thibault
Member
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2009
- Messages
- 191
I performed the National Test Pilot School (NTPS) procedure to verify TAS. This is the three leg test where the aircraft is flown at constant power, airspeed, altitude over three GPS tracks while recording the GPS track and the GPS groundspeed values. These six values can be used to solve for TAS and Wind Direction and Wind Speed. The NTPS website has a spread sheet that does all the calculations for you at http://www.ntps.edu/information/downloads
What I found was that the Dynon calculated TAS (which is IAS corrected for pressure and temperature) was within two Knots of the NTPS calculation, so that is good.
The wind direction was way off and wildly different during each of the three legs. So my question is, since the Dynon TAS is pretty good, does the problem probably point at the compass calibration?
My rationale is that significant errors in OAT, static pressure or pitot pressure measurement would have made the TAS off by more than 2 Knots
What I found was that the Dynon calculated TAS (which is IAS corrected for pressure and temperature) was within two Knots of the NTPS calculation, so that is good.
The wind direction was way off and wildly different during each of the three legs. So my question is, since the Dynon TAS is pretty good, does the problem probably point at the compass calibration?
My rationale is that significant errors in OAT, static pressure or pitot pressure measurement would have made the TAS off by more than 2 Knots