
September 23rd 03, 04:38 AM
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"MLenoch" wrote
"Paul Austin"
wrote:Something I saw raised a question in my mind: An MD-80's
T-tail had
one half pitched up and the other half pitched about neutral.
This is a situation that is specific to the DC-9/MD-80 series
airplanes. These
aircraft have elevators that are not connected to the control yoke
in the
cockpit. Rather, the yoke drives the trailing edge tabs only, and
thus the
elevators follow the "trim force" from the trailing edge tabs.
Pitch trim, in
the usual sense, is attained by a trimable horizontal stabilizer.
During
pretakeoff checks, the pilots will push forward on the control yoke
to activate
the "stall recovery" (for lack of a better word at this moment)
actuator; this
actuator will force the elevators down in unison, to produce a nose
down
control input should a "stall recovery" be commanded by the aircrew.
Just prior
to takeoff, the elevators appear in "harmony" to be connected
together.
Therefore, seeing a split elevator on DC-9/MD-80 aircraft, while on
the ground,
is normal, though visually disconcerting.
Thanks for the explanation.
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