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jconnell(at)fmwildblue.co Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 6:56 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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Gentlemen,
I've been flying my Kitfox-II for about 12 years. An item in the May issue of "Flying" magazine is prompting this note. One paragraph in an article called "Aftermath" by Pete Garrison states the following:
"I have very limited experience in LSAs, but one very popular model that I have flown had surprising flight characteristics, including a rudder so whimsical that it would remain at either stop, fully deflected, while the pilot's feet were flat on the floor and the airplane flew merrily along in a gigantic sideslip. This is the kind of behavior that one associates with the First World War, not the 21st century."
My Kitfox-II exhibits the exact characteristic! If my feet are on the floor, I will get a very strong adverse yaw just by moving the wings a bit. If I look in the rearview mirror I can see the rudder is fully deflected. It's as if the short fuselage and the small vertical stabilizer are insufficient to prevent yaw in straight flight. If I remember, the Model-III and above have a much larger vertical stabilizer (with an airfoil) and rudder assembly. The Kitfox has long wings relative to fuselage.
Is anyone else experiencing this condition? I'm thinking of adding some sort of centering springs to keep the rudder centered in straight and level flight. I've even toyed with the idea of replacing the rudder with a larger later model...
Joe Connell
Kitfox-II N62JK
[quote][b]
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akflyer
Joined: 07 May 2007 Posts: 574 Location: Soldotna AK
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 7:11 am Post subject: Re: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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The "very strong adverse yaw" comes from the flaperon mixer design. While a larger vertical stab will help the issue, the real bottom line is the flaperons travel 2X more down than they do up. The down flaperon creates more drag and pull you to that side ( you roll right and the nose goes to the left). New mixers mods, will give you 2X more up than down and the majority of the adverse yaw goes away.
When setting my large models up for competition, it takes atleast 35 or 40 flights to get all the bad habits mixed out of the plane. One of the biggest issues is getting aileron travel dialed in so you perfectly axial rolls. This generally ends up have 2 to 2.5 times more up travel than down.
You can get the model IV mixer system from KF and retro it to your plane, but if you have been flying it this way for 12 years I think you have a handle on it.
Personally I think it makes you a better pilot because it forces you to use your feet..... alot.
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_________________ DO NOT ARCHIVE
Leonard Perry aka SNAKE
Soldotna AK
Avid "C" / Mk IV
582 (147 hrs and counting on the rebuild)
IVO IFA
Full Lotus 1450
#1 snake oil salesman since 1-22-2009
I would rather die trying to live, than to live trying not to die.... |
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matronics(at)bob.brennan. Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 7:29 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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Joe - my Model 2 also exhibits the same characteristics, as I believe all un-modified Model 2's do.
From the Kitfox website at http://www.kitfoxaircraft.com/Model%20III.htm:
"The Model 3 was the first major attempt to aggressively deal with the yaw control issue. It should be remembered that we are not talking about yaw instability, but a neutral yaw condition. In other words, it was desired to have the airplane return to straight flight after pressing a rudder without having to move it back with your feet. Much of this objective was achieved by increasing the size of the vertical fin."
Bottom line is - there's no cruise control on a Model 2, you have to fly it with your feet on the rudders at all times. Being a Model 2 owner I'd like to cite some positive benefit like "makes you a better pilot" but really it was just an evolving design and as the Models evolved certain things were changed. Come to think of it - when I flew Pipers I used to think a Cessna was a difficult plane to fly, now after flying the Kitfox the Cessna is like driving a car! And just as slow...
As we say in the Engineering World - it's not a flaw, it's and undiscovered feature.
Bob Brennan - N717GB
ELSA Repairman, inspection rated
1991 UK Model 2 ELSA Kitfox taildragger
Rotax 582 with 3 blade prop
Wrightsville Pa
From: owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Joe & Jan Connell
Sent: 13 April 2009 10:55 am
To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior
Gentlemen,
I've been flying my Kitfox-II for about 12 years. An item in the May issue of "Flying" magazine is prompting this note. One paragraph in an article called "Aftermath" by Pete Garrison states the following:
"I have very limited experience in LSAs, but one very popular model that I have flown had surprising flight characteristics, including a rudder so whimsical that it would remain at either stop, fully deflected, while the pilot's feet were flat on the floor and the airplane flew merrily along in a gigantic sideslip. This is the kind of behavior that one associates with the First World War, not the 21st century."
