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Encyclopedia > Directional gyro

The heading indicator (or HI) is an instrument used in an aircraft to inform the pilot of his heading. It is sometimes referred to by its older name, the directional gyro, or (UK usage) direction indicator or DI. The primary means of establishing heading in most small aircraft is the magnetic compass, but that suffers from errors created by the 'dip' or downward slope of the earth's magnetic field. Dip error causes the magnetic compass to read incorrectly whenever the aircraft is in a bank, or during acceleration, making it difficult to use in any flight condition other than perfectly straight and level. To remedy this, the pilot will typically maneuver the airplane with reference to the heading indicator, as the gyroscopic heading indicator is unaffected by dip and acceleration errors. The pilot will periodically reset the HI to the heading shown on the magnetic compass. Most aircraft are equipped with a standard set of flight instruments which give the pilot information about the aircrafts attitude, airspeed, and altitude. ... An aircraft is any machine capable of atmospheric flight. ... Aviators are people who fly aircraft either for pleasure or for a job. ... This article is about the navigational instrument. ...


The HI works using a gyroscope to establish an inertial platform, which will remain fixed in space. The HI is arranged so that only the horizontal axis is used to drive the display, which consists of a circular compass card calibrated in degrees. The gyroscope is spun either electrically, or using air from a vacuum pump (sometimes a pressure pump in high alititude aircraft) driven from the aircraft's engine. Because the earth rotates (15° per hour), and because of small accumulated errors caused by friction, the HI will drift over time, and must be reset from the compass periodically. Normal procedure is to reset the heading indicator once each fifteen minutes of flight. Failure to do this is a common source of navigation errors among beginner pilots. Acrobatic bicycle is possible thanks to gyroscopic effects A gyroscope is a device which demonstrates the principle of conservation of angular momentum, in physics this is also known as gyroscopic inertia or rigidity in space. ... An inertial navigation system measures the position and altitude of a vehicle by measuring the accelerations and rotations applied to the systems inertial frame. ... A vacuum pump is a pump that removes gas to leave behind a partial vacuum (of varying quality, depending on the pump). ... An engine is something that produces some effect from a given input. ...


Some more expensive heading indicators are 'slaved' to a sensor (called a 'flux gate'). The flux gate continuously senses the earth's magnetic field, and a servo mechanism constantly corrects the heading indicator. These 'slaved gyros' reduce pilot workload by eliminating the need to be manually reset every fifteen minutes.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Systems Operation (4182 words)
In the pitch axis, the relationship of gyro displacement to swash plate tilt (with respect to the mast) is approximately 1.5 to 1.
The fore and aft airspeed command output of the decoder is an ac voltage with a phase characteristic of the direction commanded and a magnitude proportional to the speed commanded.
When the magnitude of the combined gyro and follow-up inputs equals the magnitude of the command input the servo loop is nulled with the controls positioned to cause the drone to fly at the commanded airspeed.
Gyroscopic Systems and Instruments (3458 words)
Thus, the gyros in aircraft instruments are constructed of heavy materials and designed to spin rapidly (approximately 15,000 rpm for the attitude indicator and 10,000 rpm for the heading indicator).
Unavoidable precession is caused by aircraft maneuvering and by the internal friction of attitude and directional gyros.
This is called "tumbling" or "spilling" the gyro and should be avoided because it damages bearings and renders the instrument useless until the gyro is erected again.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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