Definition
The lift-to-drag ratio is the amount of lift an aircraft (or wing) produces compared to the amount of drag it produces at a given angle of attack. It is calculated by dividing lift by drag and is a direct measure of aerodynamic efficiency. A higher L/D means the aircraft generates more lift for each unit of drag, which translates into better glide performance, lower fuel burn at cruise, and improved range. Each airfoil has a specific angle of attack at which L/D is at its maximum, known as L/Dmax.
Plain English
It tells you how much lift you get for the drag you pay. The bigger the number, the more efficient the wing is at that moment. Pilots care because flying at the angle that gives the best L/D gives the best glide and the most efficient flight.
Context Anchor
Seen in aerodynamics discussions, glide performance, aircraft performance charts, and explanations of why a certain airspeed gives the best glide distance.
Derivation
It is literally a ratio: lift divided by drag. The word 'ratio' comes from Latin ratio meaning 'reckoning' or 'calculation' — a straightforward comparison of one quantity against another.
Why Pilots Care
A higher ratio means the aircraft can glide farther and cover more distance on the same amount of fuel.
Analogy
Think of it like miles per gallon, but for the airplane’s shape moving through the air. A better L/D means the airplane gets more useful result from the same loss of energy.
Grounding Statement
In a power-off glide, an airplane at its best L/D will cover the greatest distance before reaching the ground.
Intuition Check
Do not read “high L/D” as “more lift overall.” It means more lift compared with drag, not necessarily a larger total amount of lift.
Example Sentence 1
After the engine quit, she pitched for the speed that gave the best lift-to-drag ratio so the airplane would glide as far as possible.
Example Sentence 2
Designers aim for the highest possible lift-to-drag ratio so the airplane can cruise farther on less fuel.