vlittle
Active Member
- Joined
- May 7, 2006
- Messages
- 540
This is a lessons learned.
I had a shear screw fail in my roll servo. The underlying cause was the castellated nut was not properly torqued, so the screw was taking all of the load. This was a replacement (rebuilt) servo from Dynon received as a swap for a non-Skyview compatible unit.
Even though the screw sheared, the autopilot continued to fly most of the route. My first indication of a problem was that my trim indicator was wonky. In fact, I noticed this for some time, and attributed it to a faulty trim spring, but kept my eye on it.
The second indication was when a significant course change was followed by a non-compliance of the aircraft! I noticed no servo force in roll, but manually steering and engaging the a/p on a new course worked ok, and small course changes worked fine. Turns out that it was my autotrim system flying the aircraft.
On the ground, I located the sheared screw and have sent an email request to support for a replacement.
I learned several years ago to always monitor the autopilot when reaching a waypoint. I've had strange operation from other brands as well. One caveat: this is not the Dynon autotrim system, but the one I designed for Makerplane.
Vern
I had a shear screw fail in my roll servo. The underlying cause was the castellated nut was not properly torqued, so the screw was taking all of the load. This was a replacement (rebuilt) servo from Dynon received as a swap for a non-Skyview compatible unit.
Even though the screw sheared, the autopilot continued to fly most of the route. My first indication of a problem was that my trim indicator was wonky. In fact, I noticed this for some time, and attributed it to a faulty trim spring, but kept my eye on it.
The second indication was when a significant course change was followed by a non-compliance of the aircraft! I noticed no servo force in roll, but manually steering and engaging the a/p on a new course worked ok, and small course changes worked fine. Turns out that it was my autotrim system flying the aircraft.
On the ground, I located the sheared screw and have sent an email request to support for a replacement.
I learned several years ago to always monitor the autopilot when reaching a waypoint. I've had strange operation from other brands as well. One caveat: this is not the Dynon autotrim system, but the one I designed for Makerplane.
Vern