ok, so I went out and measured a prewar vs a post war airplanes for how the wings are mounted on the airframe. I rigged both airplanes and both fly straight and level. I started with a digital level on the horizontal to establish a "0" angle in both airplanes. I used the tool that I have for setting book spec. at 1-5/16" between the front and rear spars.
So I will give you the numbers that I found. First off, the trailing edge on the prewar was even with the top of the fuselage, the post war airplane was about an inch and a quarter with a tape measure. The prewar airplane had 8.50x6 tires and the post war had 8.00x6. Leveling means in the manual in the Hstab.
so the numbers are listed from outboard pilot, inboard pilot, inboard co-pilot, out board copilot in degrees (d=down) in the leading edge from 0 degrees
prewar .1d, 2.6d, 1.6d, .6d
post war .6d, 2.3d, 1.6d, .6d
so I really dont see any difference between the pre and post war airplanes but there is a difference in where the wing root meets the fuselage, so I am wondering if there is a difference in the fuselage longerons which gives the technical difference between the angle of incidence between both airplanes in the TCDS?
So this is actual measurement from flyable airplanes, an .5degrees in my book is negligible on an airplane that was built to +/- an 1/8" and any variations in fabric can change the measurement by .5degrees.
So I will let the tribe stew on this data and let the discussion roll.
Tim
So I will give you the numbers that I found. First off, the trailing edge on the prewar was even with the top of the fuselage, the post war airplane was about an inch and a quarter with a tape measure. The prewar airplane had 8.50x6 tires and the post war had 8.00x6. Leveling means in the manual in the Hstab.
so the numbers are listed from outboard pilot, inboard pilot, inboard co-pilot, out board copilot in degrees (d=down) in the leading edge from 0 degrees
prewar .1d, 2.6d, 1.6d, .6d
post war .6d, 2.3d, 1.6d, .6d
so I really dont see any difference between the pre and post war airplanes but there is a difference in where the wing root meets the fuselage, so I am wondering if there is a difference in the fuselage longerons which gives the technical difference between the angle of incidence between both airplanes in the TCDS?
So this is actual measurement from flyable airplanes, an .5degrees in my book is negligible on an airplane that was built to +/- an 1/8" and any variations in fabric can change the measurement by .5degrees.
So I will let the tribe stew on this data and let the discussion roll.
Tim
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