The other day my Chipmonk became very unmanagable. It didn't want to groove, and was very hard to control in manuvers. During my consecutive outside loops it was all I could do to miss the ground. Once on the ground a friend held the elevator while I worked the controls; man, they were sticky, jerky and sloppy (I don't know where Sneezy was). I figured that a clevis has come off of a horn, but managed to stay "looped" over it, as I did have some control; what I had to guess was at which end, the elevator, or flaps. I decided to cut into the elevator controls, when I did, it was scary. I discovered that the clevis was slipping over the threaded push rod

. I could work the controls, and the push rod would slip through the clevis by as many as 4 or 5 threads. I centered the controls and soldered the bugger; there, that's fixed

. I proudly worked the controls again, and to my dismay the controls were not fixed! I cut into the fuse and found the push rod coming off the bellcrank to the flap horn doing the same thing.

On my last plane I switched to ball joints, and plan on using them exclusively from now on, but never really considered that a clevis would self distruct in this manner. All I can say, is if you use a clevis, solder the thing up when you get your adjustments all set.
The pictures are of the clevis at the flap horn; the pictures show the amount of slippage; and the elevator clevis was worse.
Brian