![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I completed a weight and balance on my LS-4 and want to put
additional weight in the rear. The weight and balance included the 5.5 lb battery that is in the tail. Anyone have any advice or experience? Don (CX) |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 5, 10:08 pm, wrote:
I completed a weight and balance on my LS-4 and want to put additional weight in the rear. The weight and balance included the 5.5 lb battery that is in the tail. Anyone have any advice or experience? Don (CX) My tailwheel is filled with lead. Works fine for me. There are brass wheels available commercially from Tost (2kg with tire) http://www.wingsandwheels.com/page32.htm I may also make some molded lead weights and glass them in at the top of the stab. Or lose some body mass... /Adam |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 5, 8:56 pm, Adam wrote:
On May 5, 10:08 pm, wrote: I completed a weight and balance on my LS-4 and want to put additional weight in the rear. The weight and balance included the 5.5 lb battery that is in the tail. Anyone have any advice or experience? Don (CX) My tailwheel is filled with lead. Works fine for me. There are brass wheels available commercially from Tost (2kg with tire)http://www.wingsandwheels.com/page32.htm I may also make some molded lead weights and glass them in at the top of the stab. Or lose some body mass... /Adam Top of the stab? I'd check with an authority before installing something like that - the bending moment you could put on the vertical stab and the twisting force you're applying to the tail-boom with that arrangement might not be within the designed limits/loads of the manufacturer (think about what happens with that weight when you roll the aircraft). I'm not a manufacturer so I can't say for sure, but I would think the base of the vertical stab / tail-boom would be a much better place to put it. *shrug* --Noel |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Noel makes a good point on keeping any added weight as low as
possible. Think about what your tail will experience in a ground- loop........a large twisting moment, the higher the added weight, the more twisting.........pretty soon you will twist the tail right off. I believe the LS-4 has a provision to add tail weight on the lower rudder hinge bracket, I know the LS-6/7/8 has this. All weight MUST be secured, as in bolted or glassed in. If you pour in lead shot, the resin should be thickened with micro-balloons and even then the resin will tend to pool at the bottom. Adding more resin after the first has cured and a layer of cloth over the lead shot will keep everything in place. Hope this helps, JJ noel.wade wrote: On May 5, 8:56 pm, Adam wrote: On May 5, 10:08 pm, wrote: I completed a weight and balance on my LS-4 and want to put additional weight in the rear. The weight and balance included the 5.5 lb battery that is in the tail. Anyone have any advice or experience? Don (CX) My tailwheel is filled with lead. Works fine for me. There are brass wheels available commercially from Tost (2kg with tire)http://www.wingsandwheels.com/page32.htm I may also make some molded lead weights and glass them in at the top of the stab. Or lose some body mass... /Adam Top of the stab? I'd check with an authority before installing something like that - the bending moment you could put on the vertical stab and the twisting force you're applying to the tail-boom with that arrangement might not be within the designed limits/loads of the manufacturer (think about what happens with that weight when you roll the aircraft). I'm not a manufacturer so I can't say for sure, but I would think the base of the vertical stab / tail-boom would be a much better place to put it. *shrug* --Noel |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 6, 6:07*am, JJ Sinclair wrote:
Noel makes a good point on keeping any added weight as low as possible. Think about what your tail will experience in a ground- loop........a large twisting moment, the higher the added weight, the more twisting.........pretty soon you will twist the tail right off. I believe the LS-4 has a provision to add tail weight on the lower rudder hinge bracket, I know the LS-6/7/8 has this. All weight MUST be secured, as in bolted or glassed in. If you pour in lead shot, the resin should be thickened with micro-balloons and even then the resin will tend to pool at the bottom. Adding more resin after the first has cured and a layer of cloth over the lead shot will keep everything in place. Hope this helps, JJ noel.wade wrote: On May 5, 8:56 pm, Adam wrote: On May 5, 10:08 pm, wrote: I completed *a weight and balance on my LS-4 and *want to put additional weight in the rear. *The weight and balance included the 5.5 lb battery that is in the tail. *Anyone have any advice or experience? Don (CX) My tailwheel is filled with lead. Works fine for me. There are brass wheels available commercially from Tost (2kg with tire)http://www.wingsandwheels.com/page32.htm I may also make some molded lead weights and glass them in at the top of the stab. Or lose some body mass... /Adam Top of the stab? *I'd check with an authority before installing something like that - the bending moment you could put on the vertical stab and the twisting force you're applying to the tail-boom with that arrangement might not be within the designed limits/loads of the manufacturer (think about what happens with that weight when you roll the aircraft). *I'm not a manufacturer so I can't say for sure, but I would think the base of the vertical stab / tail-boom would be a much better place to put it. **shrug* --Noel- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I flew years with 3 pounds of lead shot secured in a bag at the top of the vertical fin above the battery cover (removed the black foam to make more space). My local authority was ok with that and I never had a problem, but also never ground looped. Ramy |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I flew years with 3 pounds of lead shot secured in a bag at the top of
