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#51
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Roy Smith wrote:
I always visually check the trim mechanism. Set the trim wheel in the cockpit to the neutral position. Then, during the walk-around, hold the elevator parallel with the longitudinal axis of the airplane and observe that the anti-servo tab is fair with the main elevator surface. If the trim indicator is "whacked", it will be immediately obvious that the trim tab isn't in the right place. Good idea. During the preflight, I check the movement, the linkage, and the piano hinge. It was in a near neutral position, as it normally always is from the last landing. This airplane normally uses a relatively narrow trim range. I am familiar with the effort required at extreme ends of the range, thanks to an instructor who liked to add extreme trim to unusual attitudes. G You didn't say what kind of plane you've got, so you may or may not be able to do this. A Beech 23 Sundowner. It's got a stabilator so your advice is helpful and applicable! I simply need to add "set trim indicator to neutral" to the end of my list, before I leave the cockpit for the second trip around. Thanks! |
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On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 08:34:28 -0400, B A R R Y
wrote: Cool! I thought you were only doing the powered parasail thing. My pal at Windham bent the gear on his T-Craft, landing in his "yard", but it was repairable. I'm still flying the powered paragliders too, but I bought a Kolb Ultrastar a year and a half ago. The wings fold in about 10 minutes, so I can keep it in a trailer and save on hangar rent. Ya gotta land a T-Craft pretty hard to bend the gear! Kinda glad now that I sold mine, with the cost of the wing strut AD. -Dana -- -- If replying by email, please make the obvious changes. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Stupidity got us into this mess... why can't it get us out? |
#53
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On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 08:41:07 -0400, Dana M. Hague
d(dash)m(dash)hague(at)comcast(dot)net wrote: Ya gotta land a T-Craft pretty hard to bend the gear! K Sideways... |
#54
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On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 08:44:25 -0400, B A R R Y
wrote: Ya gotta land a T-Craft pretty hard to bend the gear! K Sideways... That'll do it! -Dana |
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On Sun, 13 Apr 2008 18:28:29 -0400, Dana
"d(dash)m(dash)hague(at)comcast(dot)net" wrote: On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 08:44:25 -0400, B A R R Y wrote: Ya gotta land a T-Craft pretty hard to bend the gear! K Sideways... That'll do it! -Dana I can't post the details in writing. I'll share them in person. G |
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On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 16:54:33 GMT, B A R R Y
wrote: Roy Smith wrote: I always visually check the trim mechanism. Set the trim wheel in the cockpit to the neutral position. Then, during the walk-around, hold the elevator parallel with the longitudinal axis of the airplane and observe that the anti-servo tab is fair with the main elevator surface. If the trim indicator is "whacked", it will be immediately obvious that the trim tab isn't in the right place. Good idea. During the preflight, I check the movement, the linkage, and the piano hinge. It was in a near neutral position, as it normally always is from the last landing. This airplane normally uses a relatively narrow trim range. Last Landing? In the Cherokee 180 and my Deb I know if the last landing was done right as the trim will be at the up limit. Not just at but right against the stops! However... My shut down list includes setting trim to neutral. my preflight is a mechanical "look see" if it is neutral and my run-up is check to make sure the indicator is neutral. I then set it depending on load/CG calcs. I am familiar with the effort required at extreme ends of the range, thanks to an instructor who liked to add extreme trim to unusual attitudes. G You didn't say what kind of plane you've got, so you may or may not be able to do this. A Beech 23 Sundowner. It's got a stabilator so your advice is helpful and applicable! I simply need to add "set trim indicator to neutral" to the end of my list, before I leave the cockpit for the second trip around. Thanks! Roger (K8RI) ARRL Life Member N833R (World's oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#57
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