wbnc said:
Tenacious-Techhunter said:
The upshot of the Whitcomb Area Rule is that, as the wing increases in centerline axis area, the body has to shrink to compensate, to keep the same total area. Alternately, bulges before and after the wing can be used to compensate for the wings being added to an otherwise fixed fuselage shape. You should also try to change the centerline axis area as little as possible over the whole shape; a suggestion, for which, there are reasonable limits in what can be accomplished, many of them setting specific.
Having trouble converting text into a mental image on your description

one of those odd mental lapses that occur on a regular basis.
The Whitcomb Area Rule can lead to some not-so-obvious consequences that are ultimately more efficient... Let’s see if I can dig up some pictures...
This is a very obvious example:
You’ll notice how the fuselage pinches in at the point most related to where the wing reaches full extension; this is to keep the total area of the centerline cross-section the same; it makes the wings less aerodynamically “bulgy”, by giving the air the wings displaced room to go somewhere.
A more subtle example:
This one is not very obvious, but now that you know what to look for, you can see it; the fuselage gently narrows until the wing tips reach full extension, then it stops, and bulges back out a bit, before it ultimately narrows again.
An even more subtle example:
This one is tricky, and requires a careful look at the 3-view drawing. You will see that the fuselage narrows in the vertical as the wings start just behind the cockpit, and then it widens in the horizontal just as the fully outstretched wings end.
An example where the rule is applied to the aircraft somewhere else:
“But the fuselage isn’t changing at all!”; no, it isn’t. But just as the trailing edge of the wing pops up, the nacelles behind the inner engines sprout,
slowing the change in area; which is
almost as important as eliminating it. If you can’t
kill a change in area,
at least slow it down.
Any time you see some weird bulge in an aircraft, and even in ocean-going ships, looking at the centerline cross-sections will help you understand why it’s there. It’s there to minimize the change in cross-sectional area along the length of the craft, which reduces the drag. It doesn’t have to be done obviously, either; I pointed out some really old examples because it’s most obvious in those examples how it was done; more modern examples make it either really subtle, or really inexplicable; but it does have to be done to properly optimize an aircraft.