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TRIM TABS
Trim tabs are small movable portions of the trailing edge of a control surface. These tabs are controlled from the
cockpit to alter the camber of the surface and create an aerodynamic force that will hold the control surface
deflected.
Trim tabs may be installed on any of the primary control surfaces. If only one tab is used, it is nor mally on the
elevator, to permit adjustment of the tail load so the airplane can be flown hands-off at any given airspeed. The
airplane speed is set with the control wheel, and then the trim tab is adjusted until the airspeed can be
maintained without exerting force on the wheel.
BALANCE TABS
The control forces may be excessively high in some airplanes, and in order to decrease them, the manufacturer may use a balance tab. This tab is located in the same place as a trim tab. In many installations,
one tab serves both functions. The basic difference is that the control rod for the balance tab is con nected
to the fixed surface on the same side as the horn on the tab. If the control surface is deflected upward, the
connecting linkage will pull the tab down. When the tab moves in the direction opposite that of the
control surface, it will create an aerodynamic force that aids the movement of the surface.
Balance tabs provide a means for the airflow across the surface to provide
a
"power-assist"
to
reduce
high
control
forces.
SERVO TABS
Large aircraft are usually equipped with a power-operated irreversible flight control system. In these
systems, the control surfaces are operated by hydraulic actuators controlled by valves moved by the
control yoke and rudder pedals. An artificial feel system gives the pilot resistance that is proportional to
the flight loads on the surfaces. Control forces are too great for the pilot to manually move the surfaces. In
the event of a hydraulic system failure, they are controlled with servo tabs, in a process known as manual
reversion. In the manual mode of operation, the flight control column moves the tab on the control
surface, and aerodynamic forces caused by the deflected tab move the main control surface.
Servo tabs provide a force to assist the pilot in moving a primary
control surface of a large aircraft in the event of a hydraulic system
failure.
SPRING TABS
Another device for aiding the pilot of high-speed aircraft is the spring tab. The control horn is free to
pivot on the hinge axis of the surface, but it is restrained by a spring. For normal operation when control
forces are light, the spring is not compressed. The horn acts as though it were rigidly attached to the
surface. At high airspeeds when the control forces are too high for the pilot to operate properly, the spring
collapses and the control horn deflects the tab in the direction to produce an aerodynamic force that aids the
pilot in moving the surface.
GROUND-ADJUSTABLE TABS
Many small airplanes have a non-moveable metal trim tab on the rudder. This tab is bent in one direction or the
other on the ground to apply a trim force to the rudder. The correct displacement is determined by trial-and-error
until the pilot reports that the airplane is no longer skidding left or right during normal cruising flight.
ADJUSTABLE STABILIZER
Rather than using a movable tab on the trailing edge of the elevator, many airplanes pivot the horizontal stabilizer
about its rear spar, and mount its leading edge on a jackscrew that is controllable from the cockpit. On smaller
airplanes, the jackscrew is cable-operated from a trim crank, and on larger airplanes it is motor driven. The trimming
effect of the adjustable stabilizer is the same as that obtained from a trim tab.
Many airplanes, including most jet transports, use an adjustable stabilizer to provide the
required pitch trim forces.
SPLIT FLAPS
This is another design of flap that was used with a great deal of success in the past, but is seldom used today. On
the extremely popular Douglas DC-3, a portion of the lower surface of the trailing edge of the wring from one
aileron to the other, across the bottom of the fuselage, could be hinged down into the airstream. The lift change was
similar to that produced by a plain flap, but it produced much more drag at low lift coefficients. This drag coefficient changed very little with the angle of
attack.
SLOTTED FLAPS
The most popular flap on airplanes today is the slotted flap. Variations of this design are used for small airplanes as
well as for large ones. Slotted flaps increase the lift coefficient a good deal more than the simple flap. On small
airplanes, the hinge is located below the lower surface of the flap, and when it is lowered, it forms a duct between
the flap well in the wing and the leading edge of the flap.
When the flap is lowered all of the way and
break away from its surface, air from the high-pressure area below the wing flows up through the slot and blows
back over the top of the flap. This high energy flow on the surface pulls air down and prevents the flap stalling. It is
not uncommon on large airplanes to have double and even triple-slotted flaps to allow the maximum increase in
drag without the airflow over the flaps separating and destroying the lift they produce.
Triple-slotted flaps are used on many jet transports to balance the lift and
drag necessary for reasonable takeoff and landing speeds with the
requirements for high speed cruising flight.
FOWLER FLAPS
Fowler flaps are a type of slotted flap. The design of this wing flap not only changes the camber of the wing, it also
increases the wing area. Instead of rotating down on a hinge, it slides backwards on tracks. In the first portion of its
extension, it increases the drag very little, but increases the lift a great deal as it increases both the area and camber. As
the extension continues, the flap deflects downward, and during the last portion of its travel, it increases the drag
with little additional increase in lift.
