Do you want this big green box to go away? Well here's how...

Click here for full update

Wildcat! photo archives restored.

Click here for full update

Donors can now disable ads.

Click here for instructions

Add yourself to the user map.

Click here for instructions

[rebel-builders] Incident during testing

Converted from Wildcat! database. (read only)
Locked
Mike Davis

[rebel-builders] Incident during testing

Post by Mike Davis » Sun Feb 19, 2012 10:31 am

Glad you were able to handle it alright Charlie, and thanks for reporting
this to us.

Mike

----- Original Message -----
From: "Charlie Starr" <cws1932@cox.net>
To: "Murphy Aircraft Builders Group" <rebel-builders@dcsol.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 19, 2006 2:59 PM
Subject: [rebel-builders] Incident during testing

Had an incident that I thought might be of interest to some. While doing
some airspeed calibrations this past week on my SR-2500 - 60% cruise power
at 3,500 feet, 122 k indicated - the nose suddenly went up into a pretty
steep climb. I was able to overcome this with a very strong forward push.
I found that the elevator trim had run to the full nose-up position
(uncommanded). While I have emergency trim cut-off switches to remove all
power from a trim system in just such a case, I was too slow witted to
realize what had happened and to disable the elevator trim system before
it had run to the full up position - and was not movable by any of the
three trim switches. In my configuration, I have trim switches on both
sticks as well as the rocker switch in the panel.

With a lot of arm force I found that I had sufficient elevator authority
to overpower the trim, though I wouldn't want to hold it for any great
length of time. Reducing power and speed greatly reduced the push needed
to overcome the trim, and in fact - in the lading configuration (A/S about
70 k and flaps) the trim was about right for a hands off approach. A
go-around might have been interesting, though.

The problem was found to be in the Ray Allen grip switch (a five button
grip - up, down, left ,right & PPT). Evidently the up button either
shorted or was stuck. I didn't like this grip anyway, as it was difficult
to reach all buttons with my thumb or fingers. I have a single hat-switch
type grip on the right side with PPT and like it much better and will
replace the defective one with this type.

It was a bit of an alarming situation, but glad to report that the
airplane was fully controllable even with a fully mis-trimmed condition.
I'll try testing with a full down to see if that is also controlable.

Charlie Starr SR-2500 #065


-----------------------------------------------------------------
List archives located at: https://mail.dcsol.com/login
username "rebel" password "builder"
Unsubscribe: rebel-builders-unsubscribe@dcsol.com
List administrator: mike.davis@dcsol.com
-----------------------------------------------------------------

Locked