Sorry don't have any pictures of the servo install but when I built a F1 I put in the box section where the joy stick is and attached it to the base of the joy stick.Greetings: I am in the process of populating the "basement" of my Rocket.
I searched for ideas / photos of autopilot roll sevo installs and didn't find what I was looking for.
Thanks for your time,
Ken
I'm in the middle of doing this right now now, and planning on doing this approach.-under floor to the aileron pushrod attach point; aft of the spar

My thanks to all that replied! I'm glad I asked. R, KenI’m planning to install a roll servo in my Rocket this winter. By the looks of it, it should fit nicely next to the pilot’s control stick. I’ll probably mount the bracket using hi-lok fasteners through the bottom of the fuselage. I have considered just gluing the bracket to the floor with 3M 2216, but with such a critical component, I’d sleep better at night knowing that there are some mechanical fasteners in place.
Edited…. I see now that my label is wrong. It should say ‘extra wire for ROLL servo.’ I also have problems distinguishing left from right.
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What do you mean by validated, that the uneven force is validated, or that many planes have worked in this configuration? I can't imagine the push tube force is too uneven. On our RV7 it was in the wing, and also against the push tubes. Maybe the geometry is better in the wing as there is less rotation.Attachment at the aileron push tube location would require uneven servo force depending on actuation direction. This approach since been validated.
Validation means exactly that. The implementation works as intended.What do you mean by validated, that the uneven force is validated, or that many planes have worked in this configuration? I can't imagine the push tube force is too uneven. On our RV7 it was in the wing, and also against the push tubes. Maybe the geometry is better in the wing as there is less rotation.


Minor detail, best practice.
When installing a cantilevered single shear bolt, put the threads on the outer end, not in the arm or structure. If forced to place the threads at the base of the cantilever, use a slightly longer bolt so the shank extends all the way through the arm enough that the root thread is above the surface, then take up the excess with as many as three washers.
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No comment about (blind) rivets being subjected to tensile loads?
And I’m convinced your approach (and Scott Hersha and others) bests other’s in the majority of applications. Was gonna go the shared P-P tube attachment point originally. Still an elegant solution in the right application but there would have been a lot of related arranging/configuring/etc. of potential interference between pending footwells, vent SCAT, pending harness runs etc. not to mention the aforementioned uneven force-balance concern; though the latter turned out to be non-issue.This is the thread/post referred to.
RV-4 Autopilot
I am building a new panel and would like to include pitch and roll autopilot from Garmin. I've done some searching and although pitch servo mount and brackets are available for the 4 through Vans, nothing I can find for the roll mode. Any 4 drivers out there using a pitch and roll autopilot...vansairforce.net
Minor detail, best practice.
When installing a cantilevered single shear bolt, put the threads on the outer end, not in the arm or structure. If forced to place the threads at the base of the cantilever, use a slightly longer bolt so the shank extends all the way through the arm enough that the root thread is above the surface, then take up the excess with as many as three washers.
View attachment 101485
View attachment 101483