Stalls occur when the angle of attack becomes so great that the energy in the air flowing over the wing can no
longer pull air down to the surface. The boundary layer thickens and becomes turbulent and the airflow separates
from the surface.
This separation can be delayed to a higher angle of attack by any means that increases the energy of the air flowing
over the surface. One method used is a slot in the leading edge of the wing. This slot is simply a duct for air to flow
from below the wing to the top where it is directed over the surface in a high-velocity stream. Slots are usually
placed ahead of the aileron to keep the outer portion of the wing flying after the root has stalled. This keeps the
aileron effective and provides lateral control during most of the stall.
A fixed slot ducts air from the lower surface to the upper surface of a wing
at high angles of attack.
SLATS
Many high-performance airplanes have a portion of the wing leading edge mounted on tracks so it can extend
outward and create a duct to direct high-energy air down over the surface and delay separation to a very high
angle of attack.
In many airplanes these slats are actuated by aerodynamic forces and are entirely automatic in their operation. As
the angle of attack increases, the low pressure just behind the leading edge on top of the wing increases and pulls
the slat out of the wing. When the slat moves out, it ducts the air from the high-pressure area below the wing to the
upper surface and increases the velocity of the air in the boundary layer. When the angle of attack is lowered, air
pressure on the slat moves it back into the wing where it has no effect on the airflow.
Some airplanes have slats operated by either hydraulic or electric actuators, and the slats are extended
automatically when the trailing edge flaps are lowered. These slats prevent the airflow breaking away from the
upper surface when the flaps increase the camber of the wing. Flaps that are used with slats are usually slotted.
They duct high-energy air over the deflected flap sections so the airflow will not break away from their surface.
Slats extend out of the leading edge of the wing at high angles of attack
and serve the same function as a slot. They may be actuated
automatically by aerodynamic forces or mechanically operated, usually
in conjunction with the trailing edge flaps.
A small triangular stall strip may be installed on the leading edge of the
wing near the wing root to cause area behind it to stall first.
A wing tip vortex develops as a result of air flowing around the tip due to pressure
differences. All airplanes generate them. These vortices are strongest when the airplane is
flying slowly at high angles of attack and can be very dangerous to other airplanes.
There are a number of methods that have been used to reduce the effects of wing-tip vortices. Some manufacturers
install fuel tanks on the wing tips that serve the triple function of increasing the range of the airplane,
distributing the weight over a greater portion of the wing and preventing the air spilling over the wing tip.
Smaller airplanes that do not use tip tanks may have tip plates installed on the tip. These plates have the same
shape as the airfoil but are larger and prevent the air spilling over the tips.
Tip tanks minimize the amount of high pressure air spilling over from the high-pressure area
beneath the wing to the low-pressure area above it.
Far less drastic than tip tanks or tip plates are specially shaped wing tips. Some wing tips have a special droop and a
square trailing edge to tighten the vortices and spin them away so they will not contaminate the upper surface so
much.
Drooped wing tips are a simpler method of reducing losses from wing tip vortices.
WINGLETS
Another popular method of controlling, or reducing, wing tip vortices is by the use of winglets. Used principally on
high-speed airplanes, they also allow for drag reduction and better airflow control.
Winglets actually recover some of the energy that would be lost to wing tip vortices and not only reduce the vortex strength but also reduce the
total drag on the airplane.
CANARD SURFACES
Any aircraft that has the equivalent of two lifting surfaces, instead of the conventional horizontal stabilizer that
provides a down load, can be classified as a canard. The canard is the forward surface, and frequently is also a
control surface.
In a conventional airplane, the wing stalls, aileron control is lost, the CG shifts forward, then speed builds up and
control is regained. During this sequence of events there is always the chance that lateral control will also be lost,
particularly when the airplane is in a turn, causing an accidental spin. With a canard configuration, the sequence
changes somewhat. The canard stalls first; the nose drops and speed builds back up. The canard regains full lift
and the nose comes back up. The CG never changed, and full aileron control is available at all times. This
virtually eliminates the chance of an inadvertent stall/spin accident.
T-TAILS
Many aircraft today use the T-tail configuration. Although somewhat heavier, this arrangement has several
desirable characteristics. The stabilizer is moved away from the disturbed airflow of the wing, rudder
effectiveness is improved because of the cap on its end. Many jet aircraft use this configuration because it allows the
engines to be mounted on the aft fuselage. Spin recovery may be improved because of better airflow with the
stabilizer moved higher and out of the turbulence of the wing and fuselage.