uwochris
Flightinfo's sexiest user
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2001
- Posts
- 381
Hey guys,
Got a question about the HI that has been bugging me.
What exactly makes the rose card of the Heading Indicator move? Is the rose card attached to the spinning gyro (and therefore, it does not move, but rather the airplane moves around it) by gears, or to gimbals?
I've seen pictures in the Jepp Comm book and in other books, but none seem to be very well detailed. The Jepp book shows the rose card being attached by several gears to an outer gimbal, which is free to move about the longitudinal axis. If this is the case, what is attached to the spinning gyro? There doesn't appear to be anything attached to the spinning gyro...
If nothing is attached to the spinning gyro, how can it act as a steady reference?
Also, when people speak of "precession" for the HI, they seem to use it synonomously with friction. What about the standard definition of precession (you apply a force to a spinning gyro and it will act as if you had applied the force 90 degrees in the direction of gyroscopic rotation)? Does this definition not apply to the HI?
Thanks in advance.
If you know of any good flight instrument websites with some diagrams, I'd really appreciate you share them with me.
Got a question about the HI that has been bugging me.
What exactly makes the rose card of the Heading Indicator move? Is the rose card attached to the spinning gyro (and therefore, it does not move, but rather the airplane moves around it) by gears, or to gimbals?
I've seen pictures in the Jepp Comm book and in other books, but none seem to be very well detailed. The Jepp book shows the rose card being attached by several gears to an outer gimbal, which is free to move about the longitudinal axis. If this is the case, what is attached to the spinning gyro? There doesn't appear to be anything attached to the spinning gyro...
If nothing is attached to the spinning gyro, how can it act as a steady reference?
Also, when people speak of "precession" for the HI, they seem to use it synonomously with friction. What about the standard definition of precession (you apply a force to a spinning gyro and it will act as if you had applied the force 90 degrees in the direction of gyroscopic rotation)? Does this definition not apply to the HI?
Thanks in advance.
If you know of any good flight instrument websites with some diagrams, I'd really appreciate you share them with me.