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"Downthrust" is a common engine mount feature of propeller driven aircraft, models and full scale alike.

From model building experience and flight, downthrust, angling the (tractor) engine mount down a few degrees seems to relax static stability a bit when full power is applied by counter-acting tail down force and enabling flight at various speeds with less trimming.

The effect in a full power climb would be a higher trim speed than a power off glide at the same trim.

Yet many people on this site strongly feel that lift must be less than weight in a climb.

I think it can be (rockets do this well), but using the wing to climb seems far more efficient, as witnessed by superior climb and distance performance at Vcc (cruise climb) and Vy compared with Vx as seen in this reference

The larger slower wing produces much more force than the smaller, faster propeller. Additionally, at Vx, increased angle of attack, with thrust used to counter additional drag may be a better strategy than reducing wing lift and trying to replace it with a vertical thrust component. Most GA planes will lose airspeed at this point. At cruise climb speeds, the thrust vector may well be slightly below the line of flight, yet less fuel is consumed per distance than even Vy!

any other climb path is just another point in the ratio of lift + thrust + surplus thrust for climbing

Let's apply our "surplus thrust" and see what happens:

  1. Increasing thrust increases airspeed
  2. Increasing airspeed causes aircraft to pitch up
  3. Airspeed stabilizes (to trim airspeed) at higher pitch (relative to the horizon).
  4. $cosine$ of lift vector (vertical lift) decreases

In order to maintain vertical lift we:

a) speed up b) increase angle of attack c) pitch up even more

Here lies the crux of the issue. Most GA aircraft have a thrust to weight ratio of 1:4. Attempting to replace a 300 lb weightlifter with a 75 lb one will have predictable results.

"Lift is less than weight in a climb" is based on the assumption that lift is perpendicular to the thrust line...and the (upward pointed) thrust vector is carrying part of the weight

That's not the best way to do it, and is known as "helicoptering". the wings job is to produce enough $vertical$ $lift$ to make the aircraft "weightless", so the engine thrust only opposes drag. It is extremely wasteful to use thrust to "lift weight", unless the aircraft is pitched at so high an angle as to make the wings drag greater than its vertical lft contribution.

a) and b) seem to be the correct answers, as seen in the "real world" as Vx, Vy, and Vcc.

Is there a way to reconcile this academic quandary?

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Robert DiGiovanni
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    It isn't clear to me what you are asking. What do you mean by "line of flight"? – Michael Hall Jun 24 '20 at 03:01
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    If you have enough thrust horsepower, you can point straight up, where the wings are making NO lift. Any other climb path is just another point in ratio of lift +thrust+surplus thrust for climb. The engine is just canted down to put the thrust line horizontal at the airplane's cruising deck angle. – John K Jun 24 '20 at 03:10
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    I think you should add a drawing to explain what you mean. – Manu H Jun 24 '20 at 07:14
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    Hard to believe people are (desperately) trying to close this. 1. Line of flight is the direction the air craft is travelling. which, as we know from crabbing, is not necessarily where the "nose" is pointing. 2. Ok, John, if you want to compare fuel consumption rates of rockets and aircraft, I'm game. Hint: why are helicopter rotors large and slow. I'm hoping we can put politics aside and focus on science. I'll be blunt, let's not cover for a design concept that perhaps needs to be scrapped. – Robert DiGiovanni Jun 24 '20 at 07:18
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    "Yet many people on this site strongly feel that lift must be less than weight in a climb." That statement is based on the underlying assumption that the thrust line is perpendicular to the lift vector, so that the thrust carries part of the weight. Of course, if the thrust line is angled downward, many people;) will agree that this might not be the case anymore. – Sanchises Jun 24 '20 at 07:33
  • Thrust is best used to oppose drag. It is a misconception that a plane nose up is using thrust to "help it climb". No, it maintains airspeed. The lift vector must be larger as the $cosine$ of the lift vector, vertical lift, opposes weight. – Robert DiGiovanni Jun 24 '20 at 09:47
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    << I'll be blunt, let's not cover for a design concept that perhaps needs to be scrapped.>> well then. are you here to ask something and learn from the answers you get, or are you here to ask questions that are only a mask for lectures you want to dispense? apart from that, as Sanchises says, you better check your assumptions. – Federico Jun 24 '20 at 12:48
  • Roger, that is all I ask of others. We can all learn something here. – Robert DiGiovanni Jun 24 '20 at 12:57
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    Nobody is desperate to close this, and nobody has said anything political. It just isn't a good question. – Michael Hall Jun 24 '20 at 15:47
  • Can't resist continuing this. Don't mind the downvotes. – Robert DiGiovanni Jun 27 '20 at 23:19

1 Answers1

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Yes, it can. As you say, that lowered thrust line adds to the lift requirement, but not dramatically so.

I guess the technical term you mean is called downthrust. Together with sidethrust, this offset alignment of the propeller axis helps to reduce retrimming when thrust is changed.

Downthrust has two effects:

  1. It increases the angle of attack on the tail slightly when thrust is increased, thus trimming the airplane for a higher speed. The angle of attack on the tail is the sum of free flow, downwash from the wing and propeller slipstream. More thrust increases the contribution of the propeller, and if that slipstream is coming at a positive angle, the resulting angle of attack on the tail is also increased, adding some lift and lowering the nose for faster flight.
  2. It helps to shift the propeller slipstream up so the vertical tail "sees" a more symmetric slipstream. Without downthrust, the tail would fly in the upper half of the slipstream and swirl would lead to a sideslip angle there. By lifting the slipstream up, the lower vertical tail now flies in the lower part of the propeller slipstream and experiences an offsetting sideslip angle to the one hitting the upper part of the vertical.
Peter Kämpf
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  • @RobertDiGiovanni: Downthrust is meant to avoid exactly this pitch-up by adding a pitch-down moment that increases with thrust. The relaxation of static stability is a different phenomenon: The propeller acts like an additional aerodynamic surface and creates sideforces in pitch and lift in yaw. This answer covers that aspect. – Peter Kämpf Jun 24 '20 at 08:44
  • Right, downthrust will create a staticly stable trim at a lower angle of attack (and higher airspeed). Why? Naturally, the pilot (or computer) can do the same by pitching down a little. And we do need more thrust to climb in any case. But isn't it better to use increased thrust to increase speed slightly (Vy) or to labor away at a lower airspeed and higher AOA? – Robert DiGiovanni Jun 24 '20 at 09:43
  • How would you design an aircraft that could go to full power at approach speed for a go around? Like every plane ever designed, that's how. – Michael Hall Jun 24 '20 at 14:41