My Kitfox-II exhibits the exact characteristic! If my feet are on the floor, I will get a very strong adverse yaw just by moving the wings a bit. If I look in the rearview mirror I can see the rudder is fully deflected. It's as if the short fuselage and the small vertical stabilizer are insufficient to prevent yaw in straight flight. If I remember, the Model-III and above have a much larger vertical stabilizer (with an airfoil) and rudder assembly. The Kitfox has long wings relative to fuselage.
Is anyone else experiencing this condition? I'm thinking of adding some sort of centering springs to keep the rudder centered in straight and level flight. I've even toyed with the idea of replacing the rudder with a larger later model...
Joe Connell
Kitfox-II N62JK
[quote]
href="http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Kitfox-List">http://www.matronhref="http://forums.matronics.com">http://forums.matronics.com
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kerrjohna(at)comcast.net Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 7:39 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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why fly with your feet on the floor? they have built-in springs that can develop memory of what feels right. Put them on the rudder pedals and use them.
John Kerr
---
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Fox5flyer Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 7:58 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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Since you've been flying yours for 12 years I'd be the last one to try to tell you how to fly it because you already know that, and very well. What you have is typical adverse yaw which is typical of the early Foxes. Snakeman explained it very well. Mine did the same thing, but after a few flights it became second nature and wasn't a problem. There is something you can do about it, but is it worth it?
Deke Morisse
Mikado Michigan
S5/Subaru/CAP 402+ TT
"The aim of an argument or discussion should not be victory, but progress."
- Joseph Joubert
[quote] ---
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msm_9949(at)yahoo.com Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 8:09 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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As a practical matter, it means keeping your feet on the pedals and cross-controlling a tad to keep the ball centered in a turn. It's a quirk but you quickly get used to it. Personally, I don't think it needs fixing nor would I go so far as to say this benign characteristic makes the Model II a throwback to WW1.
Marco Menezes N99KX
Model 2 582-90 C-Box 3:1 w/clutch
--- On Mon, 4/13/09, akflyer <akflyer_2000(at)yahoo.com> wrote:
Quote: |
From: akflyer <akflyer_2000(at)yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Kitfox Model II flight behavior
To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
Date: Monday, April 13, 2009, 11:11 AM
--> Kitfox-List message posted by: "akflyer" <akflyer_2000(at)yahoo.com (akflyer_2000(at)yahoo.com)>
The "very strong adverse yaw" comes from the flaperon mixer design. While a larger vertical stab will help the issue, the real bottom line is the flaperons travel 2X more down than they do up. The down flaperon creates more drag and pull you to that side ( you roll right and the nose goes to the left). New mixers mods, will give you 2X more up than down and the majority of the adverse yaw goes away.
When setting my large models up for competition, it takes atleast 35 or 40 flights to get all the bad habits mixed out of the plane. One of the biggest issues is getting aileron travel dialed in so you perfectly axial rolls. This generally ends up have 2 to 2.5 times more up travel than down.
You can get the model IV mixer system from KF and retro it to your plane, but if you have been flying it this way for 12 years I think you have a handle on it.
Personally I think it makes you a better pilot because it forces you to use your feet..... alot.
--------
DO NOT ARCHIVE
Leonard Perry aka SNAKE
Soldotna AK
Avid "C" / Mk IV
582 IVO IFA
Full Lotus 1260
#1 snake oil salesman since 1-22-2009
hander outer of humorless darwin awards
Read this topic online here:
http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=238909#238909
http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?K - MATRONICS WEB FORUM; ="http://www.matronics.com/contribution" target=_blank>http://www.matro=====================
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[quote][b]
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matronics(at)bob.brennan. Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 8:23 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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Sounds like a lot of snake-oil to me!
I'm reviewing the Kitfox website about this issue Leonard, and it is
addressed in 3 places:
1. From Model 2 to 3 the vertical stabiliser size is increased to go from
yaw-neutral to yaw-positive.
