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Servo tab tale

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BJC

Well-Known Member
Supporting Member
Joined
Oct 7, 2013
Messages
18,965
Location
97FL, Florida, USA
Recent posts about anti-servo tabs reminded me of this sad story from 65+ years ago.

An older acquaintance’s (met him when flying him as a student sky diver) father got interested in homebuilts. He had no experience building, and wasn’t a pilot. I did convince him to join the almost-local EAA chapter that was almost 100% builders. They gave him advice, but it turns out that he knew everything. All the fuselage truss welding was done with a huge OA torch, and the welds all looked overly crisp, to be kind. (I had offered him the use of a Victor aircraft torch.) As he was nearing completion of the Smith Sidewinder, he still had not received the plans for the pitch control linkage. I was headed to Oshkosh, so he asked me to speak to Mr. Smith about when the plans, which had been purchased more than a year previously, would be 100% done. I did, and was told something along the lines of “Go play with yourself!”

The local builder went ahead and “designed” and built his own pitch control system. I stopped by, and saw two very significant deficiencies: the control linkage to the stabilator was an aluminum rod so long and slender that it sagged a few inches in the middle, and the anti-servo tab was installed as a servo tab. I was unsuccessful in all efforts to convince him that what he had done would be a problem. I asked him to touch base with the professional aerospace engineers in the chapter. He chose not to.

He had gotten a Private Pilot Certificate in a C150, so he was ready for the initial test flight. I wasn’t in town to see it, but I heard from several pilots who did. Upon rotation, the aircraft pitched radically nose up, then nose down and slammed into the runway. He repaired the damage, and a few months later, the local ace instructor, who had seen the wreck occur and had diagnosed PIO, attempted the next flight. He lasted through 6 or 7 pitch cycles before smashing into the runway. The aircraft was disassembled and returned to the workshop, never to be flown again.

Sad, but true.

Please share your stories.


BJC
 
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