Hi Z,
It is sensitive, but more importantly I find it almost exactly right in terms of deflection.
When I am light with a forward CG I usually need most of the up-trim available to get it balanced on a slow approach to land. Conversely, I need to trim nose down on approach with an aft CG, but not much trim by comparison.
Another important note - my trim install is not centred about neutral trim, it's biased so I have about 20%-30% more nose up trim, and of course less nose down trim. I built in the bias with the length of the pushrod.
The faster you set your trim, the quicker resetting trim after a go-around (holding large stick forces at bay) will be, but at first it's fiddly for trimming into a long steady cruise - but I soon became accustomed to just holding the switch for a quarter second at a time, or less. The resolution of these jack-screw servos is great. It takes maybe 6-8 seconds to trim from centre to full trim up, with the servo I have and the offset.
If you set your mechanical arrangement to get the correct deflection, you can add a trim speed controller into the circuit (at least for the RAC servo / relay combination) which allows you to adjust the speed. I decided not to do that, because it's easier to just push the button quickly than to fiddle with a knob on the panel before trimming.
It is sensitive, but more importantly I find it almost exactly right in terms of deflection.
When I am light with a forward CG I usually need most of the up-trim available to get it balanced on a slow approach to land. Conversely, I need to trim nose down on approach with an aft CG, but not much trim by comparison.
Another important note - my trim install is not centred about neutral trim, it's biased so I have about 20%-30% more nose up trim, and of course less nose down trim. I built in the bias with the length of the pushrod.
The faster you set your trim, the quicker resetting trim after a go-around (holding large stick forces at bay) will be, but at first it's fiddly for trimming into a long steady cruise - but I soon became accustomed to just holding the switch for a quarter second at a time, or less. The resolution of these jack-screw servos is great. It takes maybe 6-8 seconds to trim from centre to full trim up, with the servo I have and the offset.
If you set your mechanical arrangement to get the correct deflection, you can add a trim speed controller into the circuit (at least for the RAC servo / relay combination) which allows you to adjust the speed. I decided not to do that, because it's easier to just push the button quickly than to fiddle with a knob on the panel before trimming.
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