I guess can contribute something here since I experienced a sort of runaway elevator trim on my Bearhawk. I had electric elevator trim with up and down buttons on the top of both control sticks.
My wife and I were enroute from south Mississippi to Oshkosh for Airventure. As we neared Memphis, we were cruising along at 8500 feet in smooth, clear air and I was almost dozing off. Without any warning, the nose suddenly pitched up about 20 degrees and I was pushing forward on the stick, it was pretty hard trying to bring it back to level again.
I pressed the down trim button and she leveled out and the control forces were normal. As I was trying to sort out what had happened. I initially thought in my slumber I had somehow hit the trim “up” button, but my hands were not even close to the top of my control stick. What the heck had happened here?
That was when I looked over and noticed my wife had her crossword puzzle book sitting on top of the control stick on her side. She had discovered a word and when she tried writing in the book, she had pressed down hard enough to activate the “up” trim button.
Thankfully, my system had a runaway trim prevention device in line. That trim limiter device only allowed the trim servo motor to run for 2 seconds at a time each time you push the button. Not sure how bad it would have gotten with more than 2 seconds of servo run time, but I think it would have been pretty tough to control unless you can think fast enough to pull back on the throttle real fast.
I would advise anyone looking for electric trim tab control to look into a trim limiter device like I had.
Eric Newton
Bearhawk Tailwheels and Builder Manuals
My wife and I were enroute from south Mississippi to Oshkosh for Airventure. As we neared Memphis, we were cruising along at 8500 feet in smooth, clear air and I was almost dozing off. Without any warning, the nose suddenly pitched up about 20 degrees and I was pushing forward on the stick, it was pretty hard trying to bring it back to level again.
I pressed the down trim button and she leveled out and the control forces were normal. As I was trying to sort out what had happened. I initially thought in my slumber I had somehow hit the trim “up” button, but my hands were not even close to the top of my control stick. What the heck had happened here?
That was when I looked over and noticed my wife had her crossword puzzle book sitting on top of the control stick on her side. She had discovered a word and when she tried writing in the book, she had pressed down hard enough to activate the “up” trim button.
Thankfully, my system had a runaway trim prevention device in line. That trim limiter device only allowed the trim servo motor to run for 2 seconds at a time each time you push the button. Not sure how bad it would have gotten with more than 2 seconds of servo run time, but I think it would have been pretty tough to control unless you can think fast enough to pull back on the throttle real fast.
I would advise anyone looking for electric trim tab control to look into a trim limiter device like I had.
Eric Newton
Bearhawk Tailwheels and Builder Manuals
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