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slyck(at)frontiernet.net Guest
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Posted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 9:20 am Post subject: legs |
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I currently have aluminum gear legs on my MkIII (and a spare set on
the shelf)
Now I am considering changing out for the steel ones, not for any
reason other than
the increased stance on the ground. -not because it "looks cool" but
because I am
going to experiment with decreased wing incidence and it would be
nice to have enough
to get off the ground.
Anyone with a spare set lying around? I would be interested.
Otherwise I will go to TNK
BTW, what is the actual height gain over the original?
BB
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mdnanwelch7(at)hotmail.co Guest
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Posted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 9:37 am Post subject: legs |
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Bob,
Although I built my own steel gear legs, I did build them from the measurements
of someone who does have genuine Kolb steel legs. Plus, I called TNK and had Donnie
measure the stance height of the cage, directly below the socket.
The gain in height will be very close to 5 inches. 5" may not sound like much, but it
is a bunch!!
Mike Welch
MkIII
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Quote: | To: kolb-list(at)matronics.com
From: slyck(at)frontiernet.net
Subject: legs
Date: Tue, 3 Feb 2009 12:18:24 -0500
I currently have aluminum gear legs on my MkIII (and a spare set on
the shelf)
Now I am considering changing out for the steel ones, not for any
reason other than
the increased stance on the ground. -not because it "looks cool" but
because I am
going to experiment with decreased wing incidence and it would be
nice to have enough
to get off the ground.
Anyone with a spare set lying around? I would be interested.
Otherwise I will go to TNK
BTW, what is the actual height gain over the original?
BB
_________________________________________________________________
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Windows Live™ Hotmail®:…more than just e-mail.
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ulflyer(at)verizon.net Guest
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Posted: Tue Feb 03, 2009 8:06 pm Post subject: legs |
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Robert - first I am not challenging you on what your proposing to do,
that is reduce your wings incidence, just trying to understand why
and what your trying to accomplish.
I know you have been around a while so for others by changing the
wing incidence on an aircraft like a Kolb will change it's takeoff
performance, make it better or make worst. It can also impact it's
stall attitude thus the desired stance during landing operation which
thus impacts the gear configuration and vise-versa. It will also
impact the planes cruise attitude which can impact it's cruise speed,
clean and straight at cruise power setting versus a less than optimum
flight attitude at cruise resulting in greater induced drag thus lower speed.
jerb
At 11
:18 AM 2/3/2009, you wrote:
Quote: |
I currently have aluminum gear legs on my MkIII (and a spare set on
the shelf)
Now I am considering changing out for the steel ones, not for any
reason other than
the increased stance on the ground. -not because it "looks cool" but
because I am
going to experiment with decreased wing incidence and it would be
nice to have enough
to get off the ground.
Anyone with a spare set lying around? I would be interested.
Otherwise I will go to TNK
BTW, what is the actual height gain over the original?
BB
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slyck(at)frontiernet.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 5:26 am Post subject: legs |
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You are quite right, and I hope to be around for a while longer
Just experimenting. I can always revert back to stock.
It is an easy process with my bird as I don't have as much to fiddle
with the center section.
A couple of new holes in the spar ears and shims for the tin.
Check for control rod adjustment.
I won't initially change horizontal stab incidence because of a
factor I shall not divulge yet.
-only if it works
BB
On 3, Feb 2009, at 11:05 PM, jerb wrote:
Quote: |
Robert - first I am not challenging you on what your proposing to
do, that is reduce your wings incidence, just trying to understand
why and what your trying to accomplish.
I know you have been around a while so for others by changing the
wing incidence on an aircraft like a Kolb will change it's takeoff
performance, make it better or make worst. It can also impact it's
stall attitude thus the desired stance during landing operation
which thus impacts the gear configuration and vise-versa. It will
also impact the planes cruise attitude which can impact it's cruise
speed, clean and straight at cruise power setting versus a less
than optimum flight attitude at cruise resulting in greater induced
drag thus lower speed.
jerb
At 11
:18 AM 2/3/2009, you wrote:
>
>
> I currently have aluminum gear legs on my MkIII (and a spare set on
> the shelf)
> Now I am considering changing out for the steel ones, not for any
> reason other than
> the increased stance on the ground. -not because it "looks cool" but
> because I am
> going to experiment with decreased wing incidence and it would be
> nice to have enough
> to get off the ground.
