>I've seen some planes where "neutral aileron" actually was both ailerons
>sagging almost an inch -- when the plane was at rest.  Then I was told
>that at speed, both came up to level with the aerodynamic forces -- a
>bit of give in the system, I guess. 
>Rich Meyer
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Rich,

You won't catch me flying in an airplane that has "an inch of sagging"
in the aileron system at rest.  I spent $210 for an electric trim servo
just to take the "wiggle" out of my mechanically operated pitch trim tab.

Speaking of pitch trim tabs, there was a discussion a while back about
saving youself using pitch trim if the primary pitch control were to fail.
Using my Ray Allen servo (formerly Mac), I'd give myself about a
one in one thousand chance on ever pulling that off and I'm probably
being optimistic at that.  It's too slow and too far behind the aircraft 
movements to ever make it happen.  I've tried it several times and 
after about 20 seconds I've basiclly lost it.  That's one of those things 
that sounds good in a conversation but IT AIN'T GONNA HAPPEN !!
I think I could pull it off in the Tripacer but not the KR.

Larry Flesner




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