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Rudder springs

 
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Dana



Joined: 13 Dec 2007
Posts: 1047
Location: Connecticut, USA

PostPosted: Wed Jul 15, 2009 7:34 pm    Post subject: Rudder springs Reply with quote

While flying this evening I reflected on the fact that the rudder pedal
forces seem disproportionately higher than the other control forces. Part
of this is due to the fact that I moved the rudder cable attach point from
the original position midway up the pedal (per the plans) to the top of the
pedal. This gives more rudder deflection for a given amount of pedal
deflection, which makes it more comfortable to turn on the ground, but also
increases the pedal force.

However, another reason for the force is the heavy springs in front of the
pedals. These are necessary, of course, to keep the cables taut, but the
also exert a fairly heavy centering force. My thought was to replace the
springs with an additional cable around a pulley (or two pulleys) to
complete the circuit and keep the tension, without the centering
tendency. There might need to be a short spring in line with the new cable
to take up any total length variation due to the geometry as it moves
through the range of motion (I haven't analyzed it to see if this would be
necessary), but it wouldn't provide the heavy centering force the original
setup gives.

Thoughts? Anybody seen this done before?

-Dana
--
Never be afraid to try something new. Remember, amateurs built the ark.
Professionals built the Titanic.


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John Hauck



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 4639
Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)

PostPosted: Thu Jul 16, 2009 3:28 am    Post subject: Rudder springs Reply with quote

My thought was to replace the
Quote:
springs with an additional cable around a pulley (or two pulleys) to
complete the circuit and keep the tension, without the centering tendency.
-Dana


Some Kolb rudders will slowly begin a shuffle, the beginning of rudder
flutter, if there is not enough tension on the cables to prevent it. Of
three airplanes I built, only the Ultrastar was immune to this problem.

Normally would not happen on local flights, but on longer cross country
flights if my feet relaxed pressure on the rudder pedals, I'd start to
pickup a little shuffle, usually noticed at a wing tip moving slightly fore
and aft. Sometimes, if not detected and ignored for a while, it could get
very active.

Holding a lot of pressure on the pedals gets tiresome real quick. I
remedied my problem by doubling up with stronger springs on each pedal. Now
I can fly feet off the pedals without going into flutter.

I don't know if your idea will work without return springs, unless your
rudder is not prone to shuffle. Short local flights it would by applying
enough pressure on the pedals to keep them stable.

Why Kolb rudders do this could be for several reasons, the way the rudder is
hung on the tail post, the way the prop blast hits the rudder, flexibility
of the tail boom, etc. Who knows, but they do.

john h
mkIII


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Richard Pike



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 1671
Location: Blountville, Tennessee

PostPosted: Thu Jul 16, 2009 8:45 am    Post subject: Re: Rudder springs Reply with quote

As far as I know, there is only way to stop the Kolb rudder from developing it's flutter when you ease the foot pressure off, and that is to add a bird roost to it. Guaranteed to work, and also to cause bird poop to appear on your horizontal stab. Using the counterbalance, the springs need only be heavy enough to enable the pedals to keep the cables snug.

Richard Pike
MKIII N420P (420ldPoops)


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PostPosted: Thu Jul 16, 2009 6:39 pm    Post subject: Rudder springs Reply with quote

In a message dated 7/15/2009 11:35:09 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, d-m-hague(at)comcast.net writes:
Quote:
My thought was to replace the
springs with an additional cable around a pulley (or two pulleys) to
complete the circuit and keep the tension, without the centering
tendency. There might need to be a short spring in line with the new cable
to take up any total length variation due to the geometry as it moves
through the range of motion (I haven't analyzed it to see if this would be
necessary), but it wouldn't provide the heavy centering force the original
setup gives.

Thoughts? Anybody seen this done before?
Dana,

Before I became a Kolber, I was building a Scamp Bi-plane, which was designed by Harris Woods (along with the Quail, Rail and the Woody Pusher). The Scamp rudder cables were done exactly as you described. Cables from the rudder terminated on the rudder pedals. Then a lighter cable ran from one pedal to the other, through two pulleys mounted on the firewall. There was no spring. I never completed the Scamp. Sold it and built the Kolb FireStar.

