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Nose Wheel

 
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FamilyGage(at)AOL.COM
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PostPosted: Sat May 29, 2010 5:52 pm    Post subject: Nose Wheel Reply with quote

Gentlemen:

I know that this has been discussed many times on our site. Would like to present the nose wheel shimmy, just in case someone has had additional experience.
I fly a 2005 Esquil, that is Lightning cowl forward and all three gear legs.
There is no nose wheel shimmy at take off, but often becomes rather severe on landing after I allow the weight off of the main gear onto the nose wheel. By this time she is going rather slow, about 35-40 mph. The shaking will stop at about 15-20 mph. And does not recur during taxi operations. What is interesting is that even when the plane is not moving, should I take the prop and put lateral forces i.e., right and left, there is a clanking noise as if the tire is rubbing against the wheel pant.
I have checked out the nose wheel installation, changed tire pressures, balanced all tires, changed tire brands; however, the symptom remains unchanged.
I am out of ideas. Have learned to live with the shimmy, but this seems to be a mechanical mystery. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Ray Gage
83TW Spruce Creek Florida
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EAFerguson(at)AOL.COM
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PostPosted: Mon May 31, 2010 4:42 am    Post subject: Nose Wheel Reply with quote

In a message dated 5/29/2010 9:52:42 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, FamilyGage(at)AOL.COM writes:
Quote:

I know that this has been discussed many times on our site. Would like to present the nose wheel shimmy, just in case someone has had additional experience.
I fly a 2005 Esquil, that is Lightning cowl forward and all three gear legs.
There is no nose wheel shimmy at take off, but often becomes rather severe on landing after I allow the weight off of the main gear onto the nose wheel. By this time she is going rather slow, about 35-40 mph.  The shaking will stop at about 15-20 mph. And does not recur during taxi operations. What is interesting is that even when the plane is not moving, should I take the prop and put lateral forces i.e., right and left, there is a clanking noise as if the tire is rubbing against the wheel pant.
I have checked out the nose wheel installation, changed tire pressures, balanced all tires, changed tire brands; however, the symptom remains unchanged.
I am out of ideas. Have learned to live with the shimmy, but this seems to be a mechanical mystery. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Ray Gage
83TW Spruce Creek Florida


Ray,

This is a common problem with aircraft that have free swiveling nose wheels and may have nothing to do with tire balance. Check the nylon block for tightness. If the joint is too loose the wheel shimmies. We don't have an adjustment, so the only solution would be to replace parts, i.e. the nylon blocks.

On Grumman singles, which do have adjustable swivels, a force of 10 lbs to turn the wheel is standard. Less than that will produce shimmy. Since our Lightings and Esquals weight about half a Grumman, I'd look for less than 10 lbs.

Good luck fixing it.

Earl Ferguson
Atlanta
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FamilyGage(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Mon May 31, 2010 12:39 pm    Post subject: Nose Wheel Reply with quote

Earl,
Thank you. Will check out the tension on the block, and see if it needs replacement.
Ray Gage

In a message dated 5/31/2010 8:42:35 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, EAFerguson(at)AOL.COM writes:
Quote:
In a message dated 5/29/2010 9:52:42 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, FamilyGage(at)AOL.COM writes:
Quote:

I know that this has been discussed many times on our site. Would like to present the nose wheel shimmy, just in case someone has had additional experience.
I fly a 2005 Esquil, that is Lightning cowl forward and all three gear legs.
There is no nose wheel shimmy at take off, but often becomes rather severe on landing after I allow the weight off of the main gear onto the nose wheel. By this time she is going rather slow, about 35-40 mph. The shaking will stop at about 15-20 mph. And does not recur during taxi operations. What is interesting is that even when the plane is not moving, should I take the prop and put lateral forces i.e., right and left, there is a clanking noise as if the tire is rubbing against the wheel pant.
I have checked out the nose wheel installation, changed tire pressures, balanced all tires, changed tire brands; however, the symptom remains unchanged.
I am out of ideas. Have learned to live with the shimmy, but this seems to be a mechanical mystery. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Ray Gage
83TW Spruce Creek Florida


Ray,

This is a common problem with aircraft that have free swiveling nose wheels and may have nothing to do with tire balance. Check the nylon block for tightness. If the joint is too loose the wheel shimmies. We don't have an adjustment, so the only solution would be to replace parts, i.e. the nylon blocks.

On Grumman singles, which do have adjustable swivels, a force of 10 lbs to turn the wheel is standard. Less than that will produce shimmy. Since our Lightings and Esquals weight about half a Grumman, I'd look for less than 10 lbs.

Good luck fixing it.

Earl Ferguson
Atlanta
Quote:


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====================================
tp://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/contribution
====================================


[quote][b]


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Bill Strahan



Joined: 20 Aug 2008
Posts: 145

PostPosted: Mon May 31, 2010 1:00 pm    Post subject: Re: Nose Wheel Reply with quote

Now this has me wondering if my shimmy is from the mains or the nose. I have a Grumman Traveller and I've experienced the nosewheel shimmy when I didn't have the tension high enough, as described previously.

Any way to tell which it is, other than have someone observe the plane on landing and try to see where it's coming from?

Bill


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n45bm(at)yahoo.com
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PostPosted: Mon May 31, 2010 2:09 pm    Post subject: Nose Wheel Reply with quote

Ray,
New guy here, have yet to receive my kits, but hope to contribute to this group. I remember seeing something on one of the newsletters about just that problem. Seems that one solution is to drill out the nylon bearing pieces to a larger diameter and insert brass oil lite type bushings sized for the nose wheel fork that the nose gear pivots on. Can't remember which issue I saw that on, but I did see it. My guess, if it's the nose wheel shimmying is that there may be some play in those nylon blocks. My two cents; worth.
Bernardