Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

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Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby JJH » Thu Jun 18, 2009 8:28 am

I've recently noticed the aircraft's nose is pitching down during takeoff. The rear comes up first, and the nose only after liftoff. This seems to be a recent phenom as I don't remember this happening before. The only changes I've made to the aircraft.cfg have been small adjustments to wheel contact points and the addition of an autopilot panel. I cant locate anything resembling a centre of balance number. Any advice?

Jim B :-?
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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby JJH » Thu Jun 18, 2009 9:27 am

I've found what I think are the Centre of Gravity numbers:

reference_datum_position =  0, 0, 0
empty_weight_CG_position  = 0, 0, 0
CG_forward_limit = 0
CG_aft_limit = -1

I don't know what they represent, but I'll compare them to another period jet (F86) to see whether there are peculiarities and tweak them to see what happens.
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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby Travis » Thu Jun 18, 2009 10:01 am

Ummm . . . as far as I know, all taildraggers SHOULD pitch nose-down before they are able to get into the air.

The tailplane must begin to produce lift (just like the wings) before you can get off the ground.  I'm guessing that if you knew the EXACT moment that the tailplane began producing lift, you could get it to lift off without the tail coming up at all.
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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby Hagar » Thu Jun 18, 2009 10:04 am

Ummm . . . as far as I know, all taildraggers SHOULD pitch nose-down before they are able to get into the air.

The T-33 is not a taildragger.

JJH. It might be best to post this in the Aircraft Design section. That's where the serious tweakers hang out. You could also read the appropriate FS9 SDK.
Last edited by Hagar on Thu Jun 18, 2009 10:05 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby JJH » Thu Jun 18, 2009 10:11 am

Ummm . . . as far as I know, all taildraggers SHOULD pitch nose-down before they are able to get into the air.

The T-33 is not a taildragger.

JJH. It might be best to post this in the Aircraft Design section. That's where the serious tweakers hang out. You could also read the appropriate FS9 SDK.


I'll follow both of those suggestions, Hagar. In the meantime, I've changed the "elevator_effectiveness =" from 1 to 3 and that has corrected most of the problem.

Jim B :)
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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby Travis » Thu Jun 18, 2009 10:17 am

I'm sorry!  Went off a bit half-cocked, there.  Looked up "Conrad T-33" on FlightSim and saw shots of a Zlin!  Must be more tired than I thought . . . ::)
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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby Groundbound1 » Thu Jun 18, 2009 11:44 am

Hi Jim. Try this before editing any .cfg files. Start your sim and load a flight with the T-33. Once loaded, hit alt+enter to get the sim into "windowed" mode. (Skip it if you already fly that way). Now go to the aircraft menu from the menu bar and select fuel and payload. See how the plane is balanced out and if it isn't, from there you can make any changes needed.
Last edited by Groundbound1 on Thu Jun 18, 2009 11:46 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby olderndirt » Thu Jun 18, 2009 12:52 pm

Ummm . . . as far as I know, all taildraggers SHOULD pitch nose-down before they are able to get into the air.

You've got to be kidding
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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby JJH » Thu Jun 18, 2009 1:15 pm

[quote]Hi Jim. Try this before editing any .cfg files. Start your sim and load a flight with the T-33. Once loaded, hit alt+enter to get the sim into "windowed" mode. (Skip it if you already fly that way). Now go to the aircraft menu from the menu bar and select fuel and payload. See how the plane is balanced out and if it isn't, from there you can make any changes needed.
Last edited by JJH on Thu Jun 18, 2009 1:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby JJH » Thu Jun 18, 2009 2:08 pm

Found what I think I need in the SDK. Just a matter of tweaking the Reference Datum and the CG offset numbers until I get it right. Tks all. :)

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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby olderndirt » Thu Jun 18, 2009 4:08 pm

Which seat is the 600 lb student occupying?
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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby flaminghotsauce » Thu Jun 18, 2009 4:10 pm

[quote]Ummm . . . as far as I know, all taildraggers SHOULD pitch nose-down before they are able to get into the air.

The tailplane must begin to produce lift (just like the wings) before you can get off the ground.
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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby olderndirt » Thu Jun 18, 2009 7:15 pm

The old adage that the tail must fly before the wings'll fly is absolutely correct but as the tail flies the nose merely goes from three point attitude to somewhat less but surely not 'pitching down'.
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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby Travis » Thu Jun 18, 2009 9:22 pm

Sorry.  What I meant was what Older'n wrote: the plane "levels out" a bit as speed builds, then you are able to actually get the main gear off the runway.  No, I definitely understand that the nose shouldn't pitch "down" past the horizontal, but the tailgear must leave the ground before the main gear, correct?
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Re: Tim Conrad's T-33 - Nose heavy?

Postby olderndirt » Thu Jun 18, 2009 11:00 pm

Probably with full flaps and lots of horses it'd get off three point but you'd need to accelerate before trying to climb and get rid of the flaps nice and easy.
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