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#1
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Dear All,
I have seen several posts about how to share the TE line between e-vario and mechanical one. Maybe I am wrong but I can not see any post about sharing the pitot pressure (dynamic) between ASI, e-vario (computer) and and the only one static port between e-vario, altimeter and mechanical vario. Any good advice or this is not a problem at all ? |
#2
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On 7 Mar 2005 00:08:47 -0800, Istvan Csonka wrote:
Dear All, I have seen several posts about how to share the TE line between e-vario and mechanical one. Maybe I am wrong but I can not see any post about sharing the pitot pressure (dynamic) between ASI, e-vario (computer) and and the only one static port between e-vario, altimeter and mechanical vario. Any good advice or this is not a problem at all ? The altimeter doesn't need to be connected to a static port unless you plan on pressurising your glider ;-) The most important instrument on the static port is the ASI, as this measures very small changes in pressure, and the fluctuations in cockpit pressure will make the ASI reading almost useless. A vario on the static port will give you a completely uncompensated vario. This is sometimes done for motorgliders to provide a VSI for climbing under power, but would be unusual these days in a pure glider. A vario using a capacity on the static line could give transient errors on the ASI due to resistance in the tubing. If you really want to do this, separate the tubes for ASI and vario as close to the static port as possible to reduce common impedance. Sharing the pitot line seems to be less of a problem, particularly if the "e-vario" is a pressure one rather than a capacity type. However if the e-vario is a flow-meter type with a typical 1 pint capacity, it would be a good idea to separate the tubes as close to the pitot tube as possible, for the same reason as separating the tubes to different instruments from the static port or TE probe. Cheers, John G. |
#3
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I have run in to problems sharing a pitot between ASI and Cambridge
302, resulting in several very frustrating days at Hobbs one year where it seemed as if I had forgotten to thermal. Separate pitots for the two instruments solved the problem. Luckily, I have a tail pitot and a nose pitot so each can have its own. The 302 seems particularly fussy about having its own pitot and static sources however. John Cochrane |
#4
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On Mon, 07 Mar 2005 11:34:32 -0500, T o d d P a t t i s t wrote:
John Giddy wrote: The altimeter doesn't need to be connected to a static port unless you plan on pressurising your glider ;-) Recognize, however, that opening the window or vent, etc. can vary your indicated altitude by a few hundred feet, not to mention any regulatory compliance issues in your country. Would need to be a very well sealed cockpit to show such a change in pressure IMHO. I have never seen such a change, but I have seen ASI errors of 5 or so knots (say 10 km/hr) with window/vent operation. Compliance issues are not a problem in Australia. Cheers, John G. |
#5
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![]() BB wrote: I have run in to problems sharing a pitot between ASI and Cambridge 302, resulting in several very frustrating days at Hobbs one year where it seemed as if I had forgotten to thermal. Separate pitots for the two instruments solved the problem. Luckily, I have a tail pitot and a nose pitot so each can have its own. The 302 seems particularly fussy about having its own pitot and static sources however. John Cochrane John, I'm flying a 302 in my LS8 and cannot recall any problems in having it attached to the same pitot that supplies pressure to the ASI. How would you describe the behavior of the 302, just weird deflections/audio signals? Herb, J7 |
#6
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I went through that learning curve with the 302 in Hobbs last summer.
The working combination was to have the 302's static and TE/static ports connected to the same source, and (very important!) changing the 302's internal setup to use electronic TE. Once I did that, the 302's vario and my B-40 danced to the same tune. 2NO |
#7
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BB wrote:
I have run in to problems sharing a pitot between ASI and Cambridge 302, resulting in several very frustrating days at Hobbs one year where it seemed as if I had forgotten to thermal. Separate pitots for the two instruments solved the problem. Luckily, I have a tail pitot and a nose pitot so each can have its own. The 302 seems particularly fussy about having its own pitot and static sources however. Based on my experience with my 302, I don't think it was the 302. On my ASH 26 E, I went from a tail mounted TE feed to the 302 to using the ASI pitot/static (electronic TE) with no detectable change in ASI or 302 operation. Just guessing: perhaps your connection involved a leak, or maybe the 302 was not happy using a nose pitot and a TE probe and static at the rear of the glider. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#8
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Hello,
Maybe there was a misunderstanding. I am asking advices for the following: On a PIK20D, there are 4(four) tubes comming up from the cockpit at the panel: 1. Pitot from the nose 2. TE from the fin 3. Left rear fuselage static 4. Right rear fuselage static What would be the best (optimal) tubing for the following instruments ? 1. Simple ASI 2. Simple Altimeter 3. Simple PZL mech vario 4. Peschges VP9 |
#9
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On the Pik-20D that I had there were 2 static holes on each side of the
boom, 4 holes total. IIRC, one left and one right hole pair were connected to one tube toward the panel and the other left and right pair went to the other tube. It was a good static system with very small position errors. -Bob Korves "T o d d P a t t i s t" wrote in message ... (Istvan Csonka) wrote: I am asking advices for the following: On a PIK20D, there are 4(four) tubes comming up from the cockpit at the panel: 1. Pitot from the nose 2. TE from the fin 3. Left rear fuselage static 4. Right rear fuselage static On all gliders I've looked at, the right and left tail boom fuselage statics are hooked together with a T (in the tail) to produce a single static signal that is insensitive to yaw angle. I can't say if that's right for a PIK, but I'd be surprised if it wasn't. You might also want to verify that there are no under wing static holes. If not, it looks to me like you have one static, one TE and one pitot. The ASI needs static and pitot, the VP9 needs the TE. I know of no reason not to hook altimeter to static with the ASI, so that leaves the PZL and its capacity. In theory, you can hook it to either static or TE. There is the potential to interfere with other instruments when hooking it either way, so I'd ignore it (leave it disconnected or not installed) until after I was sure the other instruments were working well. Then you can try hooking it to the static or TE. My mechanical vario goes to my extra static (I've got a pair under the wings, a pair on the boom and one on the fin). |
#10
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While on the matter of line sharing, the following is relevant to sharing
the Total Energy line between a number of flow variometers, mechanical (Winter, PZL, etc.) and / or electrical (Cambridge CAV II etc.) Each of the variometers fed by the one TE source have flow through the instrument to their own flask. All flasks running off one TE source must be the same physically and thermodynamically. If you mix flasks with different characteristics then you will get cross flow between the instruments. You can try this test on the bench provided you do it carefully. Get two identical pneumatic varios (with hopefully little inherent instrument error) and two diferent flasks, say one vacuum flask with heat sink material inserted and the other a same type vacuum flask without heat sink material inside. Apply a signal via a Tee junction to the two variometers. Note the variometer readings of the two variometers at different flow rates, ie calibrate one vario relative to the other. They won't read the same! Then swap the flasks between the variometers and repeat the calibration. The relative calibration will swap over between the varios showing that the flasks are influencing things strongly due to their different characteristics. Install identical flasks and the varios will resume responding together. So use identical flasks to avoid cross flow when using a common TE source. Roger Druce "Istvan Csonka" wrote in message om... Dear All, I have seen several posts about how to share the TE line between e-vario and mechanical one. Maybe I am wrong but I can not see any post about sharing the pitot pressure (dynamic) between ASI, e-vario (computer) and and the only one static port between e-vario, altimeter and mechanical vario. Any good advice or this is not a problem at all ? |
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