Bill Varnes
Original Kolb FireStar
Audubon NJ
Do Not Archive


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[quote][b]


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slyck(at)frontiernet.net
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 16, 2009 6:59 pm    Post subject: Rudder springs Reply with quote

not a bad idea.  If I replace the puny springs that hold my rudder pedals forward I'll try a single bungeearound a point in front.  Might have to replace it with age but they are cheap.
BB
On 16, Jul 2009, at 10:28 PM, WhiskeyVictor36(at)aol.com (WhiskeyVictor36(at)aol.com) wrote:
[quote] In a message dated 7/15/2009 11:35:09 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, d-m-hague(at)comcast.net (d-m-hague(at)comcast.net) writes:
Quote:
My thought was to replace the
springs with an additional cable around a pulley (or two pulleys) to
complete the circuit and keep the tension, without the centering
tendency.  There might need to be a short spring in line with the new cable
to take up any total length variation due to the geometry as it moves
through the range of motion (I haven't analyzed it to see if this would be
necessary), but it wouldn't provide the heavy centering force the original
setup gives.

Thoughts?  Anybody seen this done before?
Dana,
 
Before I became a Kolber, I was building a Scamp Bi-plane, which was designed by Harris Woods (along with the Quail, Rail and the Woody Pusher).  The Scamp rudder cables were done exactly as you described.  Cables from the rudder terminated on the rudder pedals.  Then a lighter cable ran from one pedal to the other, through two pulleys mounted on the firewall.  There was no spring.  I never completed the Scamp.  Sold it and built the Kolb FireStar.
 
Bill Varnes
Original Kolb FireStar
Audubon NJ
Do Not Archive



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John Hauck



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 4639
Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)

PostPosted: Mon Jul 20, 2009 6:34 am    Post subject: Rudder springs Reply with quote

> As far as I know, there is only way to stop the Kolb rudder from
developing it's flutter when you ease the foot pressure off, and that is to
add a bird roost to it. Guaranteed to work, and also to cause bird poop to
appear on your horizontal stab. Using the counterbalance, the springs need
only be heavy enough to enable the pedals to keep the cables snug.
Quote:

Richard Pike


Richard P:

I found another way to do it, as I mentioned a while back.

Doubling up rudder springs does not balance the rudder, but it will prevent
shuffling/flutter from initiating. The double springs place enough pull on
the cables to keep the rudder stable. Also, the double springs don't add
any more resistance to the rudder pedal when actuating. They cancel each
other out.

This also reminds me of the way I locked my rudder (gust lock). I don't
need it now with the Maule Tundra Tailwheel and heavy rudder pedal springs,
but on the Firestar I would carry a bungee cord to wrap around the rudder
pedals several times, locking them together. That kept the rudder from
beating itself to death. This worked well.

john h
mkIII


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Dana



Joined: 13 Dec 2007
Posts: 1047
Location: Connecticut, USA

PostPosted: Mon Jul 20, 2009 6:33 pm    Post subject: Rudder springs Reply with quote

At 10:32 AM 7/20/2009, John Hauck wrote:

Quote:
Also, the double springs don't add any more resistance to the rudder pedal
when actuating. They cancel each other out.

Well, yes and no, depending on the spring rate and length. As you press a
pedal, the spring on the side you're pressing shortens, lessening the force
and the opposite side lengthens, increasing the force. The imbalance is
small near center, but the centering force increases with greater
deflection. My rudder always tends to return to center, and the reason for
my original post was to reduce this centering tendency.

-Dana
--
The most useful tool for dealing with management types is, of course, an
automatic weapon.


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PostPosted: Mon Jul 20, 2009 6:40 pm    Post subject: Rudder springs Reply with quote

Someone told me a while back that I could increase rudder spring tension on one side instead of having a trim tab on the rudder. Is this a good idea? Vic Mark III Classic

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ronlee



Joined: 25 Dec 2006
Posts: 141

PostPosted: Tue Jul 21, 2009 5:51 am    Post subject: Re: Rudder springs Reply with quote

Sounds like a design problem. Has anyone tried VGs on the rudder?

