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		enginerdy(at)gmail.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Aug 30, 2010 7:07 pm    Post subject: Progressive switch for electric trim | 
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				Bob, list,
 
 I was reading through a thread on Van's Air Force today and it got me thinking about the approaches to elevator trim control. There seemed to be two camps:
 People who use (on)-off-(on) type switches who have problems with sensitivity,
 and people who have some kind of high/low motor speed switch, either manually controlled or airspeed controlled with a Vertical Power (or similar) module.
 
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  From a usability versus complexity standpoint, I was imagining a progressive-speed switch, implemented as a 5-position switch:
 
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 (second-up) : fast down trim
 (first-up) : slow down trim
 center : trim stop
 (first-down) : slow up trim
 (second-down) : fast up trim
 
 A quick search has not turned up any toggle switches of this kind, which may be the real problem with this approach. Have you seen this approach elsewhere, or have any part number suggestions?
 
 Thanks,
 --Daniel
 
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		nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Aug 31, 2010 4:32 am    Post subject: Progressive switch for electric trim | 
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				At 10:05 PM 8/30/2010, you wrote:
  
 Bob, list,
 
 I was reading through a thread on Van's Air Force today and it got me 
 thinking about the approaches to elevator trim control. There seemed 
 to be two camps:
 People who use (on)-off-(on) type switches who have problems with sensitivity,
 and people who have some kind of high/low motor speed switch, either 
 manually controlled or airspeed controlled with a Vertical Power (or 
 similar) module.
 
  >From a usability versus complexity standpoint, I was imagining a 
 progressive-speed switch, implemented as a 5-position switch:
 
 (second-up) : fast down trim
 (first-up) : slow down trim
 center : trim stop
 (first-down) : slow up trim
 (second-down) : fast up trim
 
 A quick search has not turned up any toggle switches of this kind, 
 which may be the real problem with this approach. Have you seen this 
 approach elsewhere, or have any part number suggestions?
 
      I's aware of no COTS (commercial off the shelf)
      switch with this characteristic. There have been
      lever operated, sping loaded to center, wafer
      switches but those go back a lot of years. I
      don't think they were a catalog item.
 
      I've spent a significant portion of my career
      working on motor driven trim systems for aircraft,
      mostly bizjets. I did get to put the first microprocessor
      controlled trim system on Roy Lopresti's M30 prototype
      at Mooney. This was a proof of concept controller that
      adjusted the servo gain scale factor on a servo/anti-servo
      tab. The goal was to provide a constant stick-force/G
      response irrespective of IAS.
 
      Initial flight tests were encouraging but the M30
      program was scrapped for a host of reasons. We've
      had a number of discussions about trim systems here
      on the List. A search of the aeroelectric.com website
      using the words trim and speed will produce a number
      of hits. But in particular, may I suggest you review
      the article published at:
 
 http://www.aeroelectric.com/articles/Trim_System_Failures.pdf
 
      The "ideal" trim controller would adjust the motor's
      speed linearly over the full range of max to minimum
      depending on the airplane's IAS value. After
      crafting the trim speed controller for the Lear
      55, I wrote and delivered a paper at an SAE
      convention where I hypothesized a number of
      possibilities for future designs. Two features
      of the paper talked about a way to control trim
      speed from a single processor in a manner that
      precludes a runaway in spite of worst case software
      failure. The other was a proposal to adjust motor
      speed based on the value of pitot pressure (IAS).
 
      Obviously, there's a huge difference between a
      performance of a Lear and an RV. A larger difference
      exists between the product development budgets
      for the two aircraft.
 
      Setting the "ideal" system aside, what operating
      characteristics might offer 90 plus percent of
      everything we'd like the trim system to do.
 
      An airplane spends MOST of its flight time in
      stable flight at max IAS. This configuration
      suggests a very slow trim rate that allows
      fine tuning of trim for holding altitude.
 
      A small percentage of flight time is spent
      in approach to landing where IAS is on the
      order of 90-100 kts and some degree of
      flaps are deployed. Here the trim speed needs
      to be faster to make timely adjustments to
      establish the desired IAS.
 
      On the Lears, the high speed trim was 4x faster
      than low speed trim.
 
      I've published a suggested schematic for a
      two speed trim system for small aircraft
      at:
 
 http://www.aeroelectric.com/PPS/Flight/Trim/Two_Speed_Trim_2.pdf
 
      This is modeled after the system flying on
      30 series Lears where speed commands come
      from a switch on the flap system. With flaps
      full up, low speed is commanded. With flaps
      extended more than 10 degrees, high speed
      is commanded.
 
      I'm confident that a system crafted after
      this model will meet design goals for
      crafting a very utilitarian pitch trim
      system. The neat thing is that speed
      selection is automatically controlled by
      flight configuration. I could get this
      system qualified on a TC aircraft with
      a minimum of bureaucratic fuss.
 
      The controller should be fitted with
      screwdriver adjusted trim pots for speed
      selection. Over a series of flight tests,
      you can optimize system performance to
      meet your design goals.
    Bob . . .
 
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		marcausman
 
 
  Joined: 08 Feb 2007 Posts: 70
 
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				 Posted: Fri Sep 03, 2010 4:15 am    Post subject: Re: Progressive switch for electric trim | 
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				Automobiles now have a similar switch for electric windows. Pull (or push) the switch a bit to move the window, then pull (or push) it past a detent to automatically raise or lower the window.
 
  |  | - The Matronics AeroElectric-List Email Forum - |  |   |  Use the List Feature Navigator to browse the many List utilities available such as the Email Subscriptions page, Archive Search & Download, 7-Day Browse, Chat, FAQ, Photoshare, and much more:
 
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  _________________ Marc Ausman
 
http://www.verticalpower.com  "Move up to a modern electrical system"
 
RV-7 IO-390 Flying | 
			 
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