Brian Kraut wrote: > Rolling into a turn is to load the ailerons. When you are just straight and > level they are free to flutter. Rolling into a turn puts air pressure on > one side of the aileron and the control system forces into play. This takes > out the play and flex in the system, changes the dampening, and should stop > the flutter.
This never occured to me before, but this could be another plus for the new airfoil (not that flutter has been a problem with the old airfoil). The cusp on the bottom of the aileron loads them both upward them during flight, which unfortunately makes the control a little heavier though (although some might consider that a plus). When the stick is neutral sitting on the ground, my ailerons have to be rigged downward with respect to the wing's trailing edge by about 3/16", but in flight they line up nicely... Mark Langford, Huntsville, Alabama see KR2S project N56ML at http://home.hiwaay.net/~langford email to N56ML "at" hiwaay.net --------------------------------------------------------------