Q1. What two stabilizers are found on the empennage?
A1. The vertical stabilizer, or fin, and the horizontal stabilizer, or tailplane, are on the empennage.
Q1. What axial movement does the vertical stabilizer or fin reduce?
A1. The vertical stabilizer reduces unwanted roll and unwanted yaw.
Q1. Where is the rudder located?
A1. The rudder is hinged to the trailing edge of the vertical stabilizer of fin.
Q1. Where is the elevator control surface located?
A1. The elevator control surface is located on the trailing edge of the horizontal stabilizer.
Q2. Which two moveable control surfaces are located in the empennage?
A2. The rudder and the elevator are found in the empennage.
Q2. What axial movement does the horizontal stabilizer or tailplane reduce?
A2. The horizontal stabilizer reduces unwanted roll and unwanted pitch.
Q2. What is the rudder used for?
A2. To produce controlled yaw by rotating the aircraft about its vertical (yaw) axis.
Q2. What axial movement does the elevator control?
A2. The elevator controls pitch around the aircraft’s lateral axis.
Q3. What axial movements do the elevator and the rudder produce?
A3. The rudder changes yaw around the vertical axis and the elevator changes pitch around the lateral axis.
Q3. How do stabilizers reduce unwanted axial movements?
A3. Air moving past the flat stabilizer surfaces tends to resist any change of motion.
Q3. What controls the rudder?
A3. A set of pedals in the cockpit.
Q3. How does the pilot operate the elevator?
A3. The pilot pushes on the control column to descend and pulls back to climb.