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That's good, but I've heard of one case where the ailerons
moved together up and down, not differentially. Direct lift control, but is right up or down? I don't that airplane actual tried to take-off. If you box the control you can check for full and unrestricted travel for elevator and ailerons as well as correct rigging. I have seen wire bundles get loose and block control travel and you might see the ailerons move correctly, but you might not have full travel of the elevator. This is a killer, take off with engine failure, you can have a good chance to land without any damage. Have the controls locked, blocked or reversed and you're a passenger in a missile. The WSU football team DC3 tried to take-off with the gust locks installed on the tail, a C310 in Tulsa back in the early 70s took off with the controls reversed and immediately rolled into a smoking fireball. These are pilot error. The mechanic made a mistake, but the pilot has to check and verify... FREE and CORRECT. Test flying is any first flight after any work is done to the airplane, from a tire or oil change to a control replacement. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P "T o d d P a t t i s t" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: | | Remember, always, control wheel left and say, as you look, | right one is down and the left one is up, pull backwards and | note not just that the stick moves, but that the elevator us | up. Then stick right, left one is down and the right one is | up then stick full forward and again verify the elevator | moved in the correct direction. | | Grab stick (or yoke for those unfortunates who have them) | and stick your thumb up. Thumb should point towards the up | control as you move stick. Stick right, thumb points right, | right aileron up. Stick back, thumb points back, elevator | up. Simple to do, simple to remember. | | | Always do this, particularly after any | maintenance. It is not rare. | | I've heard of several of these accidents, and was there when | one was caught after maintenance (cables reversed). | | -- | Do not spin this aircraft. If the aircraft does enter a spin it will return to earth without further attention on the part of the aeronaut. | | (first handbook issued with the Curtis-Wright flyer) |
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