Lee, Thanks for the link to the patent. I'm sure he developed his anti-servo trim system on his free time or Lockheed would've had something to say about that. Our time, our mney. John is right, the anti-servo system makes the airplane easier to fly and is essential in an open-loop flight control system such as on the Thorp. A closed-loop system, as in a hydraulically-actuated system on a modern fighter, doesn't need an anti-servo trim tab as John mentioned as the undesirable feature of an all-moving tail surface without an anti-servo trim system. The trim button in those aircraft changes the position of the control surface and there is no direct feedback to the pilot except through an artificail feel system. The canards on the Wright airplanes are flying surfaces from an aerodynamic standpoint. It doesn't matter that the canards are out front versus a conventional layout. A horizontal stabilizer is a horizontal stabilizer regardless of where it is. I'm not sure why the Europeans are so infatuated with cnards on their fighters. Also, an elevator on a hinged system doesn't just deflect air (I'm not sure if that's what you really meant). Moving the elevator changes the camber and angle-of-attack of a lifting surface which is the horizontal stabilizer/elevator combination. When the trailing edge of the elevator goes up, it produces negative lift on the tail surface, increases the angle-of-attack on the main wing and we know what happens then. Likewise, on the Wright designs, when the horzontal stabilizer changed angle-of-attack, lift increased or decreased on the surface. Again, thanks for the answer. I was looking at just the all-moving hotizontal tail surface as a whole, which had been used before, and not thinking about the trim system that Thorp developed.
Last edited by fulcrumflyer on Mon Dec 05, 2011 10:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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