Gray Ghost prototype fighter jet, showing its distinctive wide V-tail and ruddervators Ruddervators are the control surfaces on an airplane with a V-tail configuration. They are located at the trailing edge of each of the two
airfoils making up the tail of the plane. The first use of ruddervators may have been on the
Coandă-1910's X-tail, although there is no proof that the aircraft ever flew. The later
Coandă-1911 flew with ruddervators on its X-tail. Later
Polish engineer
Jerzy Rudlicki designed the first practical ruddervators in 1930, tested on a modified
Hanriot HD.28 trainer in 1931. The name is a
portmanteau of "rudder" and "elevator." In a conventional aircraft tail configuration, the rudder provides
yaw (horizontal) control and the elevator provides
pitch (vertical) control. Ruddervators provide the same control effect as conventional control surfaces, but through a more complex control system that actuates the control surfaces in unison. Yaw moving the nose to the left is produced on an upright V tail by moving the pedals left which deflects the left-hand ruddervator down and left and the right-hand ruddervator up and left. The opposite produces yaw to the right. Pitch nose up is produced by moving the control column or stick back which deflects the left-hand ruddervator up and right and the right-hand ruddervator up and left. Pitch nose down is produced by moving the control column or stick forward which induces the opposite ruddervator movements. ==See also==