OK Joe, now I'm more confused than ever. Presently I have the elevator down 1 1/2 turns when the flaps are level. I thought this was correct
Talk to me !!!
Hi Greg,
This is why they call it "trimming". The bottom line is that no two airplanes are exactly alike in that they will probably have different degrees of small misalignments built in any of a infinite number of ways. The only correct approach to deal with an airplane is "not" to compare it to another one but to be responsive to what it tells you is wrong with it. This sort of dichotomy between stability upright versus inverted is almost certainly the result of angular misalignment of the wing and tail. That misalignment could come from something as fundamental as gluing the wing and/or stab in inaccurately or as difficult to determine as having the stagnation point of the wing or tail either high or low by virtue of not shaping the leading edge correctly.
In any case, the important thing from the flier's perspective is to react appropriately to the unwanted result of "whatever" the state of trim is and, then, to adjust the trim to eliminate the problem.
To wit, an excessive amount of the very popular "positive stab incidence" (which is the same thing as a drooped elevator relative to neutral flaps) will be very stabilizing when upright but could well produce the instability you're getting while inverted.
To aid your evaluation, I'd pay very close attention to the airplane's response to inside and outside maneuvers and if it seems to turn more aggressively and be harder to stop where you want it on outside turns I would be dialing in a little more up elevator every flight until I noted a change. If you don't use a vertical handle in level flight I would also encourage you to do the "response" check with the handle adjusted to be vertical in level upright flight. If you're totally uncomfortable flying that way find a good flier who does use the vertical neutral position and ask him to do the evaluations for you. The biased handle position that comes with a "relaxed" neutral position will effect the airplane response and could well disguise the symptoms you're looking for.
Ted