I was never to happy with the head block being perched at the top of the main mast, with the Jesus bolt through the first hole on my N5. There was a fair bit of movement that you had to try to stop by squeezing the block onto the mast with one M3 bolt and nylock.
So, when I got my N5c, I decided after it was mainened and was flying well I would change the head block position and see how it felt. I bought some turn buckles from Midlands which are around 16mm shorter than standard, and then installed the head in the top hole. the head now mounts 16mm lower, so I had to reduce the length of the pitch rods from the arms to the swash. This was a bit of trial and error untill I felt the swash would sit at the right level for +-12deg, and with full cyclic and pitch, the swash is just away from the top bearing support, and the swash driver above it.
The results are a much tighter fitting head on the main shaft, and also the heli rolls quicker and tighter. There is still bags of room between the blades and the boom, so no fear of a boom strike.


So, when I got my N5c, I decided after it was mainened and was flying well I would change the head block position and see how it felt. I bought some turn buckles from Midlands which are around 16mm shorter than standard, and then installed the head in the top hole. the head now mounts 16mm lower, so I had to reduce the length of the pitch rods from the arms to the swash. This was a bit of trial and error untill I felt the swash would sit at the right level for +-12deg, and with full cyclic and pitch, the swash is just away from the top bearing support, and the swash driver above it.
The results are a much tighter fitting head on the main shaft, and also the heli rolls quicker and tighter. There is still bags of room between the blades and the boom, so no fear of a boom strike.



V-Bar x2

Comment