2. From 3 to 4 the flaperon mixer is changed to the 2x configuration so that
it would "handle like a contemporary, certified airplane", the effect being
"rudder coordination was made much easier", but "while yaw stability was no
longer neutral, it was not aggressively positive".
3. Series 5 vertical fin changes were apparently the final solution:
"Refinements to the vertical tail surfaces and a new, trimable, horizontal
stabilizer enhanced the pitch feel. The Series 5 has a "smoother" feel than
the quick reacting Model 4, but retains the overall agility. Yaw stability
is positive and good."
So by my reading it was changes to the vertical fin in 3 and 5 that
corrected the yaw "feature" of Models 1 and 2, not the flaperon change; or
am I interpreting it wrong?
Gotta keep an eye on these snake oil salesmen <wink>
Bob Brennan - N717GB
ELSA Repairman, inspection rated
1991 UK Model 2 ELSA Kitfox taildragger
Rotax 582 with 3 blade prop
Wrightsville Pa
--
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Aerobatics(at)aol.com Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 8:24 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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A fix that helps.... is sealing the gaps on rudder ( elevator should be too) and flying a forward CG
I found the simple mod to make a big improvement....
good luck
KF 2 582 BH 450 hrs
In a message dated 4/13/2009 10:59:23 A.M. Central Daylight Time, fox5flyer(at)idealwifi.net writes:
[quote] Since you've been flying yours for 12 years I'd be the last one to try to tell you how to fly it because you already know that, and very well. What you have is typical adverse yaw which is typical of the early Foxes. Snakeman explained it very well. Mine did the same thing, but after a few flights it became second nature and wasn't a problem. There is something you can do about it, but is it worth it?
Deke Morisse
Mikado Michigan
S5/Subaru/CAP 402+ TT
"The aim of an argument or discussion should not be victory, but progress."
- Joseph Joubert
[quote] ---
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matronics(at)bob.brennan. Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 8:55 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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My flight instructor in the Kitfox (old-school tailwheel) taught me to correct roll due to turbulence with the rudder, not the stick. After experimenting I find this does indeed work better, on my Model 2 at least. When flying a 172 I still use the yoke to correct for roll and the rudder pedals are footrests. Maybe I'll try rudder control for roll on Pipers and Cessnas next time I'm flying one to see if it works as well as it does in my KF2.
Anyone else have any experience with this?
Bob Brennan - N717GB
ELSA Repairman, inspection rated
1991 UK Model 2 ELSA Kitfox taildragger
Rotax 582 with 3 blade prop
Wrightsville Pa
From: owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-kitfox-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Marco Menezes
Sent: 13 April 2009 11:54 am
To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Re: Kitfox Model II flight behavior
As a practical matter, it means keeping your feet on the pedals and cross-controlling a tad to keep the ball centered in a turn. It's a quirk but you quickly get used to it. Personally, I don't think it needs fixing nor would I go so far as to say this benign characteristic makes the Model II a throwback to WW1.
Marco Menezes N99KX
Model 2 582-90 C-Box 3:1 w/clutch
--- On Mon, 4/13/09, akflyer <akflyer_2000(at)yahoo.com> wrote:
Quote: |
From: akflyer <akflyer_2000(at)yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Kitfox Model II flight behavior
To: kitfox-list(at)matronics.com
Date: Monday, April 13, 2009, 11:11 AM
--> Kitfox-List message posted by: "akflyer" <akflyer_2000(at)yahoo.com (akflyer_2000(at)yahoo.com)>
The "very strong adverse yaw" comes from the flaperon mixer design. While a larger vertical stab will help the issue, the real bottom line is the flaperons travel 2X more down than they do up. The down flaperon creates more drag and pull you to that side ( you roll right and the nose goes to the left). New mixers mods, will give you 2X more up than down and the majority of the adverse yaw goes away.
When setting my large models up for competition, it takes atleast 35 or 40 flights to get all the bad habits mixed out of the plane. One of the biggest issues is getting aileron travel dialed in so you perfectly axial rolls. This generally ends up have 2 to 2.5 times more up travel than down.
