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#19
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On Jan 11, 4:29*pm, "Dan Marotta" wrote:
Why don't the manufactures publish the height to raise the tail as a difference between the axle center lines above ground? *Then you don't need to cut or calculate. Oh, gee... *That'd be too simple. One possible reason is that the height is not a constant for any glider that has a compressible pneumatic tyre or a sprung landing gear. Both have deflection that depends on the glider mass. That same deflection would need to be applied to the tail height. It may not be neglible at max gross wt. Speaking of sprung landing gear - in some cases the deflection changes not only the height but also the distance between the tyre/ground contact point and the datum. That applies to modern Schleicher single seaters and probably other gliders. The best plan is to do the weight and ballance as defined by the manufacturer. I also calculated my own pilot arm as I considered the generalities in the manual to be unacceptable. That can be done with a reasonably accurate bathroom scale under the tail as the calculation is independent of weight on the main gear. Andy (GY) |
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