Area of a plane in square meters

case guesstimation
Recent activity on May 07, 2018
2 Answers
3.7 k Views
Anonymous A asked on May 07, 2018

Hello,

I was doing an investment case earlier todayand was told to calculate the area of a plane in square meters. Suffice to say that I lost all confidence at tat point. How would you calculate the surface area of a plane?

Overview of answers

Upvotes
  • Upvotes
  • Date ascending
  • Date descending
Best answer
Anonymous replied on May 07, 2018

So you'll just need to brush up a bit on your high-school geometry / trigonometry / mensuration.

Best to solve these by drawing it out on a piece of paper. Roughly, a plane is:

- a long cylinder of radius R

- wings

- few other parts but mostly negligible so mention them + say we'll ignore or add 10% to final ans.

For cylinder, the radius is obviously changing, but you can do a rough estimate of an average R that's midway between the min (at the nose) and max (at the center). Then surface area is 2*pi*r*length + some rough estimate of the two edges, say 5% extra.

For wings, it's a standard triangle roughly right-angled. Assume the sides, and make an estimate.

HTHs

Was this answer helpful?
2
Retired
Expert
replied on May 07, 2018
Former BCG interviewer

Agreed with suggested approach. Do remember to multiply wings by four, not just 2 (top and bottom surface).

Also no need to specify whether the wing has a right angle (it does not) or not and put yourself in hot waters unneccesarely, just assume how much the wing is sticking out from the fuselage (height of triangle) and how long is where it attaches to it (base). Then area of triangle (whether with a right angle or not) is height*base/2.

Hope it helps,

Andrea

Was this answer helpful?
1
How likely are you to recommend us to a friend or fellow student?
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
0 = Not likely
10 = Very likely