@ersakthivel,
You have no idea of what you are posting here and you have absolutely no idea of what is the meaning of CG being above CP or use of thrustline.
Will you shut the bloody F**K if I give you the proof of F-16xl thrustline?
The language you used here shows the kind of dumbass you are faking to be a know all.Who the f**k is needed to show proof about F-16 Xl's thrust line . A troll like you or me?
Who advanced the spurious argument that F-16 Xl's low thrust line and not the fantastic low wing loading cranked delta RSS airframe being the reason behind it's stupendous performance?
It is you.NOT ME. Before asking me to show proof about F-16 XL thrust line get it into your air tight head that you are the one who advanced this F**King argument. Not me.
I just quoted that what the designer of the F-16 XL saying that,","F-16 Xl's fantastic low wing loading cranked delta RSS airframe being the reason behind it's stupendous performance and not the low thrust line"".
This is the accepted norm for posting in open forum.Know the damned rule first.If you cannot quote any credible web site for your defense, Don't lunge on the person doing exactly that like a rabis infested dog.
There are legions of retards roaming the net sprouting foolish theory. I don't have time to argue with proficient BS posters.
You are novice to this world and you are harping on things you have no clue about. Power or thrust can also have a destabilizing effect in that an increase of power may tend to make the nose rise. The aircraft designer can offset this by establishing a "high thrust line" wherein the line of thrust passes above the CG as power or thrust is increased a moment is produced to counteract the down load on the tail. On the other hand, a very "low thrust line" would tend to add to the nose-up effect of the horizontal tail surface. This is what was applied in M3 and M2K. wherein the partial pitch moment of RSS was offset by thrustline use.
yeah, I have seen it all being explained with three figures of a prop driven aircraft with three illustrations, with three vector lines indicating center of lift,center of gravity and a down load on the tail. it is no rocket science beyond my comprehension.
Just think about whether those three illustrations on which you place your entire faith have any relation to the cranked delta tail less RSS layout. Those illustrations are done to explain the pros and cons of wing arrangement of classic positive static stability fighters of yore.
Don't imagine yourself to be Newton and Einsteen combined after explaining these mundane class -I lessons to me.
Aircraft designing is a holistic science, not faking a few useless argument.All forces that act on the F**king thrust line should act through the center of lift or pressure which is the cumulative point which focus's the lift force which is planned in front of the CG in RSS airframe.That is what the difference between Mirage-III and Mirage-2000, and not any other BS you expound here.
It is not stated by something a hothead like you who posts BS clothed as knowledge. this. It is the authoritative science called Aerodynamcis.
The CG of an aircraft exists in three dimensions. It's position not only effects the balance of the aircraft, but how the aircraft reacts when power is applied or reduced. A thrust line above or below the longitudinal axis creates different behavior during power changes, mostly in the pitching moment about the lateral axis.
A simple application of Newtons Law (which ignores some other effects) says the if the thrust line is above the CG, the nose will pitch down when power is added, and up when power is reduced. If the thrust line is below the CG, the effect is opposite.
The basic postulate of aerodynamics is that any thrust on the thrust line is to act through the center of LIFT or center of pressure and nothing else. RSS airframe deals with this theory and fixes the position of the CG behind the CP or CL in subsonic and trans sonic flight to achieve super agility. Rest of the BS like TYPHOON has lower thrust line , mirage has lower thrust line is known to any kid.
Only a hero like you can dodge accepting simple facts like and go on posting your own fancy BS like F-16 XL's lower thrust line is the sole reason for it's superlative performance.
And finally when proved otherwise brazenly asking the other guy for proof of F-16 XL's thrust line!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Think of it like a rope being around your neck, your waist, or your feet and what would happen to your balance when it is suddenly tugged by someone in front of you. If around your neck, you'd pitch forward and fall face down. If your feet, you'd pitch face up and land on your back. If around your waist, you'd maintain your balance. Same basic effect in an airplane.
These rope trick and tugging are based on the premise that a person is planted on the ground with his feet and the rope is tied in a fixed point on the pole . But a fighter is a free body floating in the air with force couple between the CG , CP and the act of all the control surfaces to configure all these into useful flight.No one drives a nail through the Cg of the fighter so you can tug with your thrust line on it.
If lift force produces an upward moment . the Cg produces a downward moment that's all. By placing CG behind the CL a nose up momentum is produced and maintained. As simple as that.
All the force that acts on the thrust line should act through the cumulative point called center of lift.
If this center of lift is placed behind the CG (in a positive static stability config ) there is no F***king way to avoid a downward momentum that will certainly be caused by the CG which lies in front of CP or CL.
It is actually quite a bit more complicated than that. First is the issue of whether the center of thrust (different from the centerline of thrust) is ahead or behind the CG.
DOES THE FORCE ALONG THE THRUST LINE ACT THROUGH THE CENTER OF LIFT (which is the point of focus of cumulative lift produced by all the control and lifting surfaces )OR NOT?
Contemplate it and you will have all the answers to yourself.
There is also the issue of whether the thrust line is parallel to the longitudinal axis, or if it is slightly offset, above, below, or to one side. Designers vary these things to obtain the desired handling characteristics or to serve other more important needs. If you set a centre line, then set the elevator to 0 degrees, then for positive stability, you need the wing to have a positive incidence, with a lifting air foil, the CG below the wing, and if the thrust line is on the same line, you need down thrust. If you set the engine to 0 degrees, when you open the throttle, the airframe will tend to loop. With down thrust, it wil pull the nose down when power is increased, so you will stay in level flight. If the thrust line is above the CG, the engine needs less down thrust. If the thrust line is below the CG, the engine needs more down thrust. The relation between the thrust line and the CG depends on the nose moment, which is the distance between the CG location and the point at which the thrust acts.
What is the relation between the center of lift and the thrust line?
If the forces along the thrust line act through center of LIFT or NOT?
If they act then the logic of RSS is unbreaable. No amount of waffling will change that.
The longer the nose moment is, the longer the effective lever is, and the less shift in thrust line is needed.
You have learnt just three letters about stability and design of an aircraft R S S and you think that you have mastered it all.
Just learn that wherever the thrust line is all the force along the line should act through the center of lift. And you will get it easy.
That is why all modern multi role high agility fighters like M2K,TYPHOON, RAFALE, F-16 ,tejas,grippen, F-22,F-16 Xl are all low wing loading tail less delta either with a CRANK or COMPOUND or LREX or CANARD or Diamond shaped wing RSS airframe irrespective of the fact where the hell their thrust line is. The objective of the crank or canard or lrex or compound delta is to create lift inducing vortices and delay the onset of stall to increase the aerodynamic efficiency of the wing at close combat corner speed High AOA dog fight maneuvers.
Can please explain to me as to how RSS helps in SUSTAINING high AOA? What use are vortex generators or LERX if RSS cud do it all for F-16? I suggest that you read something more than wiki and more advanced rather than rely on articles which you can't even understand. All this while I have been discussing about higher and lower thrustline while you are hung on RSS.