> Anyone with a spare set lying around? I would be interested.
> Otherwise I will go to TNK
>
> BTW, what is the actual height gain over the original?
> BB
>
>
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ulflyer(at)verizon.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 8:17 am Post subject: legs |
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Liked your reply Robert, sounds like some past experience and lessons
learned.
Knowledge can be taught or in some cases learned and confirmed from
practice, (some past experience comes to mind of my mother telling me
not to touch the stove because it was hot and I would get burned -
yep confirmed she was right, she had knowledge).
In reference to incidence and stance I got mine from practice with
another aircraft. Lesson 1 - If you have the wrong stance an
airplane will resist becoming airborne at lower normally flyable
takeoff roll speeds. Lesson 2- if it has the correct stance but the
wing has the wrong incidence, it will increase take off roll and lift
off speed. Think about what would contribute to this.
Robert, now we need for you to pass on your knowledge to us younger
generations of lessons learned pertaining to the horizontal stabilizer.
jerb
At 07:25 AM 2/4/2009, you wrote:
Quote: |
You are quite right, and I hope to be around for a while longer
Just experimenting. I can always revert back to stock.
It is an easy process with my bird as I don't have as much to fiddle
with the center section.
A couple of new holes in the spar ears and shims for the tin.
Check for control rod adjustment.
I won't initially change horizontal stab incidence because of a
factor I shall not divulge yet.
-only if it works
BB
On 3, Feb 2009, at 11:05 PM, jerb wrote:
>
>
>Robert - first I am not challenging you on what your proposing to
>do, that is reduce your wings incidence, just trying to understand
>why and what your trying to accomplish.
>
>I know you have been around a while so for others by changing the
>wing incidence on an aircraft like a Kolb will change it's takeoff
>performance, make it better or make worst. It can also impact it's
>stall attitude thus the desired stance during landing operation
>which thus impacts the gear configuration and vise-versa. It will
>also impact the planes cruise attitude which can impact it's cruise
>speed, clean and straight at cruise power setting versus a less
>than optimum flight attitude at cruise resulting in greater induced
>drag thus lower speed.
>jerb
>
>At 11
>:18 AM 2/3/2009, you wrote:
>>
>>
>>I currently have aluminum gear legs on my MkIII (and a spare set on
>>the shelf)
>>Now I am considering changing out for the steel ones, not for any
>>reason other than
>>the increased stance on the ground. -not because it "looks cool" but
>>because I am
>>going to experiment with decreased wing incidence and it would be
>>nice to have enough
>>to get off the ground.
>>Anyone with a spare set lying around? I would be interested.
>>Otherwise I will go to TNK
>>
>>BTW, what is the actual height gain over the original?
>>BB
>>
>>
>>
>
>
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John Hauck
Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 8:59 am Post subject: legs |
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Homer Kolb was, and still is, more interested in slow flight, than faster
flight. He is still designing and building slow, high lift airplanes.
Designing increased wing incidence into his airplanes, Homer was able to
satisfy several of his requirements:
-Design the airplane to sit in a near level attitude on the ground, and be
able to take off and land in a near level attitude. His idea was to prevent
low time pilots from getting into take off and landing stalls.
-Fly very slow without the tail sagging excessively.
In accomplishing the above, it created some problems for my kind of flying:
-Cruise speed is reduced because the tail flies high, dragging the top of
the tail boom through the air, increasing drag.
-Discourages three point landings, increasing landing and take off
distances.
I would have already removed a lot of the incidence in my wings if it
weren't for refitting the windshield and center section. If I did it would
be very easy to increase nose height on the ground by increasing gear leg
length. I'm running 24" gear legs on my "Hauck" main gear. This puts my
MKIII about 4 or 5" higher than a stock MKIII. Would be pretty easy to
increase them as much as required to get the job done. Using standard MKIII
gear leg sockets with their low angle, turned down gear legs are required to
get the nose up without getting excessive track (width between main gear).
The primary reason the Sling Shot sits in a nose high attitude on the ground
is because of reduced wing incidence. The tail boom flies level, reducing
drag.
