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I am not an aviator, but I have what hopefully is not a stupid question.
I am a restoring a '80 Triumph Spitfire roadster and would like to add a Supermarine Spitfire gauge to the dash. I found a Slip (balance) and Turn indicator in ebay, but not knowing enough about them I was wondering if it would indicate anything about my turning in a car rather than a plane that is operating at an order of magnitude faster. The indicator has graduations from 1 to 4. Thanks for you time. Mike M. |
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On 3/28/2013 1:13 PM, mikeaaron353 wrote:
I am not an aviator, but I have what hopefully is not a stupid question. I am a restoring a '80 Triumph Spitfire roadster and would like to add a Supermarine Spitfire gauge to the dash. I found a Slip (balance) and Turn indicator in ebay, but not knowing enough about them I was wondering if it would indicate anything about my turning in a car rather than a plane that is operating at an order of magnitude faster. The indicator has graduations from 1 to 4. Thanks for you time. It indicates whether a turn is coordinated (slip) and the relative rate of turn. In reality, your Triumph will probably turn a lot faster than the aircraft. The slip indicator is basically showing how much the driver being pushed left or right as the car turns. A perfectly banked turn will show zero...whether you're in an aircraft or on a banked track. The slip indicator is nothing more than a carpenter's level; no power or anything needed. Looking a picture of the gauge, it looks like the turn indicator is vacuum driven. If you apply vacuum, the needle will indicate how fast you're turning. A modern "Standard Rate" turn means it takes two minutes to do a complete 360-degree circle...as you can anticipate, your car will turn a lot faster. Be neat to look at, assuming you can get some vacuum to the gauge. Ron Wanttaja |
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