR 23 requirements, but you can't put winglets on a wing and not change the point at which the wing will break.

That is why adding winglets often reduces Va, for example.

Quote:
This is something worth watching - at least Cessna thinks so

Winglets have a good PR machine behind them. They have benefits, but not nearly to the extent claimed in much of the sales literature.

Quote:
Having said that, there is no way a straight CJ would have been able to go this distance (1853 nm) no matter how much you try to throttle back.

That flight is too old for me to get data on it from Flightaware, so I can't verify they were honest in the presentation. If I had date and time, I could look up soundings and verify the claimed 26 knots tailwind figure. The article is dates June 6, 2013, a Thursday, maybe this was June 4, 2013 from the sound of the AIN report saying "Tuesday night"? I'll look that date up and see what the winds aloft actually were.

Even so, 1859 nm distance minus the 163 nm tailwind benefit is 1,696 nm and to land with 70 gallons of fuel in a CJ is very marginal, clearly not enough for the NBAA IFR range protocol with a 100 nm alternate. So we may be comparing apples to oranges here.

Mike C.

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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 14:02 
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Username Protected wrote:

Quote:
They also do not carry the weight penalty of having to beef up the wing structure due to the load alleviation surfaces.

Winglets eat into the design margin of the wing structure. That's a given. They function by moving the center of lift further outboard, essentially making the wing tip area generate more lift, thus lowering the effective wing loading. If you don't change the structure, but move the center of lift out board, the wing is less strong. That's inescapable. Now there may be enough margin in the wing to still meet FAR 23 requirements, but you can't put winglets on a wing and not change the point at which the wing will break.


That's where Tamaracks active flight controls come in to reduce the wing loading. Thus the additional cost over passive winglets.

If their claims are correct then there will be no penalty. Apparently the FAA and Cessna has bought into their engineering and flight test data on the wing loading.

If they are wrong then there will be and AD in a few years.

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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 14:03 
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Username Protected wrote:
Their solution is more than some bolt on wing tips. It includes active flight controls and electronics.

It is still pricey but I am sure their certification was not cheap.

The performance enhancement is amazing.


Color me skeptical in other than some edge cases.
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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 14:10 
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Username Protected wrote:
That flight is too old for me to get data on it from Flightaware, so I can't verify they were honest in the presentation. If I had date and time, I could look up soundings and verify the claimed 26 knots tailwind figure. The article is dates June 6, 2013, a Thursday, maybe this was June 4, 2013 from the sound of the AIN report saying "Tuesday night"? I'll look that date up and see what the winds aloft actually were.

Even so, 1859 nm distance minus the 163 nm tailwind benefit is 1,696 nm and to land with 70 gallons of fuel in a CJ is very marginal, clearly not enough for the NBAA IFR range protocol with a 100 nm alternate. So we may be comparing apples to oranges here.

Mike C.


Whatever Mike... I'll ask Tamarack to contact you when they are finished with EASA and the FAA so you can also certify their claims.

1,696 nm - with your adjustments - marginal or not is not doable in a straight CJ under any circumstances. You would flame out 300 nm before reaching this point.


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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 14:16 
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Username Protected wrote:
That's where Tamaracks active flight controls come in to reduce the wing loading.

Those come into play only during high loads. Their system is basically a lift dump when G loads exceed a certain level. This is useful to keep the ultimate load on the wing less.

How do you know the lift dump works? What happens if it isn't? What power does it depend on? What do you do if that power fails? What do you do if it activates when it should not?

This is borderline fly by wire. A computer is moving control surfaces.

If they get this approved by the FAA, why not equip all airplanes with these lift dump devices and then we can make weaker, lighter wings.

Also, during normal flight, the wing spar IS under more stress as the winglets DO move the center of lift outward. If the winglets did not do that, they would not have any aerodynamic benefits.

Quote:
If their claims are correct then there will be no penalty.

Very small increases in wing stress have radical reductions in wing fatigue life.

Mike C.

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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 14:21 
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Below is from the Cessna CJ1 Flight Planning Guide. Difference between the CJ and CJ1 is largely in the avionics and performance is similar.

Get to FL410 30 minutes quicker and cut into the fuel reserve and it looks like you can get 300 - 400 nm more range. Buyers have to ask themselves how often they can safely fly that profile.

Attachment:
2015-08-29_1416.png


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 Post subject: Re: Considering a CJ partnership
PostPosted: 29 Aug 2015, 14:28 
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Username Protected wrote:
Quote:
If their claims are correct then there will be no penalty.

Very small increases in wing stress have radical reductions in wing fatigue life.


You choose not to quote my next statement which was "If they are wrong then there will be and AD in a few years." So I think we agree that there are unknown risks in this design. Buyers need to consider who will pay for any AD repairs since it is likely that Tamarack does not have deep pockets for that.

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