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#41
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In article ,
Marian Aldenhövel wrote: Hi, Thank you all, I have learned a lot. I have also come up with two more things to consider, both rather minor I suspect: - The control linkages are propably more complicated in a T-Tail (con). - With a T-Tail you can build the elevator in one piece so you can rig and derig more easily (pro). Now why are we not seeing more V-Tails? The main pro for T-Tails seem to be: - Good ground clearance - Less drag - Operates in clean undisturbed air How does a V-Tail stand up against that? The V-Tail setup is less likely to cause fuse damage in a ground loop. Regards, -Doug |
#42
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#43
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Doug Hoffman wrote:
In article , Marian Aldenhövel wrote: Hi, Thank you all, I have learned a lot. I have also come up with two more things to consider, both rather minor I suspect: - The control linkages are propably more complicated in a T-Tail (con). - With a T-Tail you can build the elevator in one piece so you can rig and derig more easily (pro). Now why are we not seeing more V-Tails? The main pro for T-Tails seem to be: - Good ground clearance - Less drag - Operates in clean undisturbed air How does a V-Tail stand up against that? The V-Tail setup is less likely to cause fuse damage in a ground loop. Couldn't the T-tail designer just make the fuselage stronger? Or the V-tail designer make the fuselage lighter to take more advantage of the lower tail CG, so they both withstand a ground loop just as well? Maybe JJ or some other glider repairer can tell us how tail booms commonly fail - torsion or bending, and if there seems to be a difference in types of failure between the tail types. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#45
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The designer could make the fuselage so strong that it would never break, no
matter how fast the ground loop of snap roll. But then the fuselage would be twice the area, four times the weight, and the glider would never get off the ground.It is all a trade off in strength to performance. It is not a given that the tail will break in a ground loop. Most gliders are designed to survive ground loops with no damange, 'cept maybe a dizzy pilot. Couldn't the T-tail designer just make the fuselage stronger? Or the V-tail designer make the fuselage lighter to take more advantage of the lower tail CG, so they both withstand a ground loop just as well? Jim Vincent N483SZ illspam |
#46
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![]() "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... Doug Hoffman wrote: In article , Marian Aldenhövel wrote: Hi, Thank you all, I have learned a lot. I have also come up with two more things to consider, both rather minor I suspect: - The control linkages are propably more complicated in a T-Tail (con). - With a T-Tail you can build the elevator in one piece so you can rig and derig more easily (pro). Now why are we not seeing more V-Tails? The main pro for T-Tails seem to be: - Good ground clearance - Less drag - Operates in clean undisturbed air How does a V-Tail stand up against that? The V-Tail setup is less likely to cause fuse damage in a ground loop. Couldn't the T-tail designer just make the fuselage stronger? Or the V-tail designer make the fuselage lighter to take more advantage of the lower tail CG, so they both withstand a ground loop just as well? Maybe JJ or some other glider repairer can tell us how tail booms commonly fail - torsion or bending, and if there seems to be a difference in types of failure between the tail types. Lotsa Libelle booms have been broken, but then the shape may have something to do with that, or just the sheer numbers of Libelles built skews the sample. Several PIK-20 tail booms have unzipped along the lower fuselage seam from ground loops. No idea how that compares to those that actually broke the boom. From what I've heard, once repaired, they don't unzip again. What about those booms that break in two places? Peculiar to make, or type of accident? Frank Whiteley |
#47
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Mis-rigging could happen to any type. A school teacher was killed in Wales
