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Flying
Handbook Menu > Basic
Flight Maneuvers > Trim Control
The airplane is designed so that the primary
flight controls (rudder, aileron, and elevator) are streamlined
with the nonmovable airplane surfaces when the airplane is cruising
straight-and-level at normal weight and loading. If the airplane
is flying out of that basic balanced condition, one or more
of thecontrol surfaces is going to have to be held out of its
streamlined position by continuous control input. The use of
trim tabs relieves the pilot of this requirement. Proper trim
technique is a very important and often overlooked basic flying
skill. An improperly trimmed airplane requires constant control
pressures, produces pilot tension and fatigue, distracts the
pilot from scanning, and contributes to abrupt and erratic airplane
attitude control. Because of their relatively low power and
speed, not all light airplanes have a complete set of trim tabs
that are adjustable from the cockpit. In airplanes where rudder,
aileron, and elevator trim are available, a definite sequence
of trim application should be used. Elevator/stabilator should
be trimmed first to relieve the need for control pressure to
maintain constant airspeed/pitch attitude. Attempts to trim
the rudder at varying airspeed are impractical in propeller
driven airplanes because of the change in the torque correcting
offset of the vertical fin. Once a constant airspeed/pitch attitude
has been established, the pilot should hold the wings level
with aileron pressure while rudder pressure is trimmed out.
Aileron trim should then be adjusted to relieve any lateral
control yoke pressure. A common trim control error is the tendency
to overcontrol the airplane with trim adjustments. Toavoid this
the pilot must learn to establish and hold the airplane in the
desired attitude using the primary flight controls. The proper
attitude should be established with reference to the horizon
and then verified by reference to performance indications on
the flight instruments. The pilot should then apply trim in
the above sequence to relieve whatever hand and foot pressure
had been required. The pilot must avoid using the trim to establish
or correct airplane attitude. The airplane attitude must be
established and held first, then control pressures trimmed out
so that the airplane will maintain the desired attitude in “hands
off” flight. Attempting to “fly the airplane with
the trim tabs” is a common fault in basic flying technique
even among experiencedpilots. A properly trimmed airplane is
an indication of good piloting skills. Any control pressures
the pilot feels should be a result of deliberate pilot control
input during a planned change in airplane attitude, not a result
of pressures being applied by the airplane because the pilot
is allowing it to assume control.
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