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Elevator Turbulator tape question



 
 
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  #1  
Old October 7th 03, 03:44 AM
JJ Sinclair
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Default Elevator Turbulator tape question


I'm planning on trying turbulator tape (zig-zag, probably) on the
horizontal tail of my Ls-6, in front of the elevator. Anyone have any
experience doing this?


I added .4 mm ziz-zag to to the elevator of my LS-7 and it changed the stall
dramatically. Before adding it, the ship stalled like an old cow, with the
zig-zag, she broke and showed me a windshield full of mother earth. I took it
off.
:)
JJ Sinclair
  #3  
Old October 7th 03, 09:40 PM
JJ Sinclair
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One question - where did you put the tape? top & bottom?, how far in
front of the elevator?


Just forward of the hinge line, top only, as I recall. I put the wide Mylar
with zig-zag on forward edge on the rudder, seemed to help there.
JJ Sinclair
  #4  
Old October 9th 03, 10:11 PM
Eric Greenwell
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In article , stant2
@mindspring.com says...
(JJ Sinclair) wrote in message ...

I added .4 mm ziz-zag to to the elevator of my LS-7 and it changed the stall
dramatically. Before adding it, the ship stalled like an old cow, with the
zig-zag, she broke and showed me a windshield full of mother earth. I took it off.


Interesting. Sounds like the zig-zag really improved the elevator
effectiveness at large defections. Good info, I'll definitely check
that out!


Do you consider it an improvement to get a sharp stall, or is there some
other effect you hope to get with "improved elevator effectiveness"?
--
-------
Eric Greenwell USA
  #5  
Old October 10th 03, 04:45 AM
Kirk Stant
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Eric Greenwell wrote in message et...

Do you consider it an improvement to get a sharp stall, or is there some
other effect you hope to get with "improved elevator effectiveness"?


How else can I get my 6 to snap roll!

Seriously, this was suggested by an experience 6 racer, theory is that
it allows more precise elevator control while thermaling and less
drag. Worth a try. I'm not particularly concerned about sharp
stalls, I love the 2-32 (which has a particularly sharp break for a
glider) and think all pilots should be required to fly (and stall) a
T-6 to see how a real plane flies.

I am curious about which side (top or bottom) of the horizontal stab
should have the turbulator. Intuition tells me it should be on the
bottom, to energize the airflow around the up deflected elevator.

Anyway, it might be fun to find out. Especially since it is a totally
reversible mod.

BTW, two of us flew a 220 mile XC out here in AZ today - 1400' agl
release off tow, Cu's, cloudbase at 12000'. 50 mile final glide under
a thick cirrus deck, started with 350' over a 1 knot MC (!) and made
it home with enough to do a 130 kt low pass (down a runway). Other
guy did 240, and a 65 mile final glide. He beat me, 54 mph to 52 mph.

And we were definitely NOT at 500ft at 1 mile!

Yee hah! I love this sport.

Kirk
66
  #6  
Old October 10th 03, 02:27 PM
Shaber CJ
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and think all pilots should be required to fly (and stall) a
T-6 to see how a real plane flies.


I have lots of time in a T-6 and I am of the opinion that newer designs are
much better. Why not train with aircraft that characteristics of the ones we
fly. The T-6 is heavy, underpowered (in my opinion) has a sharp stall break
and snaps into a spin very easy. There has been several accidents that I know
where a pilot was flying at a heavier weight than normal used a sharp break in
the base to final turn and spin in. I like flying a T-6 but cannot recommend
them for all.

Craig
  #8  
Old October 10th 03, 08:57 PM
John Cochrane
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I would encourage a lot of caution before slapping turbulator tape on
the elevator or elsewhere upwind of control surfaces. There have been
several instances of pilots crashing or having to abandon gliders
because mylar or tape became loose on elevators. If your turbulator
tape causes separation rather than good turbulent flow, you might
follow them. Turbulator tape on the top of wings has caused really
nasty stall/spin problems. Why be a test pilot? Call the
manufacturer! SH was nice enough to provide advice on where I should
put the tape on my old discus.

John Cochrane
  #9  
Old October 14th 03, 04:04 PM
JJ Sinclair
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Kirk,
I agree with you that competent, current pilots, don't inadvertently stall any
ship. But your statement that you like a crisp stall, got me wondering. How do
you like a crisp stall, in the pattern, after some hard maneuvering to avoid a
mid-air? How do you like a crisp stall, when on the rocks, and get hit with a
large tail-gust?

The stall I got in my LS-7, after adding zig-zag to the horizontal stab, was
the worst stall I have ever seen in any sailplane. I mean she went near
vertical on me. Don't care to duplicate that in the above situations.

PS, I suspect the zig-zag delayed the *normal* seperation on the stab, but when
it did seperate, I lost all the down force from the horizontal stab and that
gave me the near vertical pitching moment. The wing may not have stalled at
all. Now someone please feel free to tell me just how full of Ka-ka, I am about
aerodynamics.
:)
JJ Sinclair
  #10  
Old October 14th 03, 09:22 PM
Bill Daniels
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JJ, you are about right on. I strongly suspect that if a glider "stalls"
but retains aileron control, the wing didn't really stall - just the
horizontal tail lost its grip on the air and let the tail pop up (Nose pops
down). Normally, this is a pretty benign way to limit minimum airspeed.
Adding any device to increase up elevator authority might allow the pilot
bring the whole wing to stall with the possibility of a spin departure.

It seems to me that the only reason to increase up elevator authority would
be to improve thermaling and then only in the case of a glider whose minimum
airspeed is limited by up elevator ineffectiveness. A case might be the
G103 Twin II when the CG is near the forward limit. This limits minimum
airspeed to well above minimum sink in a steep turn.

Bill Daniels

"JJ Sinclair" wrote in message
...
Kirk,
I agree with you that competent, current pilots, don't inadvertently stall

any
ship. But your statement that you like a crisp stall, got me wondering.

How do
you like a crisp stall, in the pattern, after some hard maneuvering to

avoid a
mid-air? How do you like a crisp stall, when on the rocks, and get hit

with a
large tail-gust?

The stall I got in my LS-7, after adding zig-zag to the horizontal stab,

was
the worst stall I have ever seen in any sailplane. I mean she went near
vertical on me. Don't care to duplicate that in the above situations.

PS, I suspect the zig-zag delayed the *normal* seperation on the stab, but

when
it did seperate, I lost all the down force from the horizontal stab and

that
gave me the near vertical pitching moment. The wing may not have stalled

at
all. Now someone please feel free to tell me just how full of Ka-ka, I am

about
aerodynamics.
:)
JJ Sinclair


 




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