Knife edge pitch trim ?

EDward Skorepa edsko at xmission.com
Mon Jun 28 10:58:30 AKDT 2004


Hi Dean,
are you trying to say, that if I trim my plane for a perfect (HANDS OFF)
horizontal flight then if I push or pull to a perfect (HANDS OFF) down or up
line  the wing is not producing any lift? If so, how that could be?
Ed
----- Original Message -----
From: Dean Pappas <d.pappas at kodeos.com>
To: <discussion at nsrca.org>
Sent: Monday, June 28, 2004 1:38 PM
Subject: RE: Knife edge pitch trim ?



Hi Ed,
Loaded means making lift. When you pull a vertical correctly, you forcibly
"drive" the plane to a vertical line. In this condition the wing makes no
lift.
If you have a plane that is trimmed for a nice straight vertical, and
over or under pull, the plane usually behaves differently, no?
Dean




-----Original Message-----
From: discussion-request at nsrca.org
[mailto:discussion-request at nsrca.org]On Behalf Of EDward Skorepa
Sent: Monday, June 28, 2004 2:19 PM
To: discussion at nsrca.org
Subject: Re: Knife edge pitch trim ?


Hi Dean,
would you mind to explain what "loaded" and "unloaded" wing means?

Thanks,
Ed
----- Original Message -----
From: Dean Pappas <d.pappas at kodeos.com>
To: <discussion at nsrca.org>
Sent: Monday, June 28, 2004 12:44 PM
Subject: RE: Knife edge pitch trim ?


Hi Paul,
The short answer is no. That wasn't very helpful, now was it!
Your conjecture about the positive incidence requiring some down trim is
good. The trim change is probably not the result of rudder displacement
making the elevatore more or less effective.

The difference between level flight and a vertical downline is that when the
wing is "loaded" the downwash that leaves the wing and strikes the stab, in
effect, produces a small bit of up trim. When the wing is unloaded, that up
trim effect goes away. In the upline, the effect of the thrustline (usually
above both the center of gravity and the center of drag) comes into play. In
the knife edge, the yaw of the plane produces small pitching effects from
different sources ranging from the size of the plane's chin, how big and how
far back the canopy is, to the distribution of the fin and rudder area and
to the effect of wing dihedral. That's why, in my opinion, the usefulness of
a trimming chart is sometimes limited. I have seen a dihedral change fix a
knife pitching problem, and a canopy placement change create one. Stab
versus elevator height has a very big effect on how much the downwash
induced trim adds into the mix, and a simple CG change has dramatic effects,
especially if the plane is borderline tail-heavy.

The result is that you start with the trim chart (it usually works) and then
experiment. The state of "proper Pattern trim" is actually a fairly tricky
thing.

Sorry but there is no "one size fits all" answer!
Regards,
Dean P.



-----Original Message-----
From: discussion-request at nsrca.org
[mailto:discussion-request at nsrca.org]On Behalf Of Paul Horan
Sent: Saturday, June 26, 2004 7:51 PM
To: discussion at nsrca.org
Subject: Knife edge pitch trim ?


    The NSRCA site's trim states that during knife edge if the model pitches
to the canopy wing then increase wing incidence.
    I assume what they are trying to accomplish is by increasing wing
incidence the elevator will carry more down.
    OK, how does elevator position tie in with rudder ?  Does rudder
deflection cause the elevator to become more effective - thus
the pitch coupling ?

Thanks,
Paul

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