You can get the model IV mixer system from KF and retro it to your plane, but if you have been flying it this way for 12 years I think you have a handle on it.
Personally I think it makes you a better pilot because it forces you to use your feet..... alot.
--------
DO NOT ARCHIVE
Leonard Perry aka SNAKE
Soldotna AK
Avid "C" / Mk IV
582 IVO IFA
Full Lotus 1260
#1 snake oil salesman since 1-22-2009
hander outer of humorless darwin awards
Read this topic online here:
http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=238909#238909
http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?K - MATRONICS WEB FORUM; ="http://www.matronics.com/contribution" target=_blank>http://www.matro=====================
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[quote]
href="http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Kitfox-List">http://www.matronhref="http://forums.matronics.com">http://forums.matronics.com
href="http://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/c
[b]
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akflyer
Joined: 07 May 2007 Posts: 574 Location: Soldotna AK
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 9:38 am Post subject: Re: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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matronics(at)bob.brennan. wrote: | Sounds like a lot of snake-oil to me!
I'm reviewing the Kitfox website about this issue Leonard, and it is
addressed in 3 places:
1. From Model 2 to 3 the vertical stabiliser size is increased to go from
yaw-neutral to yaw-positive.
2. From 3 to 4 the flaperon mixer is changed to the 2x configuration so that
it would "handle like a contemporary, certified airplane", the effect being
"rudder coordination was made much easier", but "while yaw stability was no
longer neutral, it was not aggressively positive".
3. Series 5 vertical fin changes were apparently the final solution:
"Refinements to the vertical tail surfaces and a new, trimable, horizontal
stabilizer enhanced the pitch feel. The Series 5 has a "smoother" feel than
the quick reacting Model 4, but retains the overall agility. Yaw stability
is positive and good."
So by my reading it was changes to the vertical fin in 3 and 5 that
corrected the yaw "feature" of Models 1 and 2, not the flaperon change; or
am I interpreting it wrong?
Gotta keep an eye on these snake oil salesmen <wink>
Bob Brennan - N717GB
ELSA Repairman, inspection rated
1991 UK Model 2 ELSA Kitfox taildragger
Rotax 582 with 3 blade prop
Wrightsville Pa
-- |
Take a look at the 3-4.
It is basic lift versus drag. If at first they could not figure out how to update the mixer, the only solution was to increase rudder / fin size. John Stoner did the math, figured out the issue and made a new mixer that worked right. That was on a model III.
No snake oil here, heck even Deke said I explained it well.. and if Deke agrees with me then by golly you better get your affairs in order cause the end is coming soon LOL.
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_________________ DO NOT ARCHIVE
Leonard Perry aka SNAKE
Soldotna AK
Avid "C" / Mk IV
582 (147 hrs and counting on the rebuild)
IVO IFA
Full Lotus 1450
#1 snake oil salesman since 1-22-2009
I would rather die trying to live, than to live trying not to die.... |
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dave
Joined: 22 Sep 2006 Posts: 1382
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 9:53 am Post subject: Re: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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Think Mc Bean has a mixer retrofit kit but best to ask him if it will fit.
The Iv model has different flapperons as well ( symmetrical ) and I am no sure if that changes it at all.
I was out with a guy in a KF 2 today for 1.5 hours doing X wind circuits. wind was 11 G 15 knots and had no problems doing 45 degree landings on grass. We went to another strip that was 80 degrees cross and still no problem . He is a newer pilot and just transitioning to tailwheel after one season on tri gear then about 10 hours skis in tail dragger config.
Best to just learn to fly more with Rudder as you should be . Really not a big deal.
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_________________ Realtime Kitfox movies to separate the internet chatter from the truth
http://www.youtube.com/user/kitfoxflyer
Hundreds of Kitfox Movies
Most viewed Kitfox on youtube
Most popular on youtube
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Lynn Matteson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 2778 Location: Grass Lake, Michigan
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 10:06 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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Ouch! I felt that zinger clear down South here, Snake..... : )
Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062, 628.1 hrs
Sensenich 62x46
Electroair direct-fire ignition system
Status: flying
do not archive
On Apr 13, 2009, at 1:38 PM, akflyer wrote:
Quote: |
No snake oil here, heck even Deke said I explained it well.. and if
Deke agrees with me then by golly you better get your affairs in
order cause the end is coming soon LOL.
