T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1185.1 | Go back before it's too late... | HANNAH::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 235-8459 HANNAH::REITH | Wed Feb 21 1990 13:56 | 7 |
| If you're at the point where you can correct it, do it!
You'll notice it with the covering on even more and you'll never be happy with
the way it looks. I had a model that I built with the stab out of line and it
never trimmed properly UNTIL I CRASHED IT AND REBUILT THE REAR OF THE FUSELAGE!
If you caught it this early and haven't continued yet, fix it.
|
1185.2 | My humble advice | NAC::ALBRIGHT | IBM BUSTERS - Who'ya going to call! | Wed Feb 21 1990 17:18 | 13 |
| Joe,
If your not to far out of true it may be possible to shim the
stablilzer. You will notice the plans tell you to glue the stablizer so
that it straight with the wing, not the fuse.
Another technique I saw discussed under the Chipmunk note was to wet
down the fuse and try and twist it back. It didn't work for the
chipmunk but may be worth a try. Finally, you may have to do some
serious wood carving. Take a look at the chipmunk note
(DIR/TITLE="chipmunk").
Loren
|
1185.3 | jig it | RUTLND::JNATALONI | | Thu Feb 22 1990 07:08 | 18 |
| I had this same problem with a 1/5 scale Bird dog. Here's what I did:
Strip whatever wood you can (i.e. - planking. I suspect you can't
really do that in your case though) I then mounted what was left
in a vise held jig (using 2x4's, believe it or not!) forcibly twisting
out the misalignment. Then liberally soak everything down to soften
the wood, and while all is still in the jig, add whatever new wood
you can (in my case, more planking). It's the new wood that's going
to hold all in place. Let dry, soak again and let dry. It did the
trick for me. I can't begin to describe the jig. It was sticks,
rubber bands, external props, masking tapes, etc., etc.
Basically, it was a single long 2x4, held in the vice which served as
the straight line/base line, and all else somehow attached, by hook,
nail, and grim - to it. Well ! I don't know if that helps, but I
do agree with others - it must be fixed.
john
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1185.4 | A dissenting opinion. | DIENTE::OSWALD | Randy Oswald | Thu Feb 22 1990 10:26 | 22 |
| Joe,
From experience I can say that a minor twist in the tail isn't much of a
problem in your basic trainer type airplane. If its not more that a couple
of degrees and you can live with it aesthetically (did I get that right?) don't
worry about it. It should fly fine. You may notice that it won't track true
through a loop, but you won't be worrying much about that for a while anyway.
My first couple of planes had pronounced twist at the tail and all flew fine.
(As a side note, I'm getting better and my Panic is dead square)
Have you built the wing yet? If so set it and the stab in place and see if
they are parallel. If they are or are pretty close you shouldn't have any
trouble at all. Wing and stab parallel and fin perpendicular to both is more
important than their relationship to the fuse.
I haven't found any of the twisting remedies to be fairly successful, and
cutting a fuse apart to fix a minor twist is not an experiance I'd recommend to
someone building their first plane.
Good luck in any case,
Randy
|
1185.5 | I AGREE..... | PNO::CASEYA | THE DESERT RAT (I-RC-AV8) | Thu Feb 22 1990 11:37 | 30 |
| Joe,
I'm afraid I have to agree with Randy. A minor twist in the aft
fuselage really causes very little (if any) problem as long as the stab
is aligned parallel to the wing and the fin/rudder perpendicular to the
stab. I had an old (lasted over 13-years) Ugly Stik that had a
terribly twister fuse acquired from years of water flying and it always
flew just fine, even with the stab crooked. Eventually, I refurbished
the bird and squared away the stab; the airplane flew a bit better but,
mainly, it _looked_ better in flight. Other than that, it'd have been
perfectly happy to fly with a cock-eyed stab for the rest of its life.
What you have here is a matter of effort vs. gain. I heartily concur
that drastic or intensive efforts to straighten the fuse will provide
little more than an aesthetic improvement in the bird and, if this is
to be yer' first/trainer airplane, it's just not worth the effort. I'd
only advise straightening the fuse if it involved a minimum of
work/hassle and it sounds as if this may not be the case. Therefore, I
recommend squaring away the flying surfaces and forgetting about the
twist. I guarantee it won't be visible at 25-yards from the back of a
galloping horse! :B^) Seriously, you'll be so thrilled/busy at flying
yer' own creation that I'd bet you'll never see the goof in the air and
will shortly forget about it in any case. Don't tell anyone and they
probably won't notice it either.
|
| | 00 Adios, Al
|_|_| ( >o
| Z__(O_\_ (The Desert Rat)
|
1185.6 | I'd rather twist than shout! | VTCOWS::SOUTIERE | | Thu Feb 22 1990 12:05 | 9 |
| I be the living proof, since it was my Chipmunk that was mentioned
earlier. I never did get the twist out, so I sanded and shimmed
the fuse so the horizontal stab was square to the wings. If you
get down on the ground behind the plane and look towards the prop
you will definetly see the twist, but thats the only noticeable
way of spotting it. It flys very straight and doesn't seem to add
any unwanted flying characteristics to the flight.
