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Randy(at)abros.com Guest
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Posted: Tue May 08, 2007 3:03 pm Post subject: nose wheel cocked in flight |
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Just one thing that some of you may not have experienced yet. I have on 2 occasions had the nose wheel cock a little on takeoff. It has been related to dealing with a crosswind and the nose wheel touching just before takeoff. I try to get the nose wheel off early and carry it till lift off but sometimes with a gust of wind or loss of wind the nose wheel will touch just a little and get moved off of straight. I checked the tightness of the nut and all is fine. This past weekend I mentioned it to Van and he said it has happen to him in flight. We both agreed it is annoying because if you have the rudder trimmed to fly nice and true and you end up holding left rudder in to keep from crabbing through the air. He said it happened on a long trip before to him. Anyone else. Van said they looked for a reason like the washers had some wear that may have caused a notch but they were fine. Anyone else had this happen? Randy 006
[quote][b]
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Tim Olson
Joined: 25 Jan 2007 Posts: 2872
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Posted: Tue May 08, 2007 5:35 pm Post subject: nose wheel cocked in flight |
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I'm not sure if this is the same thing, but I have photos like if you
look carefully at the 3-ship formation from the LOE trip, you can
see my nosewheel is slightly swung to the right side in flight.
It's something that's been noticed before on other -10's too.
Not sure if it's just at certain angles of attack, or power settings,
or if it's induced by rudder usage. (in that photo while flying
formation I'm sure that at times it wasn't a perfectly centered ball
while lining up for the shot)
What I don't believe is true in my case is that it affects how much
rudder I hold in flight. I think it moves around enough with the
airflow to find it's stable position. The rudder is pretty consistent
in how much I need from flight to flight.
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
do not archive
Randy DeBauw wrote:
Quote: | Just one thing that some of you may not have experienced yet. I have on
2 occasions had the nose wheel cock a little on takeoff. It has been
related to dealing with a crosswind and the nose wheel touching just
before takeoff. I try to get the nose wheel off early and carry it till
lift off but sometimes with a gust of wind or loss of wind the nose
wheel will touch just a little and get moved off of straight. I checked
the tightness of the nut and all is fine. This past weekend I mentioned
it to Van and he said it has happen to him in flight. We both agreed it
is annoying because if you have the rudder trimmed to fly nice and true
and you end up holding left rudder in to keep from crabbing through the
air. He said it happened on a long trip before to him. Anyone else.
Van said they looked for a reason like the washers had some wear that
may have caused a notch but they were fine. Anyone else had this
happen? Randy 006
*
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wvu(at)ameritel.net Guest
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Posted: Tue May 08, 2007 6:35 pm Post subject: nose wheel cocked in flight |
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I had a long 2-legged trip about a month ago where I had to hold right
rudder to center the ball on the first leg. However the 2nd leg required
left rudder. Hmmm... I scratched my head and thought a quarter-size tear in
the nose gear glass induced by the lineman using too tall of a chalk block
somehow contributed to the difference in the 2nd leg. I normally have to
hold right rudder in cruise. One other time I noticed the sound of the nose
wheel touching ground on landing was odd. It's easy enough to have a chase
verify this though.
Anh
N591VU-63hours
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ddddsp1(at)juno.com Guest
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Posted: Tue May 08, 2007 9:34 pm Post subject: nose wheel cocked in flight |
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Just a brief note to say THANKS to Randy and Cheryl tonite once we got into Portland for T Training with Mike S. this week. If you have not seeen Randy's RV 10 you need too..he did a great job building it. What is most amazing is he PAVED the way for the rest of us and had no one elses to look at for help. Randy gave us a ride then treated us to a BBQ with his new GRILL at the hanger. What a great couple to have in the RV family.
Thanks again,
DEAN 40449 [quote][b]
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Jim & Julie Wade
Joined: 25 May 2006 Posts: 34
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Posted: Wed May 09, 2007 3:03 am Post subject: Re: nose wheel cocked in flight |
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I talked to Van himself at S&F and he said he has had the same problem on occasion. I fly of a grass strip and have the problem too often. The nose wheel stays cocked in flight no matter what I do I can't straighten it in flight. I can touch and to and it will straighten up. When it is cocked I have to hold a lot of rudder to center the ball. I have taken mine apart and can not work out why. Van says he can't either. If someone comes up with the answer please let us know!!!!
