gkainz
Final Approach
for discussion or ideas ... I'm posting the following message from our club maintenance officer regarding an issue with our '87 F33A Bonanza, Aspen Pro 1000, Garmin GTN750, KCF 150 autopilot.
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"Gentlemen: we have two continuing autopilot problems, in spite of frequent avionics shop visits, adjustments, and multiple component changes: Porpoising (now identified as pitch pumping) and pitch-ups at autopilot disconnect.
Most of this info comes from a long conversation with a Senior Tech at a major repair station, and from the owner of “our” shop.
Our autopilot is a KFC 150. It uses 3 servos: One for roll, Two for pitch. We aren’t having any known roll servo problems.
Pitch: A PITCH servo drives the elevator. A pitch TRIM servo drives the trim tab.
When WE fly the plane, we FLY THE ELEVATOR, and then trim as needed. This is NOT frequent, and we never use hundreds or thousands of rapid up/down reversals.
When AUTO flies the plane, the computer (the panel mounted controller) will ask the PITCH servo to move the elevator. Resulting cable tautness signals the TRIM servo to neutralize the cable pressure.
The MAIN part of the KFC 150 test cycle is a computer check (four red light flashes). First flash: pitch signal sent. Second flash: Signal returned (OK). The next two flashes mean another signal was sent and received, all ok.
Right now, this test in our Bonanza is normal, which means the computer is ok. ( It was rebuilt recently)
Our Aspen Pro 1000 uses an electronics box (the EA 100) to monitor pitch and roll, and send emulated pitch signals to the computer. Big Glitch: Computer needs adjustments to correctly read EA 100 signals. This is not a ‘once and done’ thing. If ANYTHING is changed, like installing a new component, or loading new Aspen software, another calibration is needed to assure the computer can read the artificial pitch/roll information correctly. This is called an “AutoPilot Alignment”. We had this done last month. Our satisfaction level was about 75%. We went back for a software update - but did NOT get a fresh alignment. Satisfaction level dropped to near zero.
Recently Learned: We have pitch pumping, not porpoising. 1 second intervals. This is evidence of mis-alignment with the EA 100. MY THEORY is that “pitch pumping” is seen when the pitch servo responds EVERY second to erroneous pitch commands: Up, down, up, down, etc. Servos are built for NORMAL ops, and even turbulence does not exercise them rapidly. I think “pitch pumping” destroys servos. It also makes using an affected autopilot an intolerable experience.
Our second problem: Severe nose up pitch: There is another servo ground test. Here’s the sequence, and the report of our servo action: Push forward gently, servo reacts, trim servo follows up, starts trimming nose up. FAIL. Nose up trimming is supposed to stop when back pressure is released. FAIL. It does not stop. It is probably that inflight conditions have occurred that caused the nose up trim to begin. When it has not stopped, the next disengagement was violent.
Continuing: Gentle Back Pressure: Trim should start nose down. FAIL. It does not. There are separate switches for up/down. Imagine the rapid solenoid action and motor reversals with one second intervals. There is also a tach generator that sends rotational speed signals. Imagine reversing it, same intervals. And there is a tang that can break. Don’t know anything else about it.
I have a received another rebuilt pitch servo. I will install it soon, but this probably means is that we will start destroying it if we let ANY pitch pumping happen. There is no time in the schedule right now for a trip for alignment. You can TRY the A/P, but punch it off at the first sign of pumping, even if it is a small magnitude pumping action.
MY OPINION: If we can’t cure the pumping, we should find a REAL attitude indicator to drive the computer— which was NOT BUILT for “emulated signals”. It will take big bucks, but our experience with our other aircraft (real attitude indicators) was 100% satisfaction. I think that is where we should go.
I’ve given up any hope that we will ever be happy with the EA 100 electronic gyro, and its “emulations”."
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"Gentlemen: we have two continuing autopilot problems, in spite of frequent avionics shop visits, adjustments, and multiple component changes: Porpoising (now identified as pitch pumping) and pitch-ups at autopilot disconnect.
Most of this info comes from a long conversation with a Senior Tech at a major repair station, and from the owner of “our” shop.
Our autopilot is a KFC 150. It uses 3 servos: One for roll, Two for pitch. We aren’t having any known roll servo problems.
Pitch: A PITCH servo drives the elevator. A pitch TRIM servo drives the trim tab.
When WE fly the plane, we FLY THE ELEVATOR, and then trim as needed. This is NOT frequent, and we never use hundreds or thousands of rapid up/down reversals.
When AUTO flies the plane, the computer (the panel mounted controller) will ask the PITCH servo to move the elevator. Resulting cable tautness signals the TRIM servo to neutralize the cable pressure.
The MAIN part of the KFC 150 test cycle is a computer check (four red light flashes). First flash: pitch signal sent. Second flash: Signal returned (OK). The next two flashes mean another signal was sent and received, all ok.
Right now, this test in our Bonanza is normal, which means the computer is ok. ( It was rebuilt recently)
Our Aspen Pro 1000 uses an electronics box (the EA 100) to monitor pitch and roll, and send emulated pitch signals to the computer. Big Glitch: Computer needs adjustments to correctly read EA 100 signals. This is not a ‘once and done’ thing. If ANYTHING is changed, like installing a new component, or loading new Aspen software, another calibration is needed to assure the computer can read the artificial pitch/roll information correctly. This is called an “AutoPilot Alignment”. We had this done last month. Our satisfaction level was about 75%. We went back for a software update - but did NOT get a fresh alignment. Satisfaction level dropped to near zero.
Recently Learned: We have pitch pumping, not porpoising. 1 second intervals. This is evidence of mis-alignment with the EA 100. MY THEORY is that “pitch pumping” is seen when the pitch servo responds EVERY second to erroneous pitch commands: Up, down, up, down, etc. Servos are built for NORMAL ops, and even turbulence does not exercise them rapidly. I think “pitch pumping” destroys servos. It also makes using an affected autopilot an intolerable experience.
Our second problem: Severe nose up pitch: There is another servo ground test. Here’s the sequence, and the report of our servo action: Push forward gently, servo reacts, trim servo follows up, starts trimming nose up. FAIL. Nose up trimming is supposed to stop when back pressure is released. FAIL. It does not stop. It is probably that inflight conditions have occurred that caused the nose up trim to begin. When it has not stopped, the next disengagement was violent.
Continuing: Gentle Back Pressure: Trim should start nose down. FAIL. It does not. There are separate switches for up/down. Imagine the rapid solenoid action and motor reversals with one second intervals. There is also a tach generator that sends rotational speed signals. Imagine reversing it, same intervals. And there is a tang that can break. Don’t know anything else about it.
I have a received another rebuilt pitch servo. I will install it soon, but this probably means is that we will start destroying it if we let ANY pitch pumping happen. There is no time in the schedule right now for a trip for alignment. You can TRY the A/P, but punch it off at the first sign of pumping, even if it is a small magnitude pumping action.
MY OPINION: If we can’t cure the pumping, we should find a REAL attitude indicator to drive the computer— which was NOT BUILT for “emulated signals”. It will take big bucks, but our experience with our other aircraft (real attitude indicators) was 100% satisfaction. I think that is where we should go.
I’ve given up any hope that we will ever be happy with the EA 100 electronic gyro, and its “emulations”."
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