the vertical fin above the battery cover (removed the black foam to make more space). My local authority was ok with that and I never had a problem, but also never ground looped. Ramy The bottom line is that cantilevering that kind of weight on the top of the tail is just not something that the aircraft designers and engineers anticipated. The structure wasn't designed for it - so just because it has worked doesn't mean that it won't fail in the future, or that it works on all gliders. Disregarding structure, there are performance reasons to keep the mass concentrated down in the fuselage. The closer to the center of rotation that you place some mass, the less force it takes to put that mass into motion. Here's a thought-experiment: Imagine rolling the aircraft. Imagine looking at the airplane from behind as it executes a perfect aileron roll. If you put the weight down low in the tail-boom, the rest of the tail rotates *around* that mass and it doesn't have to travel very far or move very fast. If it was way out at the tip of the tail, it would move through a much bigger circle over the same time period. That means it travels farther and has to move faster. It takes energy to start and stop the movement of that mass. In short: Handling is going to be less crisp and it will be harder to make subtle attitude corrections with a bunch of mass out at the tip of the tail (or the tip of a wing, or any extreme end of the glider). Take care, --Noel |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 5, 11:09*pm, "noel.wade" wrote:
On May 5, 8:56 pm, Adam wrote: On May 5, 10:08 pm, wrote: I completed *a weight and balance on my LS-4 and *want to put additional weight in the rear. *The weight and balance included the 5.5 lb battery that is in the tail. *Anyone have any advice or experience? Don (CX) My tailwheel is filled with lead. Works fine for me. There are brass wheels available commercially from Tost (2kg with tire)http://www.wingsandwheels.com/page32.htm I may also make some molded lead weights and glass them in at the top of the stab. Or lose some body mass... /Adam Top of the stab? *I'd check with an authority before installing something like that - the bending moment you could put on the vertical stab and the twisting force you're applying to the tail-boom with that arrangement might not be within the designed limits/loads of the manufacturer (think about what happens with that weight when you roll the aircraft). *I'm not a manufacturer so I can't say for sure, but I would think the base of the vertical stab / tail-boom would be a much better place to put it. **shrug* --Noel- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - In my case the sailplane is a Jantar Standard 2. Indeed it is better to put it as close to the boom axis as possible. As far as real world experience, the Brazilians have been putting as much as 8 pounds of lead at the top of the stab on their fleet of Jantars for 20 years with no ill effect. They also place lead strips on a fin rib accecible when the rudder is removed. And some have 3 liter water tanks installed. In the case of my tailwheel, molten lead was simply poured in the rim recesses on both sides. No epoxy/lead shot was used. /Adam |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 5, 10:56 pm, Adam wrote:
On May 5, 10:08 pm, wrote: I completed a weight and balance on my LS-4 and want to put additional weight in the rear. The weight and balance included the 5.5 lb battery that is in the tail. Anyone have any advice or experience? Don (CX) My tailwheel is filled with lead. Works fine for me. There are brass wheels available commercially from Tost (2kg with tire)http://www.wingsandwheels.com/page32.htm I may also make some molded lead weights and glass them in at the top of the stab. Or lose some body mass... /Adam Don't know exactly what you mean by "glass" them in? I see the brass wheel - a little pricey. Do you mean that you put lead in the actual wheel? I hear that replacing the tail battery with more than the original 5.5 lbs is risky? Don |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Don our LS 4 has lead added above the tail wheel just forward of the
rudder.You have to remove the rudder to get it out. BT wrote in message ... On May 5, 10:56 pm, Adam wrote: On May 5, 10:08 pm, wrote: I completed a weight and balance on my LS-4 and want to put additional weight in the rear. The weight and balance included the 5.5 lb battery that is in the tail. Anyone have any advice or experience? Don (CX) My tailwheel is filled with lead. Works fine for me. There are brass wheels available commercially from Tost (2kg with tire)http://www.wingsandwheels.com/page32.htm I may also make some molded lead weights and glass them in at the top of the stab. Or lose some body mass... /Adam Don't know exactly what you mean by "glass" them in? I see the brass wheel - a little pricey. Do you mean that you put lead in the actual wheel? I hear that replacing the tail battery with more than the original 5.5 lbs is risky? Don |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Placing a groove in the middle of the lead weight allows its
installation/removal without having to remove the rudder. (Just place the rudder in its neutral position so that its tab/seam lines up with the groove.) Bob "BT" wrote in message ... Don our LS 4 has lead added above the tail wheel just forward of the rudder.You have to remove the rudder to get it out. BT |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|