South Burlington, VT
- Aircraft Year
- 1978 580
- Aircraft Type
- Super Commander
- Reg Number
- N555LP
- Serial Number
- 14405
Hi All,
As part of Aerodyme's 200 Kt initiative, we are about ready to begin flight testing the so-called "8 knot mod". This is the incidence change to the horizontal stab to streamline the horizontal tail in cruise. As many of you know, Robin made this change to his 112 some dozen years ago, has flown it ever since, and reported a gain of 8 knots cruise.
In trying to engineer the best possible STC kit, it would be helpful to have additional pictures of the existing trim condition on as many of our aircraft as possible. This will help me determine if one new incidence angle will suffice or if "grades" will be needed.
Would any of you be willing to snap photos and email them to me, or post here?
Example below.
Procedure as follows: Establish your best cruising speed, trim her up nicely to center the ball and hold altitude. Autopilot, hands and feet all OFF. If she won't hold a decent heading while you try to snap the pic, go get her rigged and try again. Smooth air is best but the other conditions are flexible, just send me the following data so I can normalize the results:
Indicated altitude
Pressure altitude (dial 29.92)
Indicated airspeed
OAT (at that altitude)
Your estimation of trim wheel position (see below)
Most helpful trim report:
Before the flight, position your trim wheel to make the trim tabs streamlined with the elevators (average of left and right) and mark this position of your trim wheel. Then, report to me the in flight trimmed condition as follows:
-5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 +1 +2 +3 +4 +5
-5 equals max nose down trim
0 equals the neutral position you marked
+5 equals max nose up trim
Thanks,
Jim
As part of Aerodyme's 200 Kt initiative, we are about ready to begin flight testing the so-called "8 knot mod". This is the incidence change to the horizontal stab to streamline the horizontal tail in cruise. As many of you know, Robin made this change to his 112 some dozen years ago, has flown it ever since, and reported a gain of 8 knots cruise.
In trying to engineer the best possible STC kit, it would be helpful to have additional pictures of the existing trim condition on as many of our aircraft as possible. This will help me determine if one new incidence angle will suffice or if "grades" will be needed.
Would any of you be willing to snap photos and email them to me, or post here?
Example below.
Procedure as follows: Establish your best cruising speed, trim her up nicely to center the ball and hold altitude. Autopilot, hands and feet all OFF. If she won't hold a decent heading while you try to snap the pic, go get her rigged and try again. Smooth air is best but the other conditions are flexible, just send me the following data so I can normalize the results:
Indicated altitude
Pressure altitude (dial 29.92)
Indicated airspeed
OAT (at that altitude)
Your estimation of trim wheel position (see below)
Most helpful trim report:
Before the flight, position your trim wheel to make the trim tabs streamlined with the elevators (average of left and right) and mark this position of your trim wheel. Then, report to me the in flight trimmed condition as follows:
-5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 +1 +2 +3 +4 +5
-5 equals max nose down trim
0 equals the neutral position you marked
+5 equals max nose up trim
Thanks,
Jim