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I installed a TT21 transponder over the winter, and as per the
installation instructions, tapped into my ship's static line for altitude reporting. Yesterday I checked the transponder with Orlando ATC and they reported a good signal and proper altitude reporting. So far, so good. Then I noticed my airspeed indicator seemed to be reading significantly higher than normal, and I confirmed this with a stall series. My Ventus 2bx, which normally stalls in the 40-45kt range depending on bank angle, now is apparently stalling in the 50-55kt range. The ship actually feels pretty much the same as before, although I haven't flown for 3 months so that's a bit hard to tell for sure. My dry flying weight is probably about 5-10lbs higher this year than last, as I added the TT21 itself, plus a 5-lb battery to support it. However, I'm pretty sure that by itself doesn't explain the significantly higher apparent stall speed. As a troubleshooting step, I removed and plugged the static line from the airspeed indicator, so now the ASI takes it's static input from cabin air, and everything else should be unchanged. I haven't flown it yet to try it out, but I will today. I also have a spare airspeed indicator that I can swap in if necessary. Anything else I should be considering? TIA, Frank |
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On Mar 3, 9:26*am, Frank Paynter wrote:
I installed a TT21 transponder over the winter, and as per the installation instructions, tapped into my ship's static line for altitude reporting. *Yesterday I checked the transponder with Orlando ATC and they reported a good signal and proper altitude reporting. *So far, so good. Then I noticed my airspeed indicator seemed to be reading significantly higher than normal, and I confirmed this with a stall series. *My Ventus 2bx, which normally stalls in the 40-45kt range depending on bank angle, now is apparently stalling in the 50-55kt range. *The ship actually feels pretty much the same as before, although I haven't flown for 3 months so that's a bit hard to tell for sure. My dry flying weight is probably about 5-10lbs higher this year than last, as I added the TT21 itself, plus a 5-lb battery to support it. However, I'm pretty sure that by itself doesn't explain the significantly higher apparent stall speed. As a troubleshooting step, I removed and plugged the static line from the airspeed indicator, so now the ASI takes it's static input from cabin air, and everything else should be unchanged. *I haven't flown it yet to try it out, but I will today. *I also have a spare airspeed indicator that I can swap in if necessary. Anything else I should be considering? TIA, Frank Frank, My guess is the new static line that you plumbed in for the transponder introduced a leak into the static system. It should've been leak tested when the transponder check was completed. Do you know if that was done? |
#3
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On Mar 3, 7:36*am, Tony wrote:
On Mar 3, 9:26*am, Frank Paynter wrote: I installed a TT21 transponder over the winter, and as per the installation instructions, tapped into my ship's static line for altitude reporting. *Yesterday I checked the transponder with Orlando ATC and they reported a good signal and proper altitude reporting. *So far, so good. Then I noticed my airspeed indicator seemed to be reading significantly higher than normal, and I confirmed this with a stall series. *My Ventus 2bx, which normally stalls in the 40-45kt range depending on bank angle, now is apparently stalling in the 50-55kt range. *The ship actually feels pretty much the same as before, although I haven't flown for 3 months so that's a bit hard to tell for sure. My dry flying weight is probably about 5-10lbs higher this year than last, as I added the TT21 itself, plus a 5-lb battery to support it. However, I'm pretty sure that by itself doesn't explain the significantly higher apparent stall speed. As a troubleshooting step, I removed and plugged the static line from the airspeed indicator, so now the ASI takes it's static input from cabin air, and everything else should be unchanged. *I haven't flown it yet to try it out, but I will today. *I also have a spare airspeed indicator that I can swap in if necessary. Anything else I should be considering? TIA, Frank You need to install a Dittel FSG-2T radio with the new capacitor arrangement. Apparently that fixes all types of seemingly unrelated glider gremlins. ;-) Your experiment sounds like the right first step. A second step would be to put the static back into the original configuration and then to try a new ASI if the above doesn't work (which would be odd). You also could check and see if you can try different static sources - consistent with what the certification allows. 9B |
#4
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But wouldn't a leak in the system cause the airspeed to read lower?
