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I know this has probably been discussed many times, but here goes
again. I am building my rudder this week for my HP-24. My fuselage and vertical fin is predominately carbon fiber, so no antenna in the fin. The laminate for the rudder will be fiberglass, and I plan on putting the antenna there. I am planning on using carbon edge tapes in the leading edge of the rudder laminate for added stiffness. My thougths here are that since this part of the rudder (the LE/ bullnose) is already in the aft fin cove, which is carbon allready, I should not see any degradation in the antenna function due to this added carbon. Do you pilots with carbon airframes, and antennas in the rudder find this to be an ok solution? Do you find that the antenna gets blanked out if the pilot you are talking to is in front of you and therfore have the carbon fin blocking the signal? I fly an all carbon sailplane sailplane, but use a handheld with a rubber duck antenna, what I find is that the fuselage can blank out transmissions at some points of the circle. Cheers, Brad PS................the rudder mold was cut on a CNC router, what a cool way to make tooling! |
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On Jun 30, 12:54*pm, Brad wrote:
Do you pilots with carbon airframes, and antennas in the rudder find this to be an ok solution? Do you find that the antenna gets blanked out if the pilot you are talking to is in front of you and therfore have the carbon fin blocking the signal? I fly an all carbon sailplane sailplane, but use a handheld with a rubber duck antenna, what I find is that the fuselage can blank out transmissions at some points of the circle. Stemmes (and probably other ships) have the same configuration - all carbon fiber except for the rudder which is fiberglass so the com antenna can be mounted there. Works well EXCEPT when directly ahead since then the vertical fin absorbs much of the radio energy. When I call inbound to an airport, I always turn at least 20 degrees from the tower. Seems to work OK. Martin WT |
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I have just had my Ventus CM refinished. Pretty sure it is all carbon,
except the fin which is glass. Mark On Jul 1, 10:00 am, Hellman wrote: On Jun 30, 12:54 pm, Brad wrote: Do you pilots with carbon airframes, and antennas in the rudder find this to be an ok solution? Do you find that the antenna gets blanked out if the pilot you are talking to is in front of you and therfore have the carbon fin blocking the signal? I fly an all carbon sailplane sailplane, but use a handheld with a rubber duck antenna, what I find is that the fuselage can blank out transmissions at some points of the circle. Stemmes (and probably other ships) have the same configuration - all carbon fiber except for the rudder which is fiberglass so the com antenna can be mounted there. Works well EXCEPT when directly ahead since then the vertical fin absorbs much of the radio energy. When I call inbound to an airport, I always turn at least 20 degrees from the tower. Seems to work OK. Martin WT |
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