Flying the Dreamfoil B407
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Flying the Dreamfoil B407
I purchased a Bell 407 on FSEconomy and have been ferrying the aircraft down from Chicago. I'm going to be upfront about my rotor craft skills, I'm novice at best. I can taxi, take off, fly, and descend and land with some confidence. My question is how do I reduce the amount of left pedal pressure required while in cruise? If I don't have left pedal, I have to roll left at about 5 degrees to compensate. Is there trim somewhere I'm missing? Let me know if you need some extra information on power settings or whatever. Again, be nice. I'm new to these whirly-bird thingies.

Re: Flying the Dreamfoil B407
Hi Marcus,
There are a couple of things that may help you out here.
1) The faster you go, the more authority your vertical and horizontal stabilizer will have, which will reduce the requirement for left pedal input. (Queue the Jeremy Clarkson "Pppoowwweeeeerrrr")
2) Make sure you don't have your stability set to 0%. The 407 is very tough and somewhat unrealistic at 0% stability. Try setting it somewhere between 10-20% on all three axis for the best experience.
3) There is a 'Steady Cruise' option or something similar under the stability menu. You can turn this on in long cruise which will help make the aircraft more stable, but it'll keep in squirrelly in the hover. Basically the faster you're going the more artificial stability it'll give you.
Hope this helps!
There are a couple of things that may help you out here.
1) The faster you go, the more authority your vertical and horizontal stabilizer will have, which will reduce the requirement for left pedal input. (Queue the Jeremy Clarkson "Pppoowwweeeeerrrr")
2) Make sure you don't have your stability set to 0%. The 407 is very tough and somewhat unrealistic at 0% stability. Try setting it somewhere between 10-20% on all three axis for the best experience.
3) There is a 'Steady Cruise' option or something similar under the stability menu. You can turn this on in long cruise which will help make the aircraft more stable, but it'll keep in squirrelly in the hover. Basically the faster you're going the more artificial stability it'll give you.
Hope this helps!
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- Posts: 56
- Joined: Sat Dec 20, 2014 11:06 pm
- Location: New York, NY
Re: Flying the Dreamfoil B407
Hi Chris,
Are you talking about the stability in the joystick settings menu, or the stability in the 407 plugin menu?
Thanks!
Are you talking about the stability in the joystick settings menu, or the stability in the 407 plugin menu?
Thanks!
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Evan Purcell - PPL ASEL - New York, NY
PE Aircraft:
BE33 - N1546R
BE58 - N4854B
Evan Purcell - PPL ASEL - New York, NY
PE Aircraft:
BE33 - N1546R
BE58 - N4854B
Re: Flying the Dreamfoil B407
I'm fairly sure they're linked, but I use the stability settings in the 407 'wheel'. Shown here.BluesmanEP wrote:Are you talking about the stability in the joystick settings menu, or the stability in the 407 plugin menu?
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- Posts: 56
- Joined: Sat Dec 20, 2014 11:06 pm
- Location: New York, NY
Re: Flying the Dreamfoil B407
Got it, thanks!
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Evan Purcell - PPL ASEL - New York, NY
PE Aircraft:
BE33 - N1546R
BE58 - N4854B
Evan Purcell - PPL ASEL - New York, NY
PE Aircraft:
BE33 - N1546R
BE58 - N4854B
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- Posts: 982
- Joined: Fri Feb 08, 2013 5:12 pm
Re: Flying the Dreamfoil B407
Thanks for the ideas. I feel comfortable with the stability. The problem is that the aircraft will yaw right constantly at cruise if I'm level. What is a good TRQ % at cruise? It seems the lower it is the less yaw I notice. I can usually set a 67% TRQ and still cruise at or near 120 kts.

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Re: Flying the Dreamfoil B407
Someone please correct me if I'm wrong, but it shouldn't need any pedal in cruise. You start out with left pedal in the hover, then ease it out as you transition to forward flight.
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Re: Flying the Dreamfoil B407
That's what I thought. I took a screen shot to show the bank I must use to hold a heading if I'm not using left pedal.Keith Smith wrote:Someone please correct me if I'm wrong, but it shouldn't need any pedal in cruise. You start out with left pedal in the hover, then ease it out as you transition to forward flight.

Re: Flying the Dreamfoil B407
That's about what I get too. That's my only complaint with the 407 is that they've overdone translating tendency a bit. In the real world you'd need just a touch of right pedal in fast cruise like that.Marcus Becker wrote:That's what I thought. I took a screen shot to show the bank I must use to hold a heading if I'm not using left pedal.