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Thread: Measuring Cable Tension

  1. #1

    Join Date
    Nov 2016
    Posts
    6

    Measuring Cable Tension

    I'm looking for a more precise way to measure cable tension. I have access to a tech counselor's spring dial gauge but the results are not very precise due to several things. My question is this;
    Has anyone out there made an electronic device to do this? I'm thinking of guitar tuners (they don't seem to work at all however at the low frequency I'm needing). I am trying to think of someone who plays bass fiddle to find out what they use to tune with but so far have no leads.

  2. #2
    Byron J. Covey
    Guest
    I just adjusted the aileron cable tension in my airplane, and I used the traditional spring dial gauge. The final adjustment was made to improve the control feel, within a range of acceptable values. The gauge can be checked by hanging a weight with a cable identical to that to be measured, and measuring the tension.

    Am I missing something?


    BJC

  3. #3

    Join Date
    Nov 2016
    Posts
    6
    I have a very light airframe and need to set the cable tension very low. The spring dial gauge I have access to is just not designed to measure much below about 20 lbs. Below that the results are inconsistent to say the least mainly because of the internal friction of the gauge (stickiness, etc.). The idea about an electronic "tuner" approach to accomplish the same thing seemed like a natural avenue to explore and could open up a much more accurate and precise way to measure cable tension. I was hoping someone out there had come up with the same idea and I could leverage from what they found out or developed.

  4. #4
    Cable tension measurements, especially for low tension values such as the 20-pound range you are aiming for, are at best an approximation. If you adjust the tension at one ambient temperature, it will change at other temperatures due to the thermal expansion of the different materials being used (for instance, an aluminum airframe and steel or stainless steel control cables)--that's just the nature of the beast. There are also lots of other variables that affect it.

    IMHO, investing a lot of energy in coming up with an electronic gizmo such as you describe, while it would be a fun exercise, would not gain you much. My suggestion (after building many EABs over the last 45 years) is to run your cables through the airframe, leaving one end loose on each cable; then hang a 20-pound weight on the end of each cable and get a subjective feel for the tension by deflecting the cable using your thumb and a couple of fingers. Then remove the weight and do the final adjustment until you get about that same subjective feel.

    I just completed the restoration of a 1946 Cessna 140. The "official" rigging procedure (although in 1946 there wasn't much official information) says to adjust the cables to 30 pounds tension; however, everybody knows that if you do, the controls will have too much friction, so owners typically back off the tensions just enough to reduce the friction, using the technique I described to get a subjective feel for the resulting tension.

    I suspect the airplane you are building is an ultralight-type (or maybe a slightly heavier EAB); experience has shown that the control cable tensions for such airplanes are typically not that critical, as long as you've taken the "slop" out of the cables and applied a little tension beyond that.

    Hope this helps!

  5. #5

    Join Date
    Nov 2016
    Posts
    6
    Michael,
    Yes, that helps. Good advice from some extensive experience. I'll move on to put my energy into some other part of the build.
    Thanks,
    John

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