- Joined
- Oct 31, 1996
- Posts
- 899
- Type aircraft owned
- Carbon Cub FX-3
- Base airport
- KFCI
- Ratings
- COMM, IFR, MEL, SEL
When I picked up my new Carbon Cub FX-3 in early October I noticed the elevator movement up/down during preflight seemed like something was rubbing/binding. Two years ago the DAR found the elevator cable off of the pulley below the pilot seat area. Good catch on that DAR who did a thorough job of inspecting. This year's DAR was different and far less thorough, sadly. I asked several at CubCrafters about this concern as my prior FX-3 did not have this feel on the elevator travel. I was extremely concerned on the ferry home to the point I almost grounded the airplane for this at Alpine, WY but had a hunch nothing would be found and this just the way this airplane is. Someone at CubCrafters mentioned it may be "new tension" or the old plane may not be at correct tension, on and on. I got home and even as recent as yesterday I pulled off panels and inspected. It's driving me crazy.
Then the thought occurred to me what the problem could be and today prior to flying I verified the problem. GAP SEALS. I pulled the gap seals out and sure enough the problem immediately went away. The problem is the gap seals were not cut to the proper length so they were compressed side to side to fit in the gap. The gap seal based on its shape will compress when the elevator moves up or down but if the material is further compressed then it will make it even harder for the gap seal to compress from control movement. I trimmed the affected gap seals and now it's exactly the way my prior plane was. Such a simple trivial item but if not installed correctly can give a feel of control binding.
FYI
P.S. Gap seals are an interesting concept, seems there are far better ways of keeping air out of that area than stuffing "weather stripping" material in the gap itself.
Then the thought occurred to me what the problem could be and today prior to flying I verified the problem. GAP SEALS. I pulled the gap seals out and sure enough the problem immediately went away. The problem is the gap seals were not cut to the proper length so they were compressed side to side to fit in the gap. The gap seal based on its shape will compress when the elevator moves up or down but if the material is further compressed then it will make it even harder for the gap seal to compress from control movement. I trimmed the affected gap seals and now it's exactly the way my prior plane was. Such a simple trivial item but if not installed correctly can give a feel of control binding.
FYI
P.S. Gap seals are an interesting concept, seems there are far better ways of keeping air out of that area than stuffing "weather stripping" material in the gap itself.