fiddled some with elevator bias now that I'm operating an electric with a backwards prop, but it's still down some when the flaps are neutral.
Forgive my aerodynamic ignorance here but aren't we looking at a moving target here based on more than 1 cause and effect?
First, the prop effect which can vary based on direction, rpm and weight/ diameter of the prop then design asymmetry of the plane itself?
Howard, didn't you once tell me the impact required more than the usual elevator droop, like 2 to 3 degrees compared to the normal less than 1 deg? I always assumed this was because of the high stab relationship to the wing and thrust centerline?
If this is true, then it wouldn’t surprise me that going to a pusher prop on an Impact only partially negated the design asymmetry and you still have to droop the elevators a little. Or... am I all wet?
As to the positive stab incidence thing, I haven’t really convinced myself that the effect is exactly the same as drooping the elevators. Why I say this is I’m not really sure if one method has more net negative effects, like turn symmetry, more than the other.
I can say one thing with some certainty, on more than one ship of similar design, I have proved to myself that you can droop the elevators enough to cure some upright hunts, but if drooped even further than needed can cause an inverted hunt.
One last word on hunting… as of late, I have been chasing the source of most of my more minor hunts (not saying this is everyone else’s problem, lots of things can cause this…) but a pet peeve has become slop at the bell crank due to the BC rocking on the pivot wire. Assuming you have no slop in your horn, or your using ball-links, grab and lock your lead outs, then wiggle your flaps. You don’t want slop there. I know some people liked a little slop at the elevators back in the day, and some still do, but I think it’s a curse to have any slop at the short pushrod area. This may not cause the classic hunt, but it seems to make a plane much more susceptible to turbulence, where the controls are loading and unloading in level flight, and also the rise/fall upwind/downwind effect, as that slop gets taken up one way, then the other. On a calm day, such a ship may feel fine and the effect goes unnoticed. I think an ideal BC would use at least 1/8” pivot wire, maybe something thicker if we could find something light that wouldn’t bend/break, and the BC itself would be as thick as possible in the pivot area to provide a large supporting surface as possible, but not so large as to cause any drag. So far the Morris aluminum Brett copy BC is working well for me, but I still detect a little rocking there… I know some people try to save weight and use the smaller (said thinner) of the 2 phenolic BC on 60 ships, and I really don’t like the effect. The good old 4” large arrowhead Brodak sells is also a decent BC in my opinion, and is reasonably thick at the pivot and stair steps down to the leadout points. Is this one just me, or have others been chasing this issue as well?
Sorry I rambled on so much, just all seemed worth mentioning.
I apologize for any perceived thread drift.
Thanks,
EricV