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Tucson, Arizona
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JetPilot



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 1246

PostPosted: Tue Jul 21, 2009 7:45 am    Post subject: Re: Rudder springs Reply with quote

Dana,

Your idea of completing the rudder circuit with pulleys and a cable is a good one. I have seen that system used on another aircraft with good results. As you suspect, you will need a heavy compression spring like you would find on a tailwheel to go between the short cable between the rudder pedals, this will keep your cable tension constant and will compensate for the small changes in geometry as you deflect the rudder pedals... I really like this system as it keep the rudder cables properly tensioned with zero centering force, so the rudder pedals can be easily moved to each stop and the only feedback you get are due to the air loads, just as it should be Wink Remember this system is something from another airplane type, but it is good design, works well, and is what I would do if I was trying to improve a Kolb.

Mike


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John Hauck



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 4639
Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)

PostPosted: Tue Jul 21, 2009 8:17 am    Post subject: Rudder springs Reply with quote

Remember this system is something from another airplane type, but it is
good design, works well, and is what I would do if I was trying to improve a
Kolb.
Quote:

Mike


Mike B/Gang:

The reason I shared with the Kolb List the way I have my rudder pedals set
up was because it works well, it has been thoroughly tested over many long
hours sitting in the pilots seat, and it is a very simple fix. Add a couple
heavy rudder pedal springs to what you already have and...BINGO!!! you have
the problem solved.

No need to install a rudder counterbalance weight system, or a complicated
cable and pulley system. My philosophy is KISS, keep it simple.

However, I know there are folks on the List that like to experiment as much
as I do. So...maybe you all can reinvent a better wheel. Wink

BTW: My system does not progressively load up the rudder pedals, even
though the engineers on the List will argue with me on that point. All 4
springs are stretched in the neutral position. Full pedal deflection
sitting still on the ground has no more resistance than the standard Kolb
soft rudder pedal springs.

The large rudder trim tab works perfectly, keeping the slip/skid ball
centered at all cruise speeds. I challenge the perfectionist to measure the
amount of inefficiency produced by this system over twisting the engine
every which a way. Even if it costs a few cents more to fly my mkIII the
way it is configured, by God it works, and it works good. I fly for fun.

I think I'll keep my systems for now.

john h
mkIII


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hauck's holler
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cristalclear13



Joined: 19 Sep 2007
Posts: 363
Location: Southeast Georgia

PostPosted: Wed Jul 22, 2009 5:38 am    Post subject: Re: Rudder springs Reply with quote

John Hauck wrote:

The reason I shared with the Kolb List the way I have my rudder pedals set
up was because it works well, it has been thoroughly tested over many long
hours sitting in the pilots seat, and it is a very simple fix. Add a couple
heavy rudder pedal springs to what you already have and...BINGO!!! you have
the problem solved.

No need to install a rudder counterbalance weight system, or a complicated
cable and pulley system. My philosophy is KISS, keep it simple.

john h
mkIII


I "snuck" a picture of John's rudder pedals when he flew into Douglas this year. It is attached.


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Cristal Waters
Kolb Mark II Twinstar Rotax 503 DCSI Sept 2007 - sold Sept 2012
Private Pilot Aug 2008
ELSA Repairman for N193Y April 2008
Rotax 2 stroke maintenance April 2009
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John Hauck



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 4639
Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)

PostPosted: Wed Jul 22, 2009 5:52 am    Post subject: Rudder springs Reply with quote

> I "snuck" a picture of John's rudder pedals when he flew into Douglas
this year. It is attached.
Quote:

--------
Cristal Waters


Thanks, Cristal.

I had forgotten exactly how I had done it.

Had to offset one side to make them neutral.

john h
mkIII


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 22, 2009 10:41 am    Post subject: Rudder springs Reply with quote

Cristal
Did you attach that pic? I didn't get anything
Russ K
On Jul 22, 2009, at 9:51 AM, John Hauck wrote:

Quote:

> I "snuck" a picture of John's rudder pedals when he flew into
Douglas this year. It is attached.
>
> --------
> Cristal Waters
Thanks, Cristal.

I had forgotten exactly how I had done it.

Had to offset one side to make them neutral.

john h
mkIII




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