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#19
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On Sat, 15 Nov 2003 17:56:40 GMT, Dave Hyde wrote:
My hypothesis is that the sloppy spring links let you get a bunch of rudder deflection before you get much tailwheel deflection, and this is good at, say, 40MPH and above. This is interesting. One of the things my inspector asked me to fix was the slop in the tailwheel springs. I got almost all of it out, and the airplane handles very well on the ground, but I haven't had it up to 40 mph yet. I've flown two RV's with loose springs and I thought mine handled better at low speed, but that may just be wishful thinking. I've seen lots of recommendations from RV people to make sure there's at least a little slack in the springs, and I don't recall ever seeing any RV-flyer recommend NO slack. My head hurts :-) Dave 'still ground-bound' Hyde ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Your setup is fine... for NO wind or wind STRAIGHT down the runway. In a crosswind with CONTROLS CROSSED and you're about to 3 point... guess what you got? Yep... a rudder AND a tailwheel aimed towards the boondocks. The stronger the crosswind, the more problematic this can become. depending on a lot of factors.... including one's experience level. The following is my GENERAL statement: YMMV. For the most pleasant transition.... The aircraft needs springs that can yield sufficiently in a timely manner, some 'slack' to ameliorate this golly-woppled condition or a combination of both. A lot of the setup depends on pilot preferences. Can one do without the above suggestions? Sure. Beat your head against the wall, too. That's my 2 cents - given many, many tailwheel years and hours and I'm sticking to it. g P.S. Let me add... it's as much 'art' as science. Barnyard BOb - no advocate of wheel landings |
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