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Weight/balance question



 
 
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  #1  
Old June 8th 04, 02:16 PM
Bob Martin
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Default Weight/balance question

Is a statement such as the following acceptable for weight and balance
calculations for flying?

"As long as the maximum baggage weight of XX lbs and gross weight of
xxxx lbs is not exceeded, the aircraft will be in balance"
  #4  
Old June 8th 04, 04:36 PM
Jan Carlsson
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Aeronca too, but don't use that on all aircrafts! :-)

Jan Carlsson
www.jcpropellerdesign.com

"Carl Ellis" skrev i meddelandet
. 97.136...
Ron Wanttaja wrote in
:

On 8 Jun 2004 06:16:09 -0700, (Bob Martin) wrote:

Is a statement such as the following acceptable for weight and balance
calculations for flying?

"As long as the maximum baggage weight of XX lbs and gross weight of
xxxx lbs is not exceeded, the aircraft will be in balance"


Taylorcraft too.

- Carl -



  #8  
Old June 16th 04, 03:11 PM
Wright1902Glider
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Hmmm... would I be correct in assuming that on aircraft placarded this way, it
would be physically improbable to load baggage in an area of the airframe that
would cause an out-of-limit CG issue if the weight limit was not exceeded?

Just wondering... CG is a VERY big issue with pioneer-era airframes, and
simply leaning back could/did cause stalls 100 years ago.

Harry
  #10  
Old June 18th 04, 09:01 PM
Wright1902Glider
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hmmm... wondering that myself... I did say "within placarded weight limit",
right?

What I was asking was if is possible to seriously affect the CG by loading the
max. cargo limit into the designated space in the airframe. Obviously, CG is
effected by where one places a load in an airframe, as well as the weight of
the load. My question was how much effect does a 100% placarded load effect CG
versus say a 23% load. Is there a noticable diference in handling, or can this
be trimmed out? Just wondering. Most of my airtime is in weight-shift
gliders, where CG is absolutely critical.

BTW, 4 kegs? Might be time to switch to muzzleloader...

Harry


 




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