Yeah, a "Yaw Damper", or yaw damper function, is for bigger, heavier planes where the plane has so much inertia that it will occillate in yaw if displaced in yaw. Nowadays most of those bigger and heavier airplanes have swept wings. On an older plane, the "Yaw Damper" was a separate device. Nowadays it is just a software function.
But yaw is yaw, no matter where it came from. The EFIS systems are miniature versions of the INS based instrument and navigation systems on aircraft for the last 35 years. They have gyros and accelerometers that can measure pitch and pitch rate, roll and roll rate, and yaw and yaw rate. It doesn't matter what caused them.
Using those to run the integrated autopilot function built-in to the EFIS in some ways is easy. Commanding a roll or pitch to climb or turn probably is that hard. Expecting it to perfectly coordinate a turn with a rudder servo? I am not sure how well it will work. Depending on the airplane, it might "lead" too much, or "lag" Thinking about it, I think that to get it to work really well, it might be necessary to have adjustable gains on the rudder and maybe the ailerons. There are far more RV's that any other Exp aircraft, so if I was an EFIS manufacturer, I would tune it to work well on an RV.
Like I wrote in a previous post on this thread, VAF had a writeup about RV guys turning the yaw autopilot function on right after takeoff, and allowing the EFIS to coordinate turns the rest of the flight. Would it work across a lot of different roll inputs? Again, not sure. I bet if the gains are adjustable, that you would have a good chance of getting it to work well at 1 roll rate, which is that commanded by the roll function of the autopilot.
I just ordered a Pitot and remote magnetometer from Dynon. I am going to hold off on the rest until I am almost ready to fly, as that is what everyone recommends with the newer EFIS's. They just keep getting better, and cheaper.
But yaw is yaw, no matter where it came from. The EFIS systems are miniature versions of the INS based instrument and navigation systems on aircraft for the last 35 years. They have gyros and accelerometers that can measure pitch and pitch rate, roll and roll rate, and yaw and yaw rate. It doesn't matter what caused them.
Using those to run the integrated autopilot function built-in to the EFIS in some ways is easy. Commanding a roll or pitch to climb or turn probably is that hard. Expecting it to perfectly coordinate a turn with a rudder servo? I am not sure how well it will work. Depending on the airplane, it might "lead" too much, or "lag" Thinking about it, I think that to get it to work really well, it might be necessary to have adjustable gains on the rudder and maybe the ailerons. There are far more RV's that any other Exp aircraft, so if I was an EFIS manufacturer, I would tune it to work well on an RV.
Like I wrote in a previous post on this thread, VAF had a writeup about RV guys turning the yaw autopilot function on right after takeoff, and allowing the EFIS to coordinate turns the rest of the flight. Would it work across a lot of different roll inputs? Again, not sure. I bet if the gains are adjustable, that you would have a good chance of getting it to work well at 1 roll rate, which is that commanded by the roll function of the autopilot.
I just ordered a Pitot and remote magnetometer from Dynon. I am going to hold off on the rest until I am almost ready to fly, as that is what everyone recommends with the newer EFIS's. They just keep getting better, and cheaper.
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