Jim
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jesse(at)saintaviation.co Guest
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Posted: Wed May 09, 2007 5:09 am Post subject: nose wheel cocked in flight |
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I don't know if this has happened to us or not because we have rudder trim.
With the trim (and no indicator except the ball), it is hard to tell if the
nose wheel is cocked to one side. I imagine this creates a great amount of
drag. The only thing I can suggest is to relieve a little of the tension on
the pivot so it doesn't take as much force to turn the nose wheel, while not
making it too loose. I can say that they loosen up from use from the
initial setting (26 lbs at the axle), but I imagine they don't loosen up too
much after that first adjustment. If you leave it too loose, then you get a
shimmy on landing - big time. If you have it too tight, it won't straighten
up in flight. Unfortunately, there is a lot of pressure adjustment when
just turning one flat on the nut, so there is a limited amount of fine
tuning possible.
Jesse Saint
Saint Aviation, Inc.
jesse(at)saintaviation.com
www.saintaviation.com
Cell: 352-427-0285
Fax: 815-377-3694
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Tim Olson
Joined: 25 Jan 2007 Posts: 2872
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Posted: Wed May 09, 2007 5:40 am Post subject: nose wheel cocked in flight |
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I've checked mine a couple times now. It really does need a
re-adjustment, as you mentioned, in perhaps the first 50-75 hours
to get it back into that mid-20's for breakaway torque.
But, then after a couple hundred hours it is fairly loose again...not
nearly in the 20's for breakaway torque. The problem is, as you
noted, just going one more flat gives it too much torque, so until
you either drill through a castle top and make an in-between
position, or wait for it to loosen even more, you're kind of stuck.
It's an unfortunate situation. I thought about drilling a 2nd
hole in the leg, but I cringe at weakening that area more than
necessary. I do have a shimmy though, briefily, just a couple
kts on either side of 35, so one of these days I'm going to have
to get it adjusted again.
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
do not archive
Jesse Saint wrote:
Quote: |
I don't know if this has happened to us or not because we have rudder trim.
With the trim (and no indicator except the ball), it is hard to tell if the
nose wheel is cocked to one side. I imagine this creates a great amount of
drag. The only thing I can suggest is to relieve a little of the tension on
the pivot so it doesn't take as much force to turn the nose wheel, while not
making it too loose. I can say that they loosen up from use from the
initial setting (26 lbs at the axle), but I imagine they don't loosen up too
much after that first adjustment. If you leave it too loose, then you get a
shimmy on landing - big time. If you have it too tight, it won't straighten
up in flight. Unfortunately, there is a lot of pressure adjustment when
just turning one flat on the nut, so there is a limited amount of fine
tuning possible.
Jesse Saint
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tgesele(at)optonline.net Guest
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Posted: Wed May 09, 2007 7:25 am Post subject: nose wheel cocked in flight |
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Based on a situation I ran into while getting my BFR in a -6A C I would not recommend loosening the nosewheel E The instructor (being in one of his more sadistic moods) C wanted to see how I handled a cross wind landing near the limits of the plane E In that instance C I needed to use full rudder and the nosewheel ended up cocking 90 deg to the runway 6nbsp;and C when the nosewheel set down C it sounded and felt 6nbsp;like the plane was going to shake apart E It did straighten after skipping a few times but we were lucky there was no damage and the nosegear didn 7t collapse E
6nbsp;
BTW C I believe this was not long after the plane 7s annual so it 7s unlikely the torque on the nosewheel was out of specs E E E
6nbsp;
Just something to keep in mind E
6nbsp;
Tom Gesele 3473 Finishing
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Randy(at)abros.com Guest
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Posted: Wed May 09, 2007 8:13 am Post subject: nose wheel cocked in flight |
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I know that my nose wheel wasn’t too tight as I has expected. It is odd that there isn’t enough wheel pant length to act on the wind hitting the side of the wheel pant to align it. Randy
From: owner-rv10-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-rv10-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of tgesele(at)optonline.net
Sent: Wednesday, May 09, 2007 8:24 AM
To: rv10-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: RE: Re: nose wheel cocked in flight
Based on a situation I ran into while getting my BFR in a -6A, I would not recommend loosening the nosewheel. The instructor (being in one of his more sadistic moods), wanted to see how I handled a cross wind landing near the limits of the plane. In that instance, I needed to use full rudder and the nosewheel ended up cocking 90 deg to the runway and, when the nosewheel set down, it sounded and felt like the plane was going to shake apart. It did straighten after skipping a few times but we were lucky there was no damage and the nosegear didn't collapse.
