One Wing Low
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One Wing Low
After owning my M7 for a few years and logging several hundred hours, it begs me to ask this question. The right wing is always heavy. Control inputs require left aileron all the time. I always burn out of the right tank first and that helps. Is there some way to warp the wing to correct this? I don't have an autopilot so after an hour or so, my hand gets tired to holding the correction. Jeremy, what do you think? Anyone else, please help.
William H Redick
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Re: One Wing Low
I have the same problem. It's going in for annual next week. While things are apart, I may go through the rigging section of the service manual.wredick wrote:After owning my M7 for a few years and logging several hundred hours, it begs me to ask this question. The right wing is always heavy. Control inputs require left aileron all the time.
Christopher Owens
1993 MX-7-180A
Members: AOPA EAA VAA
1993 MX-7-180A
Members: AOPA EAA VAA
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You cannot rig the airplane by adjusting the ailerons, as they are independent to the rig of the plane.
Use the manual and start at the beginning otherwise you are chasing your tail.
There are no shortcuts if you want optimum lift and speed.
Very often the ailerons have been reskined or twisted and thus will roll the plane.
Use lateral level tube first, then check tail hinge line for parallel horiz stabs, then elevators for equal angle and no twist at balance weight horn,then vertical stab and rudder for perpendicular and alignment to correct position left of centre above windscreen, then dihedral of wings, then washout with rear lift struts.
Finally the flaps and ailerons for no twist and flush at all ends with bottom of wing when upward pressure is applied to trailing edges.
Ailerons and rudder neutral, then adjust the servo tab.
Now you can fly it with equal fuel in mains and Empty aux tanks.
Use the manual and start at the beginning otherwise you are chasing your tail.
There are no shortcuts if you want optimum lift and speed.
Very often the ailerons have been reskined or twisted and thus will roll the plane.
Use lateral level tube first, then check tail hinge line for parallel horiz stabs, then elevators for equal angle and no twist at balance weight horn,then vertical stab and rudder for perpendicular and alignment to correct position left of centre above windscreen, then dihedral of wings, then washout with rear lift struts.
Finally the flaps and ailerons for no twist and flush at all ends with bottom of wing when upward pressure is applied to trailing edges.
Ailerons and rudder neutral, then adjust the servo tab.
Now you can fly it with equal fuel in mains and Empty aux tanks.
- DeltaRomeo
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What Jeremy said. Had the same issue and found the left wing to have the opposite of wash out. Got the wash out correct on both sides, checked dihedral, and all the other rigging specs per the manual and it now flies straight and level. Do what Jeremy said. There is no need to fight tendencies like heavy wings as they are indicating a more insidious problem. Until I corrected these issues, the stall was a hard break to the left. Now it just mushes.
M5
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Do the full rig by the book and check it twice. A little flap may not hurt but if it takes much at all don't do it. Instead tab an aileron. Put it on the one that you must tab down to make the aileron fly up. The ailerons must fly aligned. The tab is part number is 3056b found on drawing 3056b Rev. C.
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Re aileron tabs on a Maule wing. Generally the only time a tab is useful is when there is a twisted aileron from a re-skin and not getting the spar perpendicular to the bottom skin the full length.
Whenever I come across a Maule with an aileron tab I know there is a rigging problem, twisted aileron or flap or an un-plumb airframe, thus the reason to rig from square 1, then fly it to get a baseline to work from.
Whenever I come across a Maule with an aileron tab I know there is a rigging problem, twisted aileron or flap or an un-plumb airframe, thus the reason to rig from square 1, then fly it to get a baseline to work from.
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