by LarryEWaiex121 » Mon Nov 30, 2015 7:13 pm
Ryan,
Quick word about the trim spring and how its going to effect the whole flight envelope.
The Waiex really doesn't need a tremendous amount of up trim. Unfortunately, the only time you need "lots" of up trim is in full flap landing configuration. You will just end up doing it the Armstrong method.
In your normal flight regimes you will probably use very little up trim and substantially fly the entire flight, dialing in down trim as your fuel burns off.
In my Waiex, I went in and changed the spring to afford me more down adjustment. Deliberately. I stretched the spring a couple inches more than the instructions indicate on the pushrod. I don't mind a plane I have to hold a bit of up elevator for awhile but, hate a plane that you have to constantly hold down elevator in level flight. This mostly occurs at full up seat weight and minimal fuel load.
In my Waiex, I have the Jab 3300 and I have my gross set at 1200lbs. No, I don't want to start another discussion on what should be. It is what it is. With 440lbs in the seat, I run out of down trim at about 6 gallon mark. From then on its forward stick till landing time.
If you ever fly at such weights you will learn the value of smoothness on the pitch inputs.
As a side note, there has never been a plane I've flown that was as neutral on the controls as a Waiex "in landing configuration". Even in the middle of the CG envelope it requires very minimal pitch inputs to flare. At aft CG conditions you essentially fly it into ground effect and hold it steady. No flare whatsoever and it will 3 pt. on its own.
Sorry for the wandering off subject, but the trim is mostly needed for nose down.
Larry
Waiex121YX