Range and endurance are fundamental measures of airplane performance, describing how far or how long an aircraft can fly on a given amount of fuel. For propeller-driven airplanes, these quantities depend on aerodynamic efficiency, engine performance, and fuel consumption characteristics.
1. Definitions
1.1 Range
- The maximum horizontal distance an airplane can travel on a given fuel load.
- Important for planning routes, avoiding refueling stops, and optimizing mission profiles.
1.2 Endurance
- The maximum time an airplane can remain airborne on a given fuel load.
- Critical for loitering, surveillance, search and rescue, and training missions.
2. Basic Principles
The key idea: Fuel flow provides power to overcome drag.
- For propeller aircraft, fuel flow rate is proportional to power required, not thrust alone.
Power required for steady, level flight:
Where:
= Drag
= True airspeed
3. Fuel Consumption in Propeller Aircraft
3.1 Brake Specific Fuel Consumption (BSFC)
- Measure of engine efficiency.
Units: lb/(hp·hr) or kg/(kW·hr).
Lower BSFC indicates better engine efficiency.
4. Endurance for Propeller Airplane
Endurance (E) is the total time aloft:
Fuel flow rate for a piston/propeller engine is proportional to power required:
Hence:
4.1 Condition for Maximum Endurance
- Minimum power required.
At minimum power speed:
- Aircraft uses fuel most slowly per unit time.
- Best for loitering or maximizing time aloft.
Graphically:
- Power required vs. speed curve is U-shaped.
- Minimum point on the curve → maximum endurance.
5. Range for Propeller Airplane
Range (R) is the total horizontal distance flown:
Considering fuel flow rate:
But fuel flow rate is proportional to power required:
So:
5.1 Condition for Maximum Range
- Maximize the ratio
.
Aerodynamic Interpretation
Therefore:
Key Insight:
- Maximum range occurs at maximum lift-to-drag ratio (
).
6. Summary of Optimal Conditions
Quantity | Optimize for |
---|---|
Endurance | Minimum power required |
Range | Maximum lift-to-drag ratio |
7. Example Formulas
7.1 Endurance Estimate
If fuel flow rate :
= Total fuel weight
= Fuel consumption constant
7.2 Range Estimate
Maximizing yields maximum range.
8. Practical Considerations
- Altitude: Affects air density, engine efficiency, and drag.
- Weight: Heavier aircraft require more lift → higher drag.
- Propeller efficiency (
): Real-world propeller efficiency reduces available power for propulsion.
- Wind: Tailwinds increase groundspeed (effective range), headwinds decrease it.
9. Operational Significance
- Max Endurance Flight:
- Search-and-rescue loiter
- Holding patterns before landing
- Max Range Flight:
- Ferry flights
- Long cross-country trips
Pilots consult aircraft performance charts to determine appropriate speeds for maximum range and endurance under given conditions.
10. Summary
For propeller airplanes:
- Endurance is maximized at minimum power required speed, yielding longest time aloft.
- Range is maximized at maximum
ratio speed, yielding longest distance per unit of fuel.
Understanding these principles enables efficient flight planning, fuel management, and mission optimization.