BTW, I believe this was not long after the plane's annual so it's unlikely the torque on the nosewheel was out of specs...
Just something to keep in mind.
Tom Gesele #473 Finishing
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dlm46007(at)cox.net Guest
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Posted: Wed May 09, 2007 9:39 am Post subject: nose wheel cocked in flight |
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And we know how to fix that. I believe the Cherokee 6 has a fin aft of the pant.
From: owner-rv10-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-rv10-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Randy DeBauw
Sent: Wednesday, May 09, 2007 9:11 AM
To: rv10-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: RE: RE: Re: nose wheel cocked in flight
I know that my nose wheel wasn’t too tight as I has expected. It is odd that there isn’t enough wheel pant length to act on the wind hitting the side of the wheel pant to align it. Randy
From: owner-rv10-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-rv10-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of tgesele(at)optonline.net
Sent: Wednesday, May 09, 2007 8:24 AM
To: rv10-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: RE: Re: nose wheel cocked in flight
Based on a situation I ran into while getting my BFR in a -6A, I would not recommend loosening the nosewheel. The instructor (being in one of his more sadistic moods), wanted to see how I handled a cross wind landing near the limits of the plane. In that instance, I needed to use full rudder and the nosewheel ended up cocking 90 deg to the runway and, when the nosewheel set down, it sounded and felt like the plane was going to shake apart. It did straighten after skipping a few times but we were lucky there was no damage and the nosegear didn't collapse.
BTW, I believe this was not long after the plane's annual so it's unlikely the torque on the nosewheel was out of specs...
Just something to keep in mind.
Tom Gesele #473 Finishing
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rleffler
Joined: 05 Nov 2006 Posts: 680
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Posted: Wed May 09, 2007 10:18 am Post subject: nose wheel cocked in flight |
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Quote: |
From: "David McNeill" <dlm46007(at)cox.net>
Date: 2007/05/09 Wed PM 12:34:54 EST
To: <rv10-list(at)matronics.com>
Subject: RE: RE: Re: nose wheel cocked in flight
And we know how to fix that. I believe the Cherokee 6 has a fin aft of the
pant.
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All the Cherokees have the fin.
They put 8 quarts of oil in at the annual and I've been cleaning that darn thing after every flight for the last month. I'll be glad when it drops below quarts and I don't have to clean the bottom side as much.
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_________________ Bob Leffler
N410BL - Phase I
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pitts_pilot(at)bellsouth. Guest
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flywrights(at)yahoo.com Guest
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Posted: Fri May 18, 2007 10:46 am Post subject: nose wheel cocked in flight |
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Here's an older topic, but I'm just now getting to it after being on hiatus:
When I installed my nosewheel, I torqued it, then rotated it back and forth many times, retorqued it, rotated it, retorqued it, etc. until I had a stable torque setting. I took a number of iterations before the wheel settled into it's breakout force. I went ahead and tightened one more flat of the nut to reach the cotter pin hole instead of loosening. I figured it would loosen up a little more in taxi/flight testing. My final breakout with cotter pin aligned was right at 30#.
Rob Wright
#392
Canopy trimming
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Tim Olson
Joined: 25 Jan 2007 Posts: 2872
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Posted: Fri May 18, 2007 11:09 am Post subject: nose wheel cocked in flight |
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Yup. And you'll probably find that after 50 hours or whatever
that you're down to 10# or something much lower. It changes
quite a bit. I wouldn't recommend cranking it another flat
right now just to prepare....just means you'll want to re-check
it about the time you're ending your flyoff, or perhaps a bit
longer down the road.
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
do not archive
Robert Wright wrote:
Quote: | Here's an older topic, but I'm just now getting to it after being on hiatus:
When I installed my nosewheel, I torqued it, then rotated it back and
forth many times, retorqued it, rotated it, retorqued it, etc. until I
had a stable torque setting. I took a number of iterations before the
wheel settled into it's breakout force. I went ahead and tightened one
more flat of the nut to reach the cotter pin hole instead of loosening.
I figured it would loosen up a little more in taxi/flight testing. My
final breakout with cotter pin aligned was right at 30#.
Rob Wright
#392
Canopy trimming
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Rick S.
Joined: 12 Feb 2006 Posts: 347 Location: Las Vegas
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