The effect of mass on airplane turning radius?

AI Thread Summary
In comparing two airplanes of different masses flying at the same speed, the heavier plane generally requires a larger turning radius due to its greater inertia. However, the turning radius is primarily influenced by airspeed and roll angle rather than mass alone. While a heavier plane needs to generate more lift to maintain level flight, the centripetal force acting on both planes can yield the same turn radius if speed is constant. Practically, heavier planes often fly faster to generate the necessary lift, which can lead to larger turning radii in comparison to lighter planes. Overall, the relationship between mass and turning radius is complex and varies with specific flight conditions.
dbaezner
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I've been trolling for this answer on the Internet but can't find a simple explanation.

If I have two airplanes of different mass, both flying at the same speed, which plane has the larger turning radius and why? It seems like the more massive plane would require the larger turning radius due to its greater inertia. Can a plane's yaw, pitch, and roll be used to counter for this effect?

Thanks very much.
Dirk
 
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For regular curves, the pilot can choose the curve radius. There is some limit, of course*, but that is certainly not in the range of regular operations.

If all other conditions are the same**, I would expect that the airplane with a larger mass has a larger curve radius.

* do you count diving? It really reduces the curve radius ;).
**well, they cannot be exactly the same, as one airplane needs more lift than the other one
 
If the plane has more mass, the wings must produce more lift to maintain level flight (i.e. to make lift = weight).

Therefore, (to a first approximation) for the same amount of roll, the turn radius is independent of the mass, but only depends on the airspeed. The proportion of the lift (perpendicular to the wings) that is turned into centripetal force depends only on the roll angle. More centripetal force, acting on more mass, gives the same centripetal acceleration and the same turn radius, if the speed is the same.

But in practice, heavier planes tend to generate more lift by flying faster than light ones, which explains why small planes tend to make sharper turns than big ones for the same amount of roll.

Note: the above is about a non-aerobatic aircraft flying a circle at constant altitude. If you include motion in 3 dimensions and/or aerobatics, the answer would be a lot more complicated!
 
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