Ray, perhaps I might answer your questions in reverse order ?
Also, can you explain your abbreviations, please ?
My apologies .. I really should think more about trying to match acronyms to the audience at hand. A bit of a glossary follows, with a few more reasonably important terms thrown in –
AFM - Approved Flight Manual
CG - centre of gravity
Design Standard - Code specifying the minimum requirements for an aircraft design eg FAR 23
GAMA - General Aviation Manufacturers Association
GW - gross weight
ICAO - International Civil Aviation Organisation
NAA - National Aviation Authority eg FAA, CASA
OEM - Original Equipment Manufacturer – important as this entity holds all the proprietary information for a design (and, generally, protects its rights in such data with vigour)
POH - Pilots Operating Handbook – the usual AFM format for light aircraft.
TC - Type Certificate – attests that a design complies with the relevant Design Standards
TCDS - Type Certificate Data Sheets – subordinate document to the TC with lots of useful (ie required) information. A typical example is
rgl.faa.gov/Regulatory_and_Guidance_Libr...FILE/3A12_Rev_84.pdf
WCA - Weight Control Authority – maintenance authority for weight control matters
WCO - Weight Control Officer (see CAO 100.28
www.legislation.gov.au/Details/F2013C00881/Download ) – WCA holder
A few comments to help you see where stuff fits in the scheme of things…
When an OEM decides to design and build a new plane, their design group management gets together with the relevant NAA airworthiness certification folks and, after a lot of talk, agree on a Design Standard for the activity. As the Standards keep changing, it is conventional to “freeze” the requirements at a particular revision status so that the goalposts don’t move through the exercise.
After a lot of dollars and effort by the OEM, both parties agree that the design meets the Design Standard and the NAA issues a TC for the design. This document has a variety of subordinate documents, including the TCDS and AFM/POH. After a few more hoops have been jumped through, the OEM can start building and selling the aircraft.
Each aircraft, when registered, has a Certificate of Airworthiness which basically certifies that the specific aircraft complies with the Type Design as approved via the TC and any other local NAA requirements.
So far as the POH is concerned, ICAO issued a recommendation at Doc 9516 (I’m sure there will be a non-ICAO source link on the net somewhere but I can’t find any just now) for light aircraft POH documentation. This is essentially similar to the equivalent GAMA document.
GAMA, which numbers as members the major GA OEMs, issued a POH specification (
www.gama.aero/files/gama_specification_1...6_pdf_498ca05388.pdf), originally in the mid-70s, which is the style you see in your local flying school/club aircraft (unless, like most of us old blokes, you prefer ancient aeroplanes). You may hear references to a “GAMA format POH” .. this is where that expression originates. A typical example can be found at
www.gaceflyingclub.com/Member%20Download...ual%20Searchable.pdf
If there is no difference between the two graphs why have both ?
From the above discussion, the TC imposes a prescriptive CG envelope. This has to be specified in the POH and, for the typical GAMA Spec 1 format POH, one sees a written definition in the Limitations Section with that information repeated as the more usable graph in the Weight and Balance Section.
While the loading calculations can be done using this graph, it is a bit of a pain as one has to calculate the actual CG each time before a co-ordinate can be plotted.
The GAMA spec recommends that the calculation bits are done using the normal moment calculation and provides some moment based charts to facilitate this. More importantly, if you consider the typical longhand weight and balance calculation, you add weights, add moments .. but NEVER add CGs. It follows that you can use moment charts conveniently as the addition of weights and moments then can be done graphically. A read through the Weight and Balance Section will clarify this.
For Australian aircraft, be aware that WCOs may bypass the POH loading system altogether and prescribe something different to suit the owner’s/operator’s requirements. Typically, this will be to call up a trimsheet loading system. If this is the case,
be very wary of trying to do things your own way rather than as the WCO specifies as the trimsheet design datum typically is different to the OEM datum and it can all turn topsy very quickly if you don't know just what you are doing ... Use of a non-OEM datum is done to increase execution accuracy when using the trimsheet.
This is the long-winded answer for which Bob gave the short brief in his previous post …