Castor
I like your approach.
I'm thinking of things that might arise that haven't been tested yet. Not to be negative, just to be thorough.
I'm wondering if it is possible to have the nose wheel turned a significant angle while in flight, say almost 90 degrees, by some sequence of events that I can't currently imagine.
Then, with the wheel turned 90 degrees, is there sufficient castor to make the wheel straighten out at touch-down without any other ill effects?
I could foresee the possibility of skidding the tire, or rolling the tire off the rim, or overloading the strut, if it touched down while turned 90 degrees. Generally castoring nose wheels have substantially more "trail". Or perhaps there is enough here?
I can only speculate how that could happen though, maybe. Maybe very high speed flight? Note that the aerodynamic center on the tire is about 25% of the diameter back from the leading edge, while the pivot is at 50% of the diameter. So it would be pitch unstable, and at some very large airspeed, it would diverge to 90-degree turn.
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Steve Smith
Aeronautical Engineer
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