Andy
What are the benifits of changing from the trim tab setup?
Dave
Andy
What are the benifits of changing from the trim tab setup?
Dave
Dave Holl
Building Kitfox MK7
Rotax 912ULS
Well, for me the main thing was the loss of elevator effectiveness at slow speed with the trim tabs. With full flaps, on a short strip I loose up elevator at about 60mph with the tabs. If you look at them they tip down when the elevator goes up and they account for about 1/3 of the area of the elevator. Not the best design.
I'm sure the part I will miss is the ease in trimming for cruise flight with the manual lever. I'll have a good comparison when the project is done and can report back the up's and down's of it.
Andy
Thanks for the update.
I have not finished my tailplane and elevator so have a while to decide!
Will wait for your findings
Dave
Dave Holl
Building Kitfox MK7
Rotax 912ULS
You say not the best design. I think I can agree for practical reasons. I opted for the Speedster trim tab on my first Model IV. It was on one side only and worked fine. I rarely used flaps as the lighter Kitfox models had a fairly low stall speed clean. Then when thinking of a way to add a trim tab to conventional elevator, I was at the Desert Fox fly-in several years ago and saw one of the locals with a home brew trim tab. As I recall it had about a four inch chord and was right at a foot wide - or maybe a little more, but definitaly not the full width tab that you see on the prebuilt ones. (am I remembering correctly?) Two giant tabs - one either side? Way overkill, it seems and not surprising the loss of effectiveness.
One question, do you know how much weight the project will add to the tail of the airplane. Consider that the arm is close to eleven feet. I think about this because I put in ribs and gap seals on both vertical and horizontal surfaces and even though I used urethane foam and very light weight glass cloth plus two RAC servos, I figure I added about six pounds - 66 ft. lbs. aft of the datum. Fun stuff, though.
Alas I fail at being scientific... I have not weighed all the components that I removed and that I installed, but I can tell you this, The tabs & linkages were surprisingly heavy. The servo is about 2 feet forward from the elevator so I suspect it will be a wash in terms of CG and after removing the manual cable etc who knows maybe a win? Like I said, without weighing all the parts, I can feel good with my guesses! I'll put it on the scales when it's all done and confirm things there.
Having done the same conversion I am fairly confident the electric system weighs less (also not very scientific). Will be interested to see what Andy's scales say.
Last edited by Dorsal; 10-04-2011 at 02:58 PM.
Dorsal ~~^~~
Series 7 - Tri-Gear
912 ULS Warp Drive
Time for the next update. Covered the elevator and I am now ready to start spraying the polybrush, polyspray, and polytone!
Cut some fabric to size
Glue it down
Add some finishing tapes
All done. FYI "wool" on my 1950's iron is 250deg...
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