![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Al" wrote in
: Some autopilot failures are very subtle. I was shooting a coupled ILS to minimums with a King autopilot in a Mooney. After capturing the glideslope, I noticed the rate was about 75'/min more than I was used to. As we got closer to DH, the DME was still showing about 2 miles to the airport. I leveled at DH, and while motoring along 200' above the houses, I tapped the Vor/loc. The GS needle snapped to the top of the case. It was "stuck" centered, and the autopilot was literally flying the needle. Iron Mike, indeed. Technically speaking, that wasn't an autopilot failure, it was a GS needle failure. The results would have been nearly identical if you were hand- flying. Although you might have noticed inconcistencies in airplane response more quickly and fixed it earlier. Then again, you might have been so busy keeping the needle centered that it would have gone unnoticed until you flew your plane right through someone's living room. Hard to say. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Judah" wrote in message . .. "Al" wrote in : Some autopilot failures are very subtle. I was shooting a coupled ILS to minimums with a King autopilot in a Mooney. After capturing the glideslope, I noticed the rate was about 75'/min more than I was used to. As we got closer to DH, the DME was still showing about 2 miles to the airport. I leveled at DH, and while motoring along 200' above the houses, I tapped the Vor/loc. The GS needle snapped to the top of the case. It was "stuck" centered, and the autopilot was literally flying the needle. Iron Mike, indeed. Technically speaking, that wasn't an autopilot failure, it was a GS needle failure. Correct. The results would have been nearly identical if you were hand- flying. Although you might have noticed inconcistencies in airplane response more quickly and fixed it earlier. Naw, If I'd set the plane up for the descent, and got it exactly right the first time, with no additional trim, I'd be real suspicious...Never happened before. Then again, you might have been so busy keeping the needle centered that it would have gone unnoticed until you flew your plane right through someone's living room. Hard to say. It's really a matter of cross checking and a cynical attitude. Al |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On the Century-2000 equipped Bonanzas I fly, there's an interesting
trim problem with the AP, which is basicly that it doesn't trim. Engage the AP while you're being vectored for the ILS and let it fly the approach, as you keep reducing power to slow down and then track the GS. As you slow down, you should be dialing in nose-up trim (and, indeed, the AP prompts you to do this, but if you're not paying attention, you can miss the flashing light). Now, at DH, click off the AP to hand-fly the landing. All of a sudden, you've got a fistfull of yoke trying to pull your arms out of their sockets until you get the trim fixed. Even worse if you didn't see the runway and clicked off the AP to execute the missed. Of course, the AP is performing as designed, and it's the pilot who's unairworthy, but it's a common enough mistake that I've got to believe it's a design flaw in the system. If nothing else, it should have a more obvious alert than a small blinking light outside of your main visual scan. Like maybe a mechanical arm that smacks you upside your head with a rolled-up sectional while a synthesized voice says, "Trim up, trim up". |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The auto-pilot should be running the trim, the annunciation
is intended to be advisory. Using the electric trim will disengage the auto-pilot. I'm guessing that you have a bad relay. It is not airworthy as it is, you might be able to placard it in-op until you can get it in the shop. Read the POH FM supplement for a description of the required pre-flight tests, you may not be doing them properly and thus the A/P won't engage. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P "Roy Smith" wrote in message ... | On the Century-2000 equipped Bonanzas I fly, there's an interesting | trim problem with the AP, which is basicly that it doesn't trim. | | Engage the AP while you're being vectored for the ILS and let it | fly the approach, as you keep reducing power to slow down and then | track the GS. As you slow down, you should be dialing in nose-up trim | (and, indeed, the AP prompts you to do this, but if you're not paying | attention, you can miss the flashing light). | | Now, at DH, click off the AP to hand-fly the landing. All of a | sudden, you've got a fistfull of yoke trying to pull your arms out of | their sockets until you get the trim fixed. Even worse if you didn't | see the runway and clicked off the AP to execute the missed. | | Of course, the AP is performing as designed, and it's the pilot who's | unairworthy, but it's a common enough mistake that I've got to believe | it's a design flaw in the system. If nothing else, it should have a | more obvious alert than a small blinking light outside of your main | visual scan. Like maybe a mechanical arm that smacks you upside your | head with a rolled-up sectional while a synthesized voice says, "Trim | up, trim up". |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article 5u4ag.20816$ZW3.8687@dukeread04,
Jim Macklin wrote: The auto-pilot should be running the trim, the annunciation is intended to be advisory. Using the electric trim will disengage the auto-pilot. I'm guessing that you have a bad relay. There is no electric trim. I believe it's an option, but our boxes don't have it. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I've never seen a Bonanza without electric trim and an
autopilot installed. What you have seems to be just a wing leveler with heading and [maybe] tracking. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P "Roy Smith" wrote in message ... | In article 5u4ag.20816$ZW3.8687@dukeread04, | Jim Macklin wrote: | The auto-pilot should be running the trim, the annunciation | is intended to be advisory. Using the electric trim will | disengage the auto-pilot. I'm guessing that you have a bad | relay. | | There is no electric trim. I believe it's an option, but our boxes | don't have it. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article PG5ag.20818$ZW3.19044@dukeread04,
Jim Macklin wrote: I've never seen a Bonanza without electric trim and an autopilot installed. Apparently not :-) What you have seems to be just a wing leveler with heading and [maybe] tracking. Nope. It does heading, tracks nav, altitude hold, course intercepts, and coupled ILS approaches. Once we get the kinks worked out of the new add-on box, it'll be doing GPS roll steering too. We've got one driven from a CDI, another with an HSI. It just doesn't have electric trim. It's an option, and we don't have that option. Wish we did, but we don't. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Experimental Catagory: Pros and Cons? | [email protected] | Soaring | 18 | April 16th 06 10:56 PM |
Long Tow Rope Pros & Cons | chris | Soaring | 7 | December 10th 03 02:30 PM |
Aluminum vs Fiberglass landing gear - Pro's and cons. | Bart Hull | Home Built | 1 | November 24th 03 02:46 PM |
Aluminum vs Fiberglass landing gear - Pro's and cons. | Bart Hull | Home Built | 2 | November 24th 03 05:23 AM |
Aluminum vs Fiberglass landing gear - Pro's and cons. | Bart Hull | Home Built | 0 | November 24th 03 03:52 AM |