My guess is the new static line that you plumbed in for the transponder introduced a leak into the static system. *It should've been leak tested when the transponder check was completed. Do you know if that was done? |
#5
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On Mar 3, 8:07*am, GARY BOGGS wrote:
But wouldn't a leak in the system cause the airspeed to read lower? My guess is the new static line that you plumbed in for the transponder introduced a leak into the static system. *It should've been leak tested when the transponder check was completed. Do you know if that was done?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - That depends on whether his cabin pressure is higher or lower than static. Easy to check with a manometer connected to static on one side and nothing (cabin) on the other. My fancy manometer is some acrylic tube in a 'U' shape, and some water. |
#6
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Perhaps the curse I put on CP for abandoning his Canadian club (not
the whiskey!) for warmer climes (and climbs!) has had a spill-over effect to Frank's ASI? I wouldn't have thought the sacrifice of a PW-5 could be so powerful. |
#7
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It also depends upon whether the ships static system shows true
static or not. If you read through Richard Johnson's tests you'll see that many gliders have static systems with significant errors built in to them. If there is more than one static source the manual will usually specify which one to connect to as that is the one which was used for certification testing and the placard speeds will take any error into account. I would reconnect everything the way it's supposed to be and then get the pitot-static system checked out with a test set. But wouldn't a leak in the system cause the airspeed to read lower? That depends on whether his cabin pressure is higher or lower than static. |
#8
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On Mar 3, 10:26*am, Frank Paynter wrote:
I installed a TT21 transponder over the winter, and as per the installation instructions, tapped into my ship's static line for altitude reporting. *Yesterday I checked the transponder with Orlando ATC and they reported a good signal and proper altitude reporting. *So far, so good. Then I noticed my airspeed indicator seemed to be reading significantly higher than normal, and I confirmed this with a stall series. *My Ventus 2bx, which normally stalls in the 40-45kt range depending on bank angle, now is apparently stalling in the 50-55kt range. *The ship actually feels pretty much the same as before, although I haven't flown for 3 months so that's a bit hard to tell for sure. My dry flying weight is probably about 5-10lbs higher this year than last, as I added the TT21 itself, plus a 5-lb battery to support it. However, I'm pretty sure that by itself doesn't explain the significantly higher apparent stall speed. As a troubleshooting step, I removed and plugged the static line from the airspeed indicator, so now the ASI takes it's static input from cabin air, and everything else should be unchanged. *I haven't flown it yet to try it out, but I will today. *I also have a spare airspeed indicator that I can swap in if necessary. Anything else I should be considering? TIA, Frank As with all design work: 1. Only make one change at a time. 2. If there is a problem, undo the change. 3. If the system returns to normal start testing other things. If you start chasing options without checking if the original system is still the same you may spend lots of time chasing the incorrect problem. I would put the system back to the pre trig state and leave the trig in cabin static for the first test. |
#9
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On Mar 3, 1:42*pm, Tim Taylor wrote:
On Mar 3, 10:26*am, Frank Paynter wrote: I installed a TT21 transponder over the winter, and as per the installation instructions, tapped into my ship's static line for altitude reporting. *Yesterday I checked the transponder with Orlando ATC and they reported a good signal and proper altitude reporting. *So far, so good. Then I noticed my airspeed indicator seemed to be reading significantly higher than normal, and I confirmed this with a stall series. *My Ventus 2bx, which normally stalls in the 40-45kt range depending on bank angle, now is apparently stalling in the 50-55kt range. *The ship actually feels pretty much the same as before, although I haven't flown for 3 months so that's a bit hard to tell for sure. My dry flying weight is probably about 5-10lbs higher this year than last, as I added the TT21 itself, plus a 5-lb battery to support it. However, I'm pretty sure that by itself doesn't explain the significantly higher apparent stall speed. As a troubleshooting step, I removed and plugged the static line from the airspeed indicator, so now the ASI takes it's static input from cabin air, and everything else should be unchanged. *I haven't flown it yet to try it out, but I will today. *I also have a spare airspeed indicator that I can swap in if necessary. Anything else I should be considering? TIA, Frank As with all design work: 1. *Only make one change at a time. 2. If there is a problem, undo the change. 3. If the system returns to normal start testing other things. If you start chasing options without checking if the original system is still the same you may spend lots of time chasing the incorrect problem. I would put the system back to the pre trig state and leave the trig in cabin static for the first test. Are you sure you hooked it up to Static and not the TE probe? Mike |
#10
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On Mar 3, 10:26*am, Frank Paynter wrote:
I installed a TT21 transponder over the winter, and as per the installation instructions, tapped into my ship's static line for altitude reporting. *Yesterday I checked the transponder with Orlando ATC and they reported a good signal and proper altitude reporting. *So far, so good. Then I noticed my airspeed indicator seemed to be reading significantly higher than normal, and I confirmed this with a stall series. *My Ventus 2bx, which normally stalls in the 40-45kt range depending on bank angle, now is apparently stalling in the 50-55kt range. *The ship actually feels pretty much the same as before, although I haven't flown for 3 months so that's a bit hard to tell for sure. My dry flying weight is probably about 5-10lbs higher this year than last, as I added the TT21 itself, plus a 5-lb battery to support it. However, I'm pretty sure that by itself doesn't explain the significantly higher apparent stall speed. As a troubleshooting step, I removed and plugged the static line from the airspeed indicator, so now the ASI takes it's static input from cabin air, and everything else should be unchanged. *I haven't flown it yet to try it out, but I will today. *I also have a spare airspeed indicator that I can swap in if necessary. Anything else I should be considering? TIA, Frank Results of todays experiment: With the ASI static port open to the cabin, the problem remained (reads too high by about 10-15kt). I believe this eliminates the plumbing changes associated with the TT21 install. I happened to remember that my CAI-302 has an airspeed readout as part of it's calibration/debug screens, and I was able to get it to that display while in flight today. The CAI-302 (static also open to cabin pressure) display was much more believable than the ASI, reading about 38kt at stall in thermalling configuration, and consistently about 10-13kt lower than the ASI at all airspeeds. I believe this eliminates cabin pressure differential as a possible cause, as both the CAI-302 and ASI were using the same static reference, and the same pitot line. My conclusion (to be tested tomorrow) is that the ASI has decided to depart for an extended lunch. I happen to have a spare (actually the original ASI for this ship) that was overhauled about a year ago. My prediction is that the replacement ASI and the CAI-302 will be very close - any bets? Regards, Frank PS: Two nice streeting days here, but very windy (20+kt out of east). Got 3hrs in yesterday, and another 3 in today, all street running. |
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