by beaky » Tue Dec 12, 2006 7:20 pm
Use it sparingly; that's Rule #1.
It's very hard to use in FS compared to real life, and unless you have your elevator sensitivity adjusted properly, it's going to be nearly impossible to use.
But here's the idea: the trim wheel or electric trim servo controls a little tab on the trailing edge of the elevator (or sometimes it moves the whole horizontal stabilizer, but not many planes have that).
As you move the wheel, the tab deflects. When you add "nose up" trim, the tab deflects downward, which causes the elevator to "want" to go upwards while in flight (picture it). This of course makes the plane pitch up.The opposite applies to "nose down" trim.
The reason it's there is to "trim off" the force the pilot has to apply in order to maintain a certain pitch angle... to climb or descend, or to maintain a given airspeed at a given power setting. In a real airplane, it's usually possible to trim the plane so you can let go of the yoke or stick, and it will "stay put" until something disturbs it.
Took me a while, but in RL I eventually learned to fly a Cessna in a tight circle hands-off, by setting the bank, then using trim to hold the necessary "back force".
In RL, it's pretty easy, because you can feel how much resistance you're "fighting" with your hand. In the sim, it's much harder, but with a good model and some adjusting, it's very do-able.
You probably remember the lessons sayingto dial in "takeoff trim" before rolling- this helps ease the amount of force you need to rotate, and also guarantees that if your hand slips or whatever, the elevator will still tend to go up, which will keep you climbing.
Keeping in mind what I said about "trimming off force" is the key to understanding how to use it. You have to put the nose where you want it, then apply up or down trim until you can let go and the pitch angle remains more or less stable. This is where the sim makes it harder, even if you have force-feedback controllers... in RL, you can literally feel when you have it trimmed right.
So try that: hold it where you want it, apply a little trim, let go, put it back where it cshould be, trim some more, etc.
You may find that you think you have it trimmed off, but it still dips or rises a little... some planes need a moment to oscillate before they "settle down", so be patient. Otherwise you wind up "chasing" the nose up and down, and next thing you know, it's so "out of trim" you can barely hold it level.
And use small amounts of trim, always. Trim... wait... check.... trim... wait.
Best way to learn this is in a slower plane, like the Cub... once you get the hang of trimming, try keeping your hand off the yoke or stick and climbing or desending with trim alone.
And again: check your sensitivities... for elevator, and for trim, if you're using a pot on the controller to adjust trim. Experiment- it depends very much on the plane, etc.
Last edited by
beaky on Tue Dec 12, 2006 7:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.