Ken
|
1185.7 | Water & counter-twist worked | WAV12::MARRONE | | Thu Feb 22 1990 13:01 | 21 |
| Thanks for all the advice. Here's a quick update.
Since the twist only appeared to be a few degrees, I decided to use the
water/counter-twisting method. I dipped the rear 12" of the fuse in
HOT water. Then I clamped the cabin section of the fuse (where the
sides are parallel) in the vise, and placed a big C clamp over the very
last piece of the fuse, lightly tightening it to avoid crushing it.
To create a counter-twisting torque, I then hung a heavy wrench
suspended by a string over the end of the C clamp. Worked like a
charm, just giving enough compensating twist in the other direction. I
let it dry overnight, and looked at it this morning...it appears to
have less than half the twist it had before. I'll probably repeat the
process again to get it all out. On the other hand, from the comments
made earlier, just a little sanding will make the stab parallel to the
wing, so I may not bother.
I learned something on this one.
Thanks,
Joe
|
1185.8 | some machines never read the book | TONAGE::HUFF | | Thu Feb 22 1990 20:26 | 18 |
| FROM BACK IN THE DAYS OF RADIO DISTURBED FREE FLIGHT (OR) MULTI
CHANNEL "REED" RADIOS WITH "OPEN-LOOP" SERVOS.........
For those of you who may have heard of JERRY NELSON (US Team Member
at the RC INTERNATIONALS of 1963(?) and 5th placer):
Jerry had a kitted design called the SULTAN. For some reason (Jerry
ordinarily built and rebuilt beautiful aircraft) his personal ship
had a stabilizer that was as crooked as they can get, both stabilizer
and fin. He flew it this way at contests and WON. And on reeds,
there ain't no holding in trim to compensate; the darn thing just
tracked like on a rail. I might say that my Sultan, another one
at Hickam AFB and all the other North and South California Sultans
had stright tail feathers and they all also tracked nice.
Must have repeeeeeld the laws of astrodynamics.
don
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1185.9 | Water wasn't the answer | WAV14::MARRONE | | Fri Feb 23 1990 13:09 | 14 |
| I guess I spoke too soon. Last night when I started working on it
again, the original amount of twist was back. I then decided that
water ain't the solution, at least not long-term. Since the problem
was mainly restricted to the stab platform, I de-bonded one joint
between it and the left fuse side. Now, with the joint open, I did a
little cutting here and there to make the joint fit better. After
regluing and holding the aft end in the propor orientation, it dried up
quite straight. After sanding a little to make the stab surface nice
and smooth, a test with a level told me it was dead nuts on! Problem
solved, and it didn't really take all that much work.
On to the engine mount........
-Joe
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1185.10 | Use window cleaner | CURIE::ANKER | Anker Berg-Sonne | Sun Feb 25 1990 21:45 | 12 |
| Re: <<< Note 1185.9 by WAV14::MARRONE >>>
Joe,
You are right, water isn't the answer. But window
cleaner is! "Borrow" your wife's window cleaner, spray the
entire fuse and then twist it so much that there is a slight
twist in the opposite direction. Tthen let it dry overnight.
Why window cleaner? It contains ammonia, which softens balsa
wood.
Anker
|
1185.11 | Glad it was easy to fix "right" | LEDS::LEWIS | | Mon Feb 26 1990 08:03 | 9 |
|
re: .9
I think you made the right decision taking the time to fix it, given
that it wasn't a major overhaul. I know personally I'd keep looking
at it and wishing I'd fixed it, even if it didn't affect the flight
characteristics. Maybe I'm too picky!
P.S. Anker, this is a plywood fuse, so even ammonia might not do the
trick???
|
1185.12 | Surgury is best | WAV13::MARRONE | | Thu Mar 01 1990 12:42 | 11 |
| Re: a few notes back....yes, the fuse IS plywood, so would the window
cleaner method work?
Even if it does, I am now convinced that if a repair can be done
without compromising the integrity of everything, then that's the right
way to go.
The work has slowed down a bit because I'm waiting for some
mail-ordered monokote from Tower.
-Joe
|
1185.13 | More Fuse. Fussin' | RUTLND::JNATALONI | | Thu Mar 01 1990 13:50 | 21 |
| Just to go back and add to some comments I made in reply >.3
I think I agree with both those that say fix it, and those who
say don't bother - depending on other factors.
I'm sure that my method worked so well only because I had the
opportunity to add NEW wood (turtledeck planking) while the fuse
was jig'd. This prevented "Memory" from being a factor. Also a
factor, this is a scale ship and I couldn't tolerate a twist, at
any price. Another thing - although balsa and plywood were inv-
olved, I did lace the water spray liberally with an ammonia clean-
ing agent (about 50/50). That does help!.
Incidentally, the reason why the twist got in, in the first place
was that I paid too much attention to aligning the very aft end of
the fuse so that the sticks "Matched". I should have used my eye-
ball on the rest of the fuse - let the end sticks "Mismatch" until
such time as everything set up, then make my corrections at the
tail end only (a little cutting - a little filling). Would have
been, by comparison, a lot simpler. For what it's worth ?
john
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