The 150/152 rudder stops on the rudder horn was in response to loss of control
issues during training specifically spin training
The original stops were much smaller and could jump over the adjustment stop
resulting in jammed rudder and several deaths
Regarding stress on cables as a former 152
At 09:35 AM 6/9/2015, you wrote:
>I've had wire cables fail two ways for me. One way, is where the
>crimp/soldered end/etc tears off the end of the cable. I think I've had
>that happen three or four times over my lifetime. The other failure I've
>had is midpoint wire breakages.
+
I'm about to make an argument for stops at the surface only. I think I've
got a good argument here.
I've had wire cables fail two ways for me. One way, is where the
crimp/soldered end/etc tears off the end of the cable. I think I've had
that happen three or four times over my lifetime. The oth
>
>"Hey Guys, Looks like I'll be doing Rudder stops as an afterthought.
>What's the best place and method for this ?"
+
When it comes to stress loads on the control systems in my KR, I'm
convinced the greatest s
"Hey Guys, Looks like I'll be doing Rudder stops as an afterthought. What's the
best place and method for this ?"
I don't often contribute but I think this time it is important. My take on
this is;
I am installing stops at both ends. The reason: I hear it is accepted good
practice to s
The highest loads you'll ever put on your rudder cables and rudder horn are
when you are braking if you have toe brakes. The Tony Bingelis books advise
using stops at the control surfaces to prevent overload and damage at the
control surface hinges when parked with a tailwind, should you happen
too hard. So
it looks like we have a reason for something to protect the flight surface from
banging over too far, and also the control cable and related from being
stressed. Why not both?
> Date: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 13:02:04 -0400
> To: krnet at list.krnet.org
> Subject: Re: KR>
Ever look at a Cessna?
The control stops are at the control surfaces to prevent over stressing the
surface due to flight loads, not pilot input.
Just sayin'
Chris G.
Sent from my iPad
> On Jun 7, 2015, at 10:00 PM, Flesner via KRnet
> wrote:
>
> At 08:52 PM 6/7/2015, you wrote:
>
>> I would
At the rudder pedals, Virg
On 6/7/2015 7:01 PM, Mike Sylvester via KRnet wrote:
> Hey Guys, Looks like I'll be doing Rudder stops as an afterthought. What's
> the best place and method for this ?
>
> Mike Sylvester
> kr2s builder
> Birmingham,AL.
>
> Cell no.205-966-3854
I would disagree with Larry on that one.
The control surface stops should be as close to the control surface as possible.
It is a Canadian requirement to have control stops on all control surfaces.
My rudder stops are where the control horn meets the fuselage. A simple bracket
was added with adjus
At 08:52 PM 6/7/2015, you wrote:
>I would disagree with Larry on that one.
>The control surface stops should be as close to the control surface
>as possible.
++
Why do I want to stress the entire system, cable, fare leads,
pulleys, and
>, Looks like I'll be doing Rudder stops as an afterthought. What's
>the best place and method for this ?
>Mike Sylvester
++
Method will depend on your setup but put them at the rudder bar and
not on the tail. You don't w
Hey Guys, Looks like I'll be doing Rudder stops as an afterthought. What's the
best place and method for this ?
Mike Sylvester
kr2s builder
Birmingham,AL.
Cell no.205-966-3854
14 matches
Mail list logo