It was my father in-laws...is this something I should sell or donate to an aviation museum?It's an autopilot signal processor. It takes the raw signal from various flight instruments and adjusts the output signal to the servos. All those knobs are trimmers for adjusting each one of the channels for pitch, roll, yaw and whatever else is controlled in the specific installation...
I'd say you have a bad case of crosspost-itis.Does anyone know what I have here?
Sorry I received a message that I had to start 5 threads or be kicked off as spam...I'd say you have a bad case of crosspost-itis.
Sorry I received a message that I had to start 5 threads or be kicked off as spam...
Heh. For some reason the cross-posting reminded me of this.Sorry I received a message that I had to start 5 threads or be kicked off as spam...
Sorry new to the forum, not intentionally violating protocols...I want to sell if needed and useable, or donate to air museum if wanted . Thank you kindly.@Pacer are you trying to sell this or just identify it? You've made posts in multiple forums asking the same question.
We ask that you not make duplicate posts in multiple forums for the same question.
Thank you!I'm not a museum but I do collect old aviation components, so I'll take it if it's free.
If you wish to try to sell, though, I would try to wait for some additional help in the (now single) thread. I've merged all of your threads together.
It's an autopilot signal processor. It takes the raw signal from various flight instruments and adjusts the output signal to the servos. All those knobs are trimmers for adjusting each one of the channels for pitch, roll, yaw and whatever else is controlled in the specific installation...
Jeez. Looks like about an 1-2 hours of fuel now you can carry once removed from the W&B sheetCorrect!. If you enlarge the image you can read the I.D. Label. Also the handle partly conceals the markings "YAW - ROLL - PITCH - ALTITUDE" along the bottom of the panel.
The second photo shows that it uses vacuum tubes! Probably vintage 1950s or '60s. Geeks would call it a "Boat Anchor".
Dave