What?
The negative lift of the tail balances the "nose heavy" airplane about
the center of lift and the fact that the main wing airfoil causes increasing
lift with increasing speed (flaps in cruise position), generally nose down trim
is used to lessen the negative lift of the tail as designed when in the neutral
cruise position. That is, the AOA of the main wing is reduced by
reducing the negative AOA of the horizontal stab, thus pitching the nose
down. If the negative lift of the tail was disturbed or made less
effective, the nose would pitch down. Remember that when you pull on the
stick, the upward movement of the elevator increases the negative lift of the
horizontal (AOA of upside down wing), thus raising the nose (and, by
association, the AOA of the main wing is also increased). Also
remember that the main wing was installed with a positive angle of incidence and
the horizontal stab with a slight negative angle.
In a 200-300 series Lancair, the flaps cruise position is in reflex to
lessen the lift at cruise (AOA is reduced, drag is reduced, pitching moment
is becomes more nose up requiring reducing the neg lift of the HS and
also reducing the drag). One feature this provides is the strong nose
down pitch trim available by extending the flaps slightly (taking them out
of reflex). An interesting point of difference between Legacy and 200-300
series is the fact that if the horizontal stab effectiveness to hold the nose up
were reduced by opened canopy turbulence during the takeoff climb, nose up
pitch could be added by moving the takeoff flaps (10 degrees down - out of
reflex) to the full reflex cruise position (7 degrees up).
The Legacy has Fowler flaps and, as such, may not have as much of a
dramatic pitching moment as do the flaps on the 200-300 series.
Perhaps some Legacy pilot can describe the actual change in pitch
trim as the plane speeds up or slows down - with and without
some flaps.
Embrace our differences!
Grayhawk
In a message dated 2/10/2009 5:38:33 P.M. Central Standard Time,
paul@tbm700.com writes:
How true
Dennis (about getting it backwards).
Paul Miller
Legacy N357V
On 10-Feb-09, at 11:32 AM, Dennis Johnson wrote:
The tail
provides negative lift in level flight, pushing the nose down, not
up. If the open canopy blanketed the tail, I think the nose would have
pitched up, not down.
I point this out for two
reasons:
1. It's an important concept that all
of us pilots sometimes get
backwards and that can lead us to make incorrect decisions with
possibly bad outcomes.
=