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Active control of landing light aim
Has anybody made a small circuit to control the aim of the landing light?
First step would be a servo with a manual dial adjustment. Second step would be some brains to interact with a AOA sensor to keep the light aimed in the direction of flight. Third and hardest step would be automatic light yaw control for crabbing and forward slips. |
Makes my head hurt.
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Will need a weight on wheels sensor as well, so it doesn't loose it's marbles once on the ground and slowing.
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Why would you want this?
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Whether or not this is something that’s necessary is another subject... Skylor |
Really simple
I think it would be really simple to make the lights point where the pilot is looking. That would be cool and I think very easy to do.
Says the guy spending 5+ years on a “simple” bone stock RV9A |
What you want is head tracking control of the landing light. Something that tracks your eye movements and relays that to the landing light gimbal.
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And just imagine all the new failure modes this will introduce. You've got to mitigate them or risk having it go dark just when you're about to flare or about to turn into the ramp to your hangar.
Dave |
I’d be worried about Spacial D with moving lights at night or in clouds.
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Complexity is the enemy of reliability.
The standard GE4509 incandescent landing light was a wonderfully reliable, simple product. It worked nearly 100% of the times you didn't need it, and nearly 0% of the times when you did need it! :-) Enter the LED landing light... The world of lighting has changed so very much as a result. Rather than go with steerable lights, go with multiple lights. One in each wingtip in "landing light" configuration. If on tail dragger gear, aim one higher for better visibility on approach and aim one lower for better visibility in the flair. Then install another light in the engine cowl or similar location with a diffuser lens on it to act as your taxi light. The "spill" on modern LED wide-angle lenses is pretty fantastic. I have wingtip LED landing lights (Baja Squadron Pro, 4700lumens per lamp). They are aimed as described above and I'm very pleased with the results. I'm not so happy with the relatively small amount of "spill" from these fairly concentrated spot beams. Given they are aimed to converge at a point some distance ahead of the aircraft, there tends to be an area directly in front of the aircraft where illumination could be better. That's where a FlyLEDS single lamp module with a "flood" diffuser on it comes in handy. Mounted in the cowl, it has the capacity to provide a wide, evenly lit area directly in front of the airplane, making taxi operations considerably easier on that proverbial dark and stormy night. |
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