went to the club on friday and I took my Dalton 260 and a Extra 330, and I decided to take some advice from one of the friends i met at an IMAC competition.
He gave me plenty of information, and he was awesome in giving me advice like no one else. I was like a sponge absorbing all the information he gave me.
However, it was 3 weeks since then, and i have now had the opportunity to try to do what he told me.
He told me:
1. fly straight up and check thrust. if it veers to left, then i need to add right thrust.
2. CG check.. inverted climb at 45 degrees, hands off and see what happens, are towards canopy = nose heavy
3. then roll to KE, and see what happens, if there is coupling and it arcs towards gear or canopy, then add rudder to elevator mix, if there is also rolling component, then add rudder to aileron mix as well.
Then, i have read peter goldsmith's recommendations, and he seems to say, check CG 1st, then thrust line.??
on both airplanes, i have corrected thrust line, i have gotten cg where i want it, end result, if i fly it inverted, i do have to apply just a touch of down elevator to keep it level, not bad. and i have added a mix, stays on all the time, of rudder to elevator, and with those two birds, i have never done knife edge like that before. i still have to add just a minuscule amount of rudder to aileron mix on it to keep it straight. The knife edge was like never before i have done before, and i felt like i could have flown it 20 feet above the runway, directly over it, and now i know how the "pros" have been able to do that at fly ins!! They have all kinds of mixes!!
well, here is my question:
1. the knife edge mix, will this improve my level flight rudder turns? meaning, when i do KE, left rudder applies up elevator, coincidentally, right rudder also required up elevator. if before the mix, i applied right rudder during level flight, the airplane would dip down. But now, it remains more level. once i add the aileron mix to it, will it keep it from rolling as well? i guess no mix will make it perfect, but sure will make it couple less? would this be the way to think of it?
He gave me plenty of information, and he was awesome in giving me advice like no one else. I was like a sponge absorbing all the information he gave me.
However, it was 3 weeks since then, and i have now had the opportunity to try to do what he told me.
He told me:
1. fly straight up and check thrust. if it veers to left, then i need to add right thrust.
2. CG check.. inverted climb at 45 degrees, hands off and see what happens, are towards canopy = nose heavy
3. then roll to KE, and see what happens, if there is coupling and it arcs towards gear or canopy, then add rudder to elevator mix, if there is also rolling component, then add rudder to aileron mix as well.
Then, i have read peter goldsmith's recommendations, and he seems to say, check CG 1st, then thrust line.??
on both airplanes, i have corrected thrust line, i have gotten cg where i want it, end result, if i fly it inverted, i do have to apply just a touch of down elevator to keep it level, not bad. and i have added a mix, stays on all the time, of rudder to elevator, and with those two birds, i have never done knife edge like that before. i still have to add just a minuscule amount of rudder to aileron mix on it to keep it straight. The knife edge was like never before i have done before, and i felt like i could have flown it 20 feet above the runway, directly over it, and now i know how the "pros" have been able to do that at fly ins!! They have all kinds of mixes!!
well, here is my question:
1. the knife edge mix, will this improve my level flight rudder turns? meaning, when i do KE, left rudder applies up elevator, coincidentally, right rudder also required up elevator. if before the mix, i applied right rudder during level flight, the airplane would dip down. But now, it remains more level. once i add the aileron mix to it, will it keep it from rolling as well? i guess no mix will make it perfect, but sure will make it couple less? would this be the way to think of it?