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In a small GA aircraft, in which phases of flight will you normally use mostly
trim to adjust pitch, and in which phases will you normally mostly use the yoke? |
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Mxsmanic wrote:
In a small GA aircraft, in which phases of flight will you normally use mostly trim to adjust pitch, and in which phases will you normally mostly use the yoke? You adjust pitch and hold that pitch, then trim. The general "rule" is nose attitude, adjust power, trim the airplane. -- Dudley Henriques |
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On May 16, 1:10 am, Nomen Nescio wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Juevie bull**** snipped -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Thanks for contributing so many lines to the noise level. "If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem". |
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On May 15, 10:00*pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
In a small GA aircraft, in which phases of flight will you normally use mostly trim to adjust pitch, and in which phases will you normally mostly use the yoke? You don't pitch with trim, you use the elevator to adjust pitch. -Robert |
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On May 16, 12:00 am, Mxsmanic wrote:
In a small GA aircraft, in which phases of flight will you normally use mostly trim to adjust pitch, and in which phases will you normally mostly use the yoke? Here's a good page with more detail along Dudley's reply: Trim history The trim tab or servo trim was invented by Anton Flettner, a German aeronautical engineer. He started work in 1905 for the Zeppelin Company. Died in 1962. Trim Most aircraft have single axis trim for the elevator. Airliners have three-axis trim for the elevator, rudder and ailerons. Trim is used to correct for any forces that might tend to counter your selected flight performance. Trim allows the pilot to relax. A pilot who cannot trim will be an exhausted pilot in a short time. It takes only a couple of flights for a pilot to realize the benefits of trim. The best check for proper trim setting for any flight configuration is to let go of the yoke completely and see what the nose does. http://www.whittsflying.com/web/page...g_the_Yoke.htm |
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On May 16, 12:00 am, Mxsmanic wrote:
In a small GA aircraft, in which phases of flight will you normally use mostly trim to adjust pitch, and in which phases will you normally mostly use the yoke? Contrary to the common opinion that trim is used for pitch control, I view it as more of a speed setting device (though it does this by adjusting pitch). So, there is an initial adjustment, frequently marked on the trim indicator, for takeoff to produce, say, 80 knots climb in takeoff configuration. Then level off, adjust again to produce cruise speed without yoke pressure. Descending, I usually leave the pitch alone and just reduce power. Entering pattern, adjust trim for approach speed. Some aircraft have noticeable pitch change when lowering flaps - that usually requires a pitch related trim adjustment, but the ultimate goal is proper speed with flaps down. |
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On May 16, 1:00*am, Mxsmanic wrote:
In a small GA aircraft, in which phases of flight will you normally use mostly trim to adjust pitch, and in which phases will you normally mostly use the yoke? The yoke is used almost always for pitch adjustment, followed by trim to zero out the control pressure. For me, however, there is (at least) one exception. When I think I'm in level cruise, but I notice a very slight residual climb or descent (e.g., maybe 100 ft over a few minutes), it's usually easier and more accurate in my Cherokee to just give the trim crank a slight nudge, than it is to try to move the yoke then retrim. |
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![]() "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... In a small GA aircraft, in which phases of flight will you normally use mostly trim to adjust pitch, and in which phases will you normally mostly use the yoke? I'm sorry you have reached your limit of questions for this week. Please refrain from asking any more questions until May 19th at the earliest. Thank you for your attention in this matter. |
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In rec.aviation.piloting Mxsmanic wrote:
In a small GA aircraft, in which phases of flight will you normally use mostly trim to adjust pitch, and in which phases will you normally mostly use the yoke? In cruise in dead calm air you occasionly tweak the trim. At all other times you use the yoke to control the aircraft and the trim to remove yoke pressure. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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Perhaps the difference between the MSFS and reality is the notion of
adjusting trim to take pressure off the yoke is one of those 'it doesn't matter in simulated flight' issues. On May 16, 11:15 am, wrote: In rec.aviation.piloting Mxsmanic wrote: In a small GA aircraft, in which phases of flight will you normally use mostly trim to adjust pitch, and in which phases will you normally mostly use the yoke? In cruise in dead calm air you occasionly tweak the trim. At all other times you use the yoke to control the aircraft and the trim to remove yoke pressure. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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