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Has anyone tried removing only half the slats and installing VG's?
It may be a useless half measure but I am curious if maintaining some of the ability to land over obstacles would be maintained while still seeing some net gains in cruise speed and fuel efficiency.
One of the characteristics of the 701/750 I don't like is the tendency of the plane to stop flying just off the ground. The number of nosegear damage incidents on low time pilots in the plane is clear evidence of this tendency. Mine lands best by keeping just a touch of power in and flying it to the ground. I wonder if a partial slat removal cleaning up half the wing might improve this.
Like to hear from anyone who might have tinkered with this.
Thanks
Tags:
Sam,
I remember looking at your fairings at Sun 'n Fun last year and that's what partially inspired me to do something similar! I did have structural concerns about extending the elevator span and that is why I kept the tips at 4" each/8" total span increase. Not being an engineer, I felt that was still pretty conservative but long enough to "pick up" the enhanced flow off the tip fences. Roger (Zenith) was interested and asked for pics and I sent them and received no comments, so I "hope" that means it didn't scare him structurally ... although he's not an engineer, either! Can't say that it added stability but I did not have any "tail wag" before the mod, either. It might be a hair more sensitive in pitch, but nothing alarming. I do have a gut feeling that the fences probably provide some drag reduction since it eliminates the tip vortices spilling over the end of HT tips. After slat removal, fairing the HT to the fuselage, tip fences and elevator tips, my 750 seems to be getting incrementally faster and faster in cruise. Used to be a 72 kt airplane in cruise and now at the same power settings it's an 82 kt airplane. ;>)
John
John,
What benefits would you attribute directly to the tabs, increased cruise, approach stability, increased elevator effectiveness, etc.?
Do you note any effect in a crosswind landing?
I would be very interested to see some more detailed photos of the tip mods as well as the fence installation if you have them. You could email them directly to me at lkirk@jingoli.com
Thanks
If by "tabs" you mean the tip fences, they prevent air spilling off the ends of the HT, which likely slightly reduces drag. However, the primary reason for them is two-fold - inboard, they keep more air flowing over the HT which then means more air flowing over the elevator for increased elevator effectiveness and outboard, they prevent air from flowing around the forward/inboard face of the tip extensions, making them even more effective. The fences alone without extensions should help somewhat, but the increased elevator effectiveness is really noticeable when used together with tip extensions. I've noticed no increased yaw, etc. in crosswinds. In cruise, if you encounter turbulence, there might be slightly more pitch sensitivity, but it's slight if at all. There's not much difference on approach except at the last moments of flare when you're getting really slow, then you really notice the improved, positive, linear response of the elevator!
I've got a detailed tutorial with plenty of pictures here: Elevator Mod - HT Fences, Tip Extensions.
Finally, my usual disclaimer: I'm not advocating or recommending that anyone do these mods, I'm simply relating my experiences! You're on your own! ;>)
John
Thanks John
the "tabs" thing was an editing screw-up and I did mean the fences. Thanks for the answer and the link.
I can send you a Hold Harmless Agreement if you like :-)
Thanks for the invaluable input.
I am in the 801 group but not the 750 group. So I can't see it. How does one get into the other sites?
I am in the 801 group but not the 750 group. So I can't see it. How does one get into the other sites?
You're not restricted to the 801 group - you can join any of the other groups including the 750 group.
John
Following this thread a little late. I own N801S which I did not build, rather be flying than building. Previously I owned a Savannah VG 100HP Rotax with a 26MPH stall and, about a 50ft roll with two on board. It is a step brother to the Z-701, long convoluted story there of the family. It came from the factory with elevator and wing VG's from www.stolspeed.com in Australia. I suggest going to his web site and take a look, he belongs to a crazy group of very intelligent STOL aviation guys. I would call them Practical Flying Engineers.
Later I needed more interior space and found an 801 to purchase with about 200hrs. Early with the 801 I hated the landings, felt like I needed more elevator, and the slats were like an on/off switch. Because of my Savannah VG background I got to checking and I ordered the STOL speed elevator and wing kit for the 801 from STOLspeed and glued the elevator kit on first. Wow, power steering is back. I can wheelie down the runway for fun. Big difference.
A couple weeks later I had time to remove the slats and do the wings. You can find some of my earlier posts on this site elsewhere, but I will NEVER bolt those slats back on. If I sell this plane and someone wants the slats, I will ship them to them and they can put them on as they wish. I would never send anyone new off in this plane with slats on for a first flight if they had never flow them before. Way too many nose gears and props bent for no reason. Why learn to land a total different animal to shorten 20 ft if you are not in high competition. Yes, you can get used to the slats and hanging on the prop flying on the edge on a regular basis for competition, and bouncing off the runway. Not what I am looking for.
I personally like to have fun without stress. Me, I can stand to add an extra 20 -25 ft in and out roll to have a Cessna type handling mushy landing on spot every time.
If you went to the VG's and had a feel you needed more excitement in your life you can always bolt the slats back on. I know a person with a Z-750 who did that one time. I asked him how he liked it, his answer was it was back to the normal slat performance. "Never again" He found someone building to sell his slats to.
Now my disclaimer: Zenith builds a great kit airplane. I have helped a little on a 750 and an 801 build. I am totally comfortable with the structure and design of my 801, What an exciting aircraft to fly. The 701 is the Sky Jeep. My 801 is the Sky Suburban, actually 4 inches wider than my Cherokee 235.
Yes the slats are a great invention and allow tremendous lift at low speed to a point. My self, I can not justify that little bit extra lift with the on/off slat over the VG's vs the smooth mushy stall safety of the VS's for about a 20ft roll difference. Just me
Just my opinion, but this is a cheap, safe, and easily reversible experiment. I highly advise trying it. Most likely the easiest, least expensive modification you can make that will make this much positive result unless you are in regular competition. Your plane will look weird for a month or two, then you will get over it. I have not found CG to feel any different, but the low speed drag feel is much less to me and I can keep the nose lower.
Good points on several issues, though like most, I want the slats for their performance in the real world, competition is the furthest thing from my mind. It doesn't land like a Cessna with my slats, but, just like I reaped the rewards from learning to land my tailwheel aircraft, with the possibility of ground loops, and damage like you describe in landing a Zenith with slats, the rewards far, far, exceed the risk and the downside of limiting myself to just landing like a "normal" aircraft.
Case in point, last weekend we had several fly into a 800 ft backcountry mountain strip we have under construction in the Sierras, and we had two limited to circling overhead because they did not have the sink rate and STOL to clear trees at one end. Who landed? Carbon Cub and a Zenith 750. You can see the Carbon cub coming in a little hot threading the trees, he has several lifetimes of experience in backcountry flying and short strips.
The reward of being able to fully use your experience and slats? No competition trophy, just sitting on the cabin porch high in the Sierras enjoying your morning coffee, wondering what the golden trout are biting on, and maybe listening to your buddies circling overhead whining they can't clear the trees and land :) (soon to be 1,800 ft for "normal" aircraft)
Ken,
I have looked at retractable slats for a while now. At one time you could buy a Zenith 701 with the Pegazair wing with retractable slats. They are rare now and I tried to by a set 6 months ago but the wanted too much for me.
I would love to see a retractable slat retrofit for the plane.
Best of both worlds.
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