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<<The builder redesigned the rudder and eliminated the vertical
portion of the rudder / vertical stabilizer gap altogether (see attached
picture). I spoke extensively with the owner on this subject and I believe
his motivation was to increase the lever arm of counter weight and therefore
reduce the required ballast.>>
The plane looks very nice, but I have two reservations: First, could the
accumulation of ice on the leading edge cause an aerodynamic instability of
the rudder? I doubt it, but it is possible, I suppose. There are lots of
IFR Pipers flying with the whole "elevator" leading edge exposed and I have
never heard of a problem. Second, I would think that ice could still build
up on the sharp edge of the balance weight that is diagonal to the air flow.
I have been thinking about also rounding this edge.
Just to add another observation: On most Cessnas the elevator balance
weight is bent downward compared to the elevator. The theory being that in
normal cruise the plane is trimmed nose down (the elevator has a slight
downward deflection) and this keeps the balance weight fair to the
stabilizer. Why didn't they just change the incidence angle of the
stabilizer? I was told that they found that the drag was slightly less with
a little down deflection of the elevator.
Gary Casey
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