I am studying Mark Goldberg's wing assembly manual, and have questions about the routing of the Aileron Control Cable. A little background, the Ailerons are controlled by a giant cable loop that runs up one strut to the bellcrank, then from the one bellcrank to the other bell crank passing over the top of the rear seat, then down the other strut back to the stick.
The cable that runs from bellcrank to bellcrank passes through 10 ribs in one wing, thru the fuselage then 10 ribs in the other wing while also passing over Flap Dive Linkages and Support Frames in both wings. Does everyone run the cable straight and level out past the Flap Drive Linkage, then use a fairlead at Rib #10 to slope the cable to target the aileron bellcrank arm? I am thinking that keeping the aileron cable elevated will give the outboard Flap Arms and Flap Push-rod room to move.
Brooks Cone
Patrol #303
Making plans for a Kit.
The cable that runs from bellcrank to bellcrank passes through 10 ribs in one wing, thru the fuselage then 10 ribs in the other wing while also passing over Flap Dive Linkages and Support Frames in both wings. Does everyone run the cable straight and level out past the Flap Drive Linkage, then use a fairlead at Rib #10 to slope the cable to target the aileron bellcrank arm? I am thinking that keeping the aileron cable elevated will give the outboard Flap Arms and Flap Push-rod room to move.
Brooks Cone
Patrol #303
Making plans for a Kit.
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