The Kolbra has less wing incidence, flies in a similar attitude as the Sling
Shot, and cruises 10 to 15 mph faster than my mkIII when both aircraft are
powered with the 912ULS.
Too late in the game for me to start making major changes to my MKIII.
Although another 10 to 15 mph cruise would be nice on a long cross country,
it ain't worth all the effort to make the changes.
john h
mkIII - From 18F to 31F by 1100 hours. Too cold to play outside today.
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_________________ John Hauck
MKIII/912ULS
hauck's holler
Titus, Alabama |
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The BaronVonEvil
Joined: 23 Jun 2006 Posts: 76 Location: Walla Walla, WA.
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Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 9:22 am Post subject: Re: legs |
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Hi All,
Perhaps another way to tweak the incidence on your Kolbs is to pickup a set of the England U-Joints. They will allow you to make minor changes in the wing incidence to see if it is something that would improve your Kolb with out cutting or welding.
If you see some improvement you like then you can make permanent changes to your wings or tail feathers.
Best Regards
Carlos G
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by0ung(at)brigham.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 9:50 am Post subject: legs |
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Just experimenting. I can always revert back to stock.
It is an easy process with my bird as I don't have as much to fiddle
with the center section.
A couple of new holes in the spar ears and shims for the tin.
Check for control rod adjustment.
I won't initially change horizontal stab incidence because of a
factor I shall not divulge yet.
-only if it works
Quote: | >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
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Just my two cents worth......
Lets just say as an example:
If the plane is flying in a straight and level configuration at say 60 MPH.
Lets say that the bottom of the fuselage is parallel to the air flow and
the wing is at 9 deg to the relative air flow. It will be producing lift
equal to the weight of the aircraft and occupants.
Now lets say we change the rigging of the aircraft and decrease the wing
incidence in relation to the main fuselage by 5 deg.
Lets put it back in the same flight configuration of straight and level and
60 mph.
In order for the wing to create the same lift as before it will still have
to be flying at 9 deg to the relative air flow...
The change will be in the incidence of fuselage, it will have to be at a
positive 5 Deg to the airflow... this will put the horizontal stabilizer
at a 5 deg up pitch as well.... and will require massive amounts of up trim
to fly at that attitude,,, or the leading edge will have to be dropped 5
deg to keep in the same relative air flow with the wing.
If I have calculated things correctly,,, with the fuselage in a 5 deg
pitch up attitude in flight,,, the tail wheel will be about 16 inches
lower, relative to the nose of the aircraft while in flight... this would
make it east to hit the tail wheel first during landing,, but the mains
will come down hard..... OR the landing speeds would have to go up by a
large margin. Also the takeoff roll would have to much faster in order to
create sufficient lift at the decreased incidence. Or with longer gear
legs, the amount of change will be less.
If the reason for the changes is to make the plane fly faster,,,, that
would only be realized if the drag of the fuselage was greatly reduced at
the changed attitude. If you have other reasons for the change... there
may be some justification.... if you want to change the speed, you will
need to change the airfoil.
Boyd young.. do not archive.
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slyck(at)frontiernet.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 10:47 am Post subject: legs |
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I agree once more and that approach would be simpler but lowering the
front will accomplish another
feat that I, personally, wish to do. -the change in geometry will
also increase dihedral. Counterproductive?
Yes, in that it will reduce the lift efficiency of the wing a trifle
by increasing tip loss (and vortex)
But that's what old knothead here is curious about.
BB
I like the behavior of more dihedral because it allows you to cruise
more with your feet.
On 4, Feb 2009, at 12:22 PM, The BaronVonEvil wrote:
Quote: |
Hi All,
Perhaps another way to tweak the incidence on your Kolbs is to
pickup a set of the England U-Joints. They will allow you to make
minor changes in the wing incidence to see if it is something that
would improve your Kolb with out cutting or welding.
If you see some improvement you like then you can make permanent
changes to your wings or tail feathers.
