Bryan Cotton wrote:It is nuts over there. I think I am done with that conversation. I do like the simplicity of spring systems. The Pawnee had one and it worked great.
Bryan Cotton wrote:I do like the simplicity of spring systems.
fastj22 wrote:Bryan Cotton wrote:It is nuts over there. I think I am done with that conversation. I do like the simplicity of spring systems. The Pawnee had one and it worked great.
tonyr wrote:fastj22 wrote:Bryan Cotton wrote:It is nuts over there. I think I am done with that conversation. I do like the simplicity of spring systems. The Pawnee had one and it worked great.
Yup its descended to personal offline abuse, I wont mention the perpetrators name, apparently a comment I made about teeth gnashing, mouth frothing and channeling John Thorpe hit a nerve.
I have flown a Sonex with the standard trim, nothing wrong with it, good authority, ease of use.. apart from looking like dogs b_lls on a hot day.
My reasoning for considering a recessed tab is purely aesthetic, but the time taken to implement decided me against it. I have taken long enough to get this point! (Once I'm done with paint 'n' polish, ready to inspect)
All the BS about flutter and cable breakage applies equally to the standard trim tab... possiblly more so as the "fulcrum" is further away from the hinge line.
My main concern with the dial trim is that it can run out of authority in some situations, i.e. full flap approach. That could be an adjustment issue.
I have fitted a dial trim anyway to my aircraft.
Cheers Tony
fastj22 wrote:Example, if I tune the springs to handle the W/B of myself an fuel, when I carry a passenger with some luggage, I run out of nose down adjustment. If I adjust the springs to handle that, then I run out of adjustment when solo on the nose up.
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