IFD-550 ARS Calibration |
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DavidBunin
Senior Member Joined: 20 May 2015 Location: Rockwall, TX Status: Offline Points: 742 |
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Posted: 12 May 2016 at 8:11am |
Steve,
As I recall, your IFD-550 pictures were taken in a Cessna 182. In that aircraft, the radio stack is mounted level with the aircraft's vertical axis. How do you calibrate the ARS when installing the IFD-550 in an airplane like Cirrus, where the radio stack is mounted at a significant angle to the vertical? Does the angled mounting affect the accuracy of the indication? David Bunin |
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AviJake
Admin Group Joined: 26 Mar 2009 Location: Lincoln MA Status: Offline Points: 2815 |
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There is a new ARS Calibration page in Mx Mode that provides a means to adjust for pitch, roll and yaw off-axis installations (though a roll tilt should be a highly unusual thing).
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Steve Jacobson
sjacobson@avidyne.com |
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DavidBunin
Senior Member Joined: 20 May 2015 Location: Rockwall, TX Status: Offline Points: 742 |
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Is it necessary to jack or shore the aircraft to a level position for the calibration, or can you tell the ARS that the aircraft is currently positioned (for example) 3° nose-up?
David Bunin |
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AviJake
Admin Group Joined: 26 Mar 2009 Location: Lincoln MA Status: Offline Points: 2815 |
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No jacking of airplane required. There are 4 fields to enter (pitch, roll, yaw, TAS).
The current procedure is to measure yaw before you put the IFD in the tray. You are measuring the difference between the longitudinal axis of the airplane the longitudinal axis of the tray. For most of us, they are one in the same (0 deg). For those folks who have the stack or panel yawed to point more toward the pilot, they need to do that measurement. You type in the True Airspeed you want to be your trim point. Say 135 KTAS is your desired level flight enroute TAS. Then the typical next step is to fly a sortie, hit your desired TAS trim point and record what you are seeing for displayed pitch and roll. Land the airplane, go back to that page and enter those values. I would expect roll to be 0 all the time. Part of the reason roll is done in flight is to prevent the flat tire scenario or lard ass pilot in one seat scenario or fuel imbalance scenario. Pitch will vary from plane to plane when sitting on the ground. Tail draggers vs tricycle wheel vs in-flight AoA vs etc. |
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Steve Jacobson
sjacobson@avidyne.com |
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oskrypuch
Senior Member Joined: 09 Nov 2012 Location: CYFD Status: Offline Points: 3061 |
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I strongly prefer to reference pitch to a neutral aircraft pitch. There is no such thing as a neutral reference point in cruise, it will always vary, and when flying in cruise you will always be nose up 1* to 3* with a positive AOA. That is how I have the ASPEN set up. In which case, I guess I would just need to match that. * Orest Edited by oskrypuch - 13 May 2016 at 1:31pm |
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AviJake
Admin Group Joined: 26 Mar 2009 Location: Lincoln MA Status: Offline Points: 2815 |
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The beauty of this system is you can certainly do that if you want.
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Steve Jacobson
sjacobson@avidyne.com |
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