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Stability variation



 
 
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  #1  
Old April 27th 08, 10:20 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
WingFlaps
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Posts: 621
Default Stability variation

I've flown about 10 different 172's and while they are quite similar
in most respects, but one of them just doesn't seem to trim out nicely
for me. In that particular plane, it is always either climbing or
descending (slowly) if I take my hand off the yoke after I trim at
cruise. Is this normal or is it just me? If it's not my lack of skill,
could it be a rigging problem or what else might be the cause? (I
aways check the trim linkage on preflight and it's firm). A related
question is how long/well should a 172 hold wings level if I let go of
the yoke (ball centered)? I know that the tanks are rarely even but
I'm concerned that the lateral stability that seems less than I would
have expected. (I find that refolding maps in the cockpit difficult as
I keep having to correct).

Cheers
  #2  
Old April 27th 08, 11:13 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
[email protected]
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Posts: 1,130
Default Stability variation

On Apr 27, 3:20 pm, WingFlaps wrote:
I've flown about 10 different 172's and while they are quite similar
in most respects, but one of them just doesn't seem to trim out nicely
for me. In that particular plane, it is always either climbing or
descending (slowly) if I take my hand off the yoke after I trim at
cruise. Is this normal or is it just me? If it's not my lack of skill,
could it be a rigging problem or what else might be the cause? (I
aways check the trim linkage on preflight and it's firm). A related
question is how long/well should a 172 hold wings level if I let go of
the yoke (ball centered)? I know that the tanks are rarely even but
I'm concerned that the lateral stability that seems less than I would
have expected. (I find that refolding maps in the cockpit difficult as
I keep having to correct).

Cheers


If a 172 won't hold a trimmed altitude for nothing, then the
elevator system might be sticky. The control column bushings get
gummed up with skin oils, pulleys get dry and stop turning freely,
cables fray and start snagging, elevator hinges get gunked up. All of
it will keep the elevator from floating in the trimmed position.
There's another, much worse possibility. The forward stabilizer
spar in the 172 will crack, due mostly to people pushing the stab down
to lift the nosewheel and rotate the airplane on the ground. The loads
on that spar are far higher in that maneuver than it was designed to
take, and it cracks through the center hole. I have seen a spar broken
completely through, with only the skin holding things together, and
that airplane would not trim out. The stab was flexing too much in
flight and altering its AOA a tiny bit. It could fail altogether in
something like a spin recovery or spiral.

Dan
  #3  
Old April 28th 08, 03:45 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
WingFlaps
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 621
Default Stability variation

On Apr 28, 10:13*am, wrote:
On Apr 27, 3:20 pm, WingFlaps wrote:

I've flown about 10 different 172's and while they are quite similar
in most respects, but one of them just doesn't seem to trim out nicely
for me. In that particular plane, it is always either climbing or
descending (slowly) if I take my hand off the yoke after I trim at
cruise. Is this normal or is it just me? If it's not my lack of skill,
could it be a rigging problem or what else might be the cause? (I
aways check the trim linkage on preflight and it's firm). A related
question is how long/well should a 172 hold wings level if I let go of
the yoke (ball centered)? I know that the tanks are rarely even but
I'm concerned that the lateral stability that seems less than I would
have expected. (I find that refolding maps in the cockpit difficult as
I keep having to correct).


Cheers


* * * *If a 172 won't hold a trimmed altitude for nothing, then the
elevator system might be sticky. The control column bushings get
gummed up with skin oils, pulleys get dry and stop turning freely,
cables fray and start snagging, elevator hinges get gunked up. All of
it will keep the elevator from floating in the trimmed position.
* * * *There's another, much worse possibility. The forward stabilizer
spar in the 172 will crack, due mostly to people pushing the stab down
to lift the nosewheel and rotate the airplane on the ground. The loads
on that spar are far higher in that maneuver than it was designed to
take, and it cracks through the center hole. I have seen a spar broken
completely through, with only the skin holding things together, and
that airplane would not trim out. The stab was flexing too much in
flight and altering its AOA a tiny bit. It could fail altogether in
something like a spin recovery or spiral.

* * * * * Dan


Thanks I'll check your ideas out.

Cheers
 




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