--------
DO NOT ARCHIVE
Leonard Perry aka SNAKE
Soldotna AK
Avid "C" / Mk IV
582 IVO IFA
Full Lotus 1260
#1 snake oil salesman since 1-22-2009
hander outer of humorless darwin awards
Read this topic online here:
http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p 38959#238959
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_________________ Lynn
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM |
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Guy Buchanan
Joined: 16 Jul 2006 Posts: 1204 Location: Ramona, CA
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 10:18 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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At 07:55 AM 4/13/2009, you wrote:
Quote: | My Kitfox-II exhibits the exact characteristic! If my feet are on
the floor, I will get a very strong adverse yaw just by moving the
wings a bit. If I look in the rearview mirror I can see the rudder
is fully deflected. It's as if the short fuselage and the small
vertical stabilizer are insufficient to prevent yaw in straight flight.
|
First of all, your case and the example are two completely different
things. The example is of neutral static stability. When deflected
the aircraft remains in its deflected state, neither returning nor
diverging from the deflected condition. It is possibly quite
dangerous because generally perfect neutral stability in aerodynamics
is hard to achieve. With a slight configuration change, the example
aircraft might just shift to negative stability, increasing in yaw
from a deflected condition. Thus were the rudder controls to fail the
aircraft would depart from controlled flight, not a good idea.
In your case you are simply seeing the rudder wag back and forth as
you work the ailerons. This does not mean you have negative or even
neutral static stability. And yes it caused by adverse yaw. All
aircraft will exhibit this behavior. And all aircraft have
substantially less static yaw stability without the rudder than with.
The Bonanza I flew would waddle all over without the feet on the pedals.
Guy Buchanan
San Diego, CA
K-IV 1200 / 582-C / Warp / 300 hrs. and counting
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_________________ Guy Buchanan
Deceased K-IV 1200
A glider pilot too. |
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akflyer
Joined: 07 May 2007 Posts: 574 Location: Soldotna AK
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 10:19 am Post subject: Re: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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Lynn Matteson wrote: | Ouch! I felt that zinger clear down South here, Snake..... : )
Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062, 628.1 hrs
Sensenich 62x46
Electroair direct-fire ignition system
Status: flying
do not archive
|
Was not ment to be anything other than a funny... I cracked myself up with it LOL.
Thinking just a touch more on the subject, the flaperon issue is dealing with nothing more than adverse yaw. The larger fin adds to yaw stability, but does not alleviate the flaperons from being the culprit. It is an inherent design..uhhh... not really a flaw, but a "characteristic".
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_________________ DO NOT ARCHIVE
Leonard Perry aka SNAKE
Soldotna AK
Avid "C" / Mk IV
582 (147 hrs and counting on the rebuild)
IVO IFA
Full Lotus 1450
#1 snake oil salesman since 1-22-2009
I would rather die trying to live, than to live trying not to die.... |
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matronics(at)bob.brennan. Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 10:34 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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So you're saying that if Deke agrees with you then hell must've frozen over?
Heck I'd better review those ski postings 'cause it sounds like I'm going to
need me a set!
Sounds like the Kitfox History pages are a little inaccurate then? You say
below "new mixer on Model 3", the website says 4. I'm assuming you meant
that John Stoner tried the new mixer on a 3 and Skystar incorporated it into
the 4? But the website still says they didn't achieve "Yaw stability
[that] is positive and good" until the Model 5 with a completely different
empennage but the same mixer as a 4.
And the lift vs drag part - so if I am turning to the right using the new
mixer the left flaperon travels further down than my Model 2, thus producing
more lift and more drag in the left wing, thus promoting yaw towards the
left... Ummmm, sounds like adverse yaw to me - BUT will require more right
rudder, which is correct. Versus my KF2 which needs right rudder in a right
turn followed by left rudder to keep the ball centered... Is that correct? I
mean the "basic lift vs drag" part of it, is that what you meant?
