
.
Mounting The Fuselage Servos
178.
Locate the die-cut plywood part FSM (fuselage servo mount). Mount your throttle,
elevator, and rudder servos in FSM using the screws, washers, and rubber
grommets that came with your radio system. Be sure to orient the servos in FSM
as shown in the Fuselage Top View.
CAUTION: The rubber grommets act as shock absorbers and prevent engine
vibration from damaging the electronics in the servos. Do not over tighten the
servo mounting screws to the point where they compress the rubber grommets
so far that the grommets loose all shock absorbing ability. Tighten the screws just
enough to make contact with the grommets and keep the servos in place.
179.
Set FSM in place inside the fuselage, on the "shelf" provided by the fuselage doublers. Slide FSM fore or aft until its front
edge is 1-7/8" behind former F2. (Do not locate FSM further aft unless you are using an abnormally heavy engine!) Flow
Medium CA glue into the joints between the edges of FSM and the fuselage sides. Be careful to not get any glue on the
servos or servo wires.
Nose Gear Control
180.
Locate the plastic bag containing four complete Pushrod Connectors.
(NOTE: A Pushrod Connector consists of a brass connector body, a 4-40 set
screw, and a nylon retainer - see drawing).
Open the bag and assemble one Pushrod Connector in the innermost hole on the
left side of the Rudder servo control arm. Assemble another Pushrod Connector
in the outermost hole of the nose gear Steering Arm (notice on the plan that this
connector goes on upside down).
181.
Locate one piece of Straight Music Wire 1/16" dia. x18" long to make the nose
gear pushrod. Use the cutting jaws of a needle nose pliers to cut the piece to 14-
1/2" long. Put a slight bend in one end of the wire, matching the angle on the plan
at the rudder servo.
182.
Locate one piece of Small Dia. Nylon Pushrod Tubing (1/8" O.D. x12" long). Use
a sharp modeling knife to cut the piece to 11-1/4" long.
183.
Slide the music wire inside the nylon pushrod tubing. Then insert the pushrod
assembly into the fuselage from the rudder servo area, through the nose section
of the model, under the tank floor, and out the hole in the bottom left corner of the
firewall, to the steering arm. Insert the front end of the wire into the pushrod
connector on the steering arm. Insert the angled end of the wire into the pushrod
connector on the rudder servo. Point the nose wheel straight ahead, check that
the rudder servo is in neutral position, and then tighten the set screws in both
pushrod connectors.
184.
Adjust the position of the nylon pushrod tubing on the music wire until only about
1/16" of tubing is sticking out past the front of the firewall. Use Slow CA to glue
the nylon pushrod tubing permanently in the notch in the left side of former F2.
185.
Temporarily plug the rudder servo into the receiver and test the operation of the
nose gear pushrod. If you sense any binding in the nose gear movement, find the
cause and fix it now. With full right movement of the transmitter’s rudder control
stick, the nose wheel should pivot right approximately the amount shown here.
The same amount for left.
NOTE: The exact amount of maximum nose wheel travel is not as critical as the other flight control surfaces will be. A
good rule of thumb, especially for new pilots, is that less travel is better than more! You do not need any more than 10o-
15o of travel each way! Too much travel can cause over controlling on the takeoff and landing roll, often leading to model
damage! If you put the pushrod connectors in the outermost hole of the steering arm and the innermost hole of the servo,
as instructed above, you should end up with about the correct amount of travel.
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