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#1
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OK, I've researched this a fair bit and am still hearing two definite
different views. One one hand you have those that swear you need toe-out and then on the other you have (among others- these are the few I'm certain about) Cessna 100 series, Huskies, and Pitt's that all are set with slight toe-in by the factory. Granted these are set without weight on the aircraft and the toe-in may change slightly when under load. I think it boils down to what wins when you start to go into a turn with a taildragger- does the toed-in outside wheel "drag" and thus want to straighten you back out or does the toed-out outside wheel get weight transferred to it and tend to straighten you out (vs tightening the turn)? Anybody with some definite answers based on physics? There's lots of emperical and experiential opinions out there, anybody with some more factual answers to the argument? J oa |
#2
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#3
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What's wrong with putting the wheels on straight?
Or not even fixed - like crosswind gear? Seems to me that there might be a few parameters to many to make a "scientific" generalization. This may be an area where it's best to just go with the conventional wisdom, hope it works, and if it doesn't, do a bit of experimenting. The conventional wisdom does not work with my brand of 'dragger, but then it's kind of odd. Q |
#4
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There's lots of
emperical and experiential opinions out there, anybody with some more factual answers to the argument? I've pondered this thing myself. Problem with tail draggers (actually a characteristic of aircraft and their need to have flexible gear way out on spindly aerodynamic legs) is that toe out could change to toe in depending on the load. This also changes during the transition from ground to flight. Worse yet (the big problem with my plane) is the toe change as I bring the tail up on take off or transition down during landing. Suffice to unscientificlly say that 20 years in the automotive alignment business has shown me that cars with toe out tend to be a bit more twitchy than those with toe in. Have no idea if that translates to aircraft because taildragger pilots EXPECT the plane to try to swap ends. Jim |
#5
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![]() Suffice to unscientificlly say that 20 years in the automotive alignment business has shown me that cars with toe out tend to be a bit more twitchy than those with toe in. Have no idea if that translates to aircraft It does not. You want a small amount of toe out with the weight on the wheels. Do a deja search and find some good posts on the topic. One of the key points has to do with which way the wheels point when one wing is up. Ed Wischmeyer |
#6
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#7
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On Fri, 14 Nov 2003 19:12:31 -0600, - Barnyard BOb -
wrote: On 15 Nov 2003 00:22:09 GMT, (JFLEISC) wrote: There's lots of emperical and experiential opinions out there, anybody with some more factual answers to the argument? I've pondered this thing myself. Problem with tail draggers (actually a characteristic of aircraft and their need to have flexible gear way out on spindly aerodynamic legs) is that toe out could change to toe in depending on the load. This also changes during the transition from ground to flight. Worse yet (the big problem with my plane) is the toe change as I bring the tail up on take off or transition down during landing. Suffice to unscientificlly say that 20 years in the automotive alignment business has shown me that cars with toe out tend to be a bit more twitchy than those with toe in. Have no idea if that translates to aircraft because taildragger pilots EXPECT the plane to try to swap ends. Jim +++++++++++++++++++++++ TOE IN is a NO-NO for tail draggers. Just the reverse of cars. And many cars actually DO have a toe out spec. The ideal is for the wheels to roll 100% straight down the road. Depending on steering geometry, they will try to toe out, or in. The spec is to set them toed in if they tend to toe out, and out if they tend to toe in, so that the natural forces pull the wheels towards the straight ahead position. GENERALLY, vehicles with front wheel drive tend to have toe out specs. ( Austin mini (old) was 0.062 inch toe out) - but more and more you are seeing spec of 0 +/-. The position of the tie rod, either ahead of or behind the steering axis had some effect, as does the position of the intersection between the KPI and the wheel centerline (camber). Positive camber contributes to a toe-out tendancy ( that's why cars tend to pull to the side with the most positive camber) (also think about the handling of a bicycle)and Negative caster has the same tendancy. On an aircraft landing gear, the camber is self evident - and the "effective" camber changes with load, and is effected by "unballanced" landings (one wheel first). If the landing gear has "caster" it changes between tail-up and tail-down attitudes. The different combinations of uneven loading and landing attitudes will all effect the "toe" behaviour of the wheel - so it is dangerous to make a statement that either toe out or toe in is NECESSARILY more desirable on a particular plane. Read the archives. This has been beaten to death. Many times. Barnyard BOb - |
#8
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On 14 Nov 2003 04:12 PM, - Barnyard BOb - posted the following:
TOE IN is a NO-NO for tail draggers. Just the reverse of cars. One of the instructors at the local A&P school tried to convince me otherwise, unsuccessfully, I might add. ---------------------------------------------------- Del Rawlins- Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email. Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website: http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/ |
#9
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#10
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