behindpropellers wrote:How are you determining the split?
mtv wrote:Okay, I’ll be the toad: It’s an OLD friggin airplane. Why are you concerned about 1 to 1.5 degrees difference? I doubt you could tell the difference if they were perfect.
Ie: Who cares?
MTV
180Marty wrote: I looked at mine this afternoon and with the right side elevator tip lined up just right, the left tip is a little higher than the horizontal.
C180_guy wrote:mtv wrote:Okay, I’ll be the toad: It’s an OLD friggin airplane. Why are you concerned about 1 to 1.5 degrees difference? I doubt you could tell the difference if they were perfect.
Ie: Who cares?
MTV
Wondering if this is typical? Want to know if this is the only one like that? Want to know more about the plane? Like to talk about these airplanes? Wouldn't mind learning a rigging hot tip? Enjoy working on it? Trying to have a conversation and that's what is on my mind right now? Always trying to learn something new? Want to strive to make to right?
Sheesh.
AEROPOD wrote:I've found this on more than one Skywagon with a heavy wing. Straightened out a few birds this way and picked up a bit of speed. The devil is in the details. Yeah, they are old airplanes, but no reason they have to fly like they are old.
mtv wrote:AEROPOD wrote:I've found this on more than one Skywagon with a heavy wing. Straightened out a few birds this way and picked up a bit of speed. The devil is in the details. Yeah, they are old airplanes, but no reason they have to fly like they are old.
Wings, yes. But how do you fix the issue the OP described without re-skinning a control surface? That’s expensive, requires trying to match paint, which is tough, and what will you gain from correcting a one degree difference? In fact, how hard is it going to be to perfectly match them even if you re build them?
And, if you’re getting into this kind of detail, there are almost assuredly several other, perhaps more ugly, issues in many Airframes.
Chasing a one degree difference in a wing “might” show some results that you can measure......maybe. But one degree difference in elevator angles?
MTV
mtv wrote:And enlarging bolt holes in a torque tube in a control surface would be approved by the FAA?
Whatever winds your watch, I reckon.
MTV
Lost wrote:Before anybody starts "fixing" the uneven elevators on their C180/182 you may want to do some additional research. This could be something cessna did intentionally to offset the effects of engine torque or slipstream in cruise flight. Don't know for sure.
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