one day while I was soaring due to mis-rigging one of the ruddervator control guides on his v-tailed BG-135, diving in from the top of the winch launch (his second of the day). It was only the second occasion he'd rigged the glider IIRC. Could have been a t-tail. I flew a v-tailed SHK for four years. The rigging of the control guides was very similar and held the same potential for being mis-rigged as the aforementioned BG-135. The sad part is that the guide is clearly in view during control deflection. This is one very specific instance where a PCC might not have detected the problem, but a visual inspection would. The fact that he made the first flight successfully attests to this. The actual disconnect probably happened during ground handling or during he landing role and wasn't noticed before the second flight. Frank Whiteley "Mark James Boyd" wrote in message news:41818446$1@darkstar... This is the only fatality I am aware of at Avenal, and the only ruddervator mechanism-related T-tail fatality I have read. NTSB Identification: LAX92LA393 . The docket is stored on NTSB microfiche number 48074. 14 CFR Part 91: General Aviation Accident occurred Friday, September 18, 1992 in AVENAL, CA Probable Cause Approval Date: 9/14/1993 Aircraft: SPARKS-SCHREDER HP-140V, registration: N704B Injuries: 1 Fatal. Prob cause: " THE LOSS OF PITCH AND YAW CONTROL DUE TO THE SEPARATION OF THE RUDDERVATOR CONTROL CABLE FROM ITS CLEVIS FORK DUE TO IMPROPER INSTALLATION." In article , Peter Wyld wrote: At 08:54 28 October 2004, Marian_Aldenhövel wrote: Hi, Thank you all, I have learned a lot. I have also come up with two more things to consider, both rather minor I suspect: - The control linkages are propably more complicated in a T-Tail (con). - With a T-Tail you can build the elevator in one piece so you can rig and derig more easily (pro). Now why are we not seeing more V-Tails? The main pro for T-Tails seem to be: - Good ground clearance - Less drag - Operates in clean undisturbed air How does a V-Tail stand up against that? Complicated mixing box required for elevator/rudder control. -- ------------+ Mark J. Boyd |
#48
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John Giddy wrote:
On Thu, 28 Oct 2004 08:07:07 +0200, Bruce Greeff wrote: John Giddy wrote: On 28 Oct 2004 02:44:06 GMT, Jim Vincent wrote: Jim, Why does the elevator have more translation on a T-Tail than on a conventional one please ? (I presume you are referring to translation in a direction normal to the tailplane surface) Bemused John G. John, If the stab is mounted at the fuselage, if there is roll, the stab only experiences a rotation around the center of the stab. If the stab is T, then not only is it rotating, it is also moving in a circle with a diameter of the rudder fin. Does that make sense? Also, with a T, if you go full rudder in one direction then another, the fin adds the inertia of the stab mounted at the top of the rudder...a torsion from yaw too! Jim Vincent N483SZ OK Jim, I agree. I was thinking of normal elevator operation, and movement in the pitch direction, which is the same for both arrangements. Cheers, John G. The one that tends to break them is the torque resulting from rapid translation acceleration. With a T-tail the moment of inertia is far greater, so when you ground loop, or perform a flick maneuver the lateral acceleration of the elevator imposes large loads on the structure. Agreed, except that it is not just the elevator. It is the whole tailplane. Cheers, John G. I stand corrected - Cirrus drivers sometimes forget that there are sailplanes that have fixed horisontal stabilisers... ;-) |
#49
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#50
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On Fri, 29 Oct 2004 08:23:18 +0200, Bruce Greeff wrote:
John Giddy wrote: On Thu, 28 Oct 2004 08:07:07 +0200, Bruce Greeff wrote: John Giddy wrote: On 28 Oct 2004 02:44:06 GMT, Jim Vincent wrote: Jim, Why does the elevator have more translation on a T-Tail than on a conventional one please ? (I presume you are referring to translation in a direction normal to the tailplane surface) Bemused John G. John, If the stab is mounted at the fuselage, if there is roll, the stab only experiences a rotation around the center of the stab. If the stab is T, then not only is it rotating, it is also moving in a circle with a diameter of the rudder fin. Does that make sense? Also, with a T, if you go full rudder in one direction then another, the fin adds the inertia of the stab mounted at the top of the rudder...a torsion from yaw too! Jim Vincent N483SZ OK Jim, I agree. I was thinking of normal elevator operation, and movement in the pitch direction, which is the same for both arrangements. Cheers, John G. The one that tends to break them is the torque resulting from rapid translation acceleration. With a T-tail the moment of inertia is far greater, so when you ground loop, or perform a flick maneuver the lateral acceleration of the elevator imposes large loads on the structure. Agreed, except that it is not just the elevator. It is the whole tailplane. Cheers, John G. I stand corrected - Cirrus drivers sometimes forget that there are sailplanes that have fixed horisontal stabilisers... ;-) That thought had crossed my mind, but I resisted the chance to point it out :-) Cheers, John G. (Std Cirrus Ser: 6720 |
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