So I'm still a bit anally confused here. Can I order me a bottle of that
Snake Oil please, I think I need one. What proof is it BTW? 90?
<wink><nudge>
Bob Brennan - N717GB
ELSA Repairman, inspection rated
1991 UK Model 2 ELSA Kitfox taildragger
Rotax 582 with 3 blade prop
Wrightsville Pa
--
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Lynn Matteson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 2778 Location: Grass Lake, Michigan
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 10:34 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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And I took it as funny, as I'm sure Deke did....well, maybe his sense
of humor is waning a bit what with a soggy runway(s) and all.... : )
Lynn Matteson
Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
Jabiru 2200, #2062, 628.1 hrs
Sensenich 62x46
Electroair direct-fire ignition system
Status: flying
do not archive
On Apr 13, 2009, at 2:19 PM, akflyer wrote:
Quote: |
Lynn Matteson wrote:
> Ouch! I felt that zinger clear down South here, Snake..... : )
>
> Lynn Matteson
> Kitfox IV Speedster, taildragger
> Jabiru 2200, #2062, 628.1 hrs
> Sensenich 62x46
> Electroair direct-fire ignition system
> Status: flying
> do not archive
>
Was not ment to be anything other than a funny... I cracked myself
up with it LOL.
Thinking just a touch more on the subject, the flaperon issue is
dealing with nothing more than adverse yaw. The larger fin adds to
yaw stability, but does not alleviate the flaperons from being the
culprit. It is an inherent design..uhhh... not really a flaw, but
a "characteristic".
--------
DO NOT ARCHIVE
Leonard Perry aka SNAKE
Soldotna AK
Avid "C" / Mk IV
582 IVO IFA
Full Lotus 1260
#1 snake oil salesman since 1-22-2009
hander outer of humorless darwin awards
Read this topic online here:
http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p 38974#238974
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_________________ Lynn
Kitfox IV-Jabiru 2200
N369LM |
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Paul A. Franz, P.E.
Joined: 02 Dec 2008 Posts: 280 Location: Bellevue WA
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 10:54 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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On Mon, April 13, 2009 8:56 am, fox5flyer wrote:
Quote: | What you have is typical adverse yaw which is typical of the early Foxes.
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Deke - maybe this is a matter of semantics but adverse yaw is not this. Adverse yaw is
the amount of rudder input you have to supply to compensate for increased drag on the
outboard wing in a turn. If it were frictionless, then a coordinated turn with
ailerons would need no rudder input.
If I'm understanding correctly, what is happening is that there is no apparent
restoring force to return the rudder to a neutral position and the plan will happily
fly along in a skid without any applied force to the rudder.
--
Paul A. Franz
Registration/Aircraft - N14UW/Merlin GT
Engine/Prop - Rotax 914/NSI CAP
Bellevue WA
425.241.1618 Cell
We the unwilling, led by the ungrateful, are doing the impossible.
We've done so much, for so long, with so little,
that we are now qualified to do something with nothing.
-- anonymous
Under every stone lurks a politician.
-- Aristophanes
Giving money and power to governments is like giving whiskey and
car keys to teenage boys.
-- P.J. O'Rourke
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_________________ Paul A. Franz, P.E.
Registration/Aircraft - N14UW/Merlin GT
Engine/Prop - Rotax 914/NSI CAP
Bellevue WA
425.241.1618 Cell
425.440.9505 Office |
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akflyer
Joined: 07 May 2007 Posts: 574 Location: Soldotna AK
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 11:14 am Post subject: Re: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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matronics(at)bob.brennan. wrote: | So you're saying that if Deke agrees with you then hell must've frozen over?
Heck I'd better review those ski postings 'cause it sounds like I'm going to
need me a set!
Sounds like the Kitfox History pages are a little inaccurate then? You say
below "new mixer on Model 3", the website says 4. I'm assuming you meant
that John Stoner tried the new mixer on a 3 and Skystar incorporated it into
the 4? But the website still says they didn't achieve "Yaw stability
[that] is positive and good" until the Model 5 with a completely different
empennage but the same mixer as a 4.
