In a message dated 1/2/2008 3:56:22 P.M. Central Standard Time,
randylsnarr@yahoo.com writes:
I have a
235 with a 320 engine and constant speed
propeller and big battery in the
tail. The fuel
reconfig is for CG purposes. I am in pretty good
shape
but I often fly alone with 15 or so gallons. In that
config I am
on the front edge of the envelope. I would
rather have a near empty header
and pull from the
wings which would put me in middle of the envelope.
Randy,
OK, every flight may be a test flight. Consider that the long engine
mount moved the CG forward (300 series) by 1.5 inches with no problems
reported. Although your 235 may handle differently, the 300 series
certainly prefer a more forward CG than one nearing the rear of the range.
Are you having problems at the round out during landing because there is
not enough elevator to compensate for fwd CG (header full)? If the plane
needs more nose up pitch, consider not using full flaps (they are the biggest
trim device we have) when landing.
If you are concerned about cruise flight trim, take her up with a
digital level lined up with the longeron. Flaps reflexed and the aircraft
trimmed in cruise at 7000 to 9000 MSL, the level should be level. One
way to test this is to carry weights aloft (in the passenger seat) and move them
into the passenger foot well to simulate the full header.
I forgot to mention that one purpose of the header was to allow the wee
Lancair to fly aerobatics since the header just becomes a deep sump. With
no fuel in the wings there are no mis-distributions of fuel during exotic
maneuvers..
The front edge of the envelope seems better than unporting the engine fuel
supply at some, uh, inopportune time.
Scott Krueger
AKA Grayhawk
Lancair N92EX IO320 SB 89/96
Aurora, IL
(KARR)
Darwinian culling phrase: Watch
This!