Best Regards
Carlos G
Read this topic online here:
http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p 28462#228462
Attachments:
http://forums.matronics.com//files/english_u_joint_328.jpg
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by0ung(at)brigham.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 12:17 pm Post subject: legs |
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When I rebuilt my mkIII after a hard landing... I bought new lift strut
fittings and I put in twice the dihedral recommended... from memory here
I went from 1 1/2 to 3 inches at the end rib.
I went from a bit of negative roll stability to neutral roll stability..
still not going to drive with your feet.. but it was an improvement for me.
Boyd young
Quote: | >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
I agree once more and that approach would be simpler but lowering the
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front will accomplish another
feat that I, personally, wish to do. -the change in geometry will
also increase dihedral. Counterproductive?
Yes, in that it will reduce the lift efficiency of the wing a trifle
by increasing tip loss (and vortex)
But that's what old knothead here is curious about.
BB
I like the behavior of more dihedral because it allows you to cruise
more with your feet.
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slyck(at)frontiernet.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 5:13 pm Post subject: legs |
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Boyd, thanx for your input and I will render more thought into my
future changes.
The main concern would be to have a struggle with the first test
flight after such "improvements"
BB
On 4, Feb 2009, at 3:16 PM, boyd wrote:
Quote: |
When I rebuilt my mkIII after a hard landing... I bought new lift
strut
fittings and I put in twice the dihedral recommended... from
memory here
I went from 1 1/2 to 3 inches at the end rib.
I went from a bit of negative roll stability to neutral roll
stability..
still not going to drive with your feet.. but it was an
improvement for me.
Boyd young
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
I agree once more and that approach would be simpler but lowering the
front will accomplish another
feat that I, personally, wish to do. -the change in geometry will
also increase dihedral. Counterproductive?
Yes, in that it will reduce the lift efficiency of the wing a trifle
by increasing tip loss (and vortex)
But that's what old knothead here is curious about.
BB
I like the behavior of more dihedral because it allows you to cruise
more with your feet.
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etzimm(at)gmail.com Guest
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Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 5:44 pm Post subject: legs |
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Bob.
Think about this.
Anything you do on a Kolb to gain roll ability with your feet will be at the expense of your cross wind capability.
Gene
On Feb 4, 2009, at 1:44 PM, robert bean wrote:
[quote] [quote][b]
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slyck(at)frontiernet.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 5:59 pm Post subject: legs |
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Thought accepted for consideration.
Legs ordered today. I woke Travis up.
Now thinking about wasting some more moola on another prop. My office gets more artifacts hanging on the wall.
I have a beautiful 3 blade powerfin hanging behind my head now. Hope the nail doesn't pull out of the wall.
Soon to be joined by a 70" warp. Both near virgin.
BB
On 4, Feb 2009, at 8:43 PM, Eugene Zimmerman wrote:
[quote]Bob.
Think about this.
Anything you do on a Kolb to gain roll ability with your feet will be at the expense of your cross wind capability.
Gene
On Feb 4, 2009, at 1:44 PM, robert bean wrote:
Quote: | href="http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Kolb-List">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Kolb-List href="http://forums.matronics.com">http://forums.matronics.com href="http://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/contribution [/b] | [b]
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beauford
Joined: 25 Apr 2007 Posts: 127 Location: Brandon, FL
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Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2009 6:26 pm Post subject: Re: legs |
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On Dihedral...
Cranked about 3 degrees into the Fly when building to induce positive (or at least neutral) roll stability. No regrets. It works. Crosswinds no problem.
Worth what ye paid fer it...
Beauford
FF-076
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JetPilot
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1246
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Posted: Thu Feb 05, 2009 11:16 am Post subject: Re: legs |
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I don't think you will gain any appreciable speed by lowering the incidence of the wings. In the end, at cruise, you will still have to fly with the wings at the same angle of attack for a given speed. Your nose will be sticking up more in cruise, and you will feel like you are climbing when you are level.
I think the much faster speeds in the Kolbra and Slingshot are due to the reduced drag of a narrow tandem fuselage, and very little to do with the reduced wing incidence. If a lot of cruise speed could be gained as easily as just reducing the wing incidence and putting taller gear in, I think Kolb and a lot of others would have already done this.
Mike
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_________________ "NO FEAR" - If you have no fear you did not go as fast as you could have !!!
Kolb MK-III Xtra, 912-S |
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