And the lift vs drag part - so if I am turning to the right using the new
mixer the left flaperon travels further down than my Model 2, thus producing
more lift and more drag in the left wing, thus promoting yaw towards the
left... Ummmm, sounds like adverse yaw to me - BUT will require more right
rudder, which is correct. Versus my KF2 which needs right rudder in a right
turn followed by left rudder to keep the ball centered... Is that correct? I
mean the "basic lift vs drag" part of it, is that what you meant?
So I'm still a bit anally confused here. Can I order me a bottle of that
Snake Oil please, I think I need one. What proof is it BTW? 90?
<wink><nudge>
Bob Brennan - N717GB
ELSA Repairman, inspection rated
1991 UK Model 2 ELSA Kitfox taildragger
Rotax 582 with 3 blade prop
Wrightsville Pa
-- |
well... in a short word... NO
John recognized the problem and made his own mixer for his model 3. He had conversations with the factory that led to the model 4 having a different mixer.
The old mixer works like this. You give right roll input and the right flaperon goes up only half the distance the left flaperon goes down. This makes the left flaperon produce a butt load of drag and pulls the nose to he left, making you use LOTS of right rudder to counteract this force.
The new mixer if you give it right roll input the right flaperon goes up twice as much as the left one goes down, making less drag on the left side, therefore, you need less right rudder input.
If I lost you on that one, you will need more than one bottle of snakeoil. I am having a batch brewed up in high hills of kentucky that will be 190 to 200 proof, so please, dont do shots of it, it is for "sipping" only!
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_________________ DO NOT ARCHIVE
Leonard Perry aka SNAKE
Soldotna AK
Avid "C" / Mk IV
582 (147 hrs and counting on the rebuild)
IVO IFA
Full Lotus 1450
#1 snake oil salesman since 1-22-2009
I would rather die trying to live, than to live trying not to die.... |
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matronics(at)bob.brennan. Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 11:53 am Post subject: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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Sorry to drag this on, pour us both a shot of that Snake Oil would ya...
So you're saying that this John Stoner, sorry I don't know who he is,
corrected *his* yaw problem on *his* Model 3; but it has nothing to do with
production kits, where a new mixer was introduced on the Model 4 but they
got it all wrong... I'm getting dizzy, and what does that have to do with
the price of Snake Oil?
Am I right in saying Models 1 and 2 have the same neutral-yaw problems, 3
and 4 have the same positive yaw but weak, and Model 5 finally has the same
positive yaw characteristics as spam cans? And that 1 and 2 have the same
small vertical stabilizers, 3 and 4 the same larger stabilizers, and 5 is a
completely re-designed empennage? And 1, 2 and 3 have 1:1 mixers and 4 and
up have the 2:1 mixers. Sure sounds to me like it was the bigger better butt
that made the difference to the yaw(ning) problem, not the mixer.
BTW I bought some 60 proof "cask strength" Macallan single malt once - they
recommend you mix it with spring water "to taste". I found it was best
straight, over a few ice cubes. [hic] Ever thought of selling that Snake Oil
as a BBQ lighter?
Bob Brennan - N717GB
ELSA Repairman, inspection rated
1991 UK Model 2 ELSA Kitfox taildragger
Rotax 582 with 3 blade prop
Wrightsville Pa
--
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akflyer
Joined: 07 May 2007 Posts: 574 Location: Soldotna AK
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Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2009 1:41 pm Post subject: Re: Kitfox Model II flight behavior |
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uhhhh... no again.. swing batter swing... strike!
And 1, 2 and 3 have 1:1 mixers
NO. I, II and III have 2:1 going the wrong way from the factory.
You be getting yaw, adverse yaw, and yaw stability scrambled more than a breakfast skillet at Denny's.
someone else want to take a shot at this one LOL.
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_________________ DO NOT ARCHIVE
Leonard Perry aka SNAKE
Soldotna AK
Avid "C" / Mk IV
582 (147 hrs and counting on the rebuild)
IVO IFA
Full Lotus 1450
#1 snake oil salesman since 1-22-2009
I would rather die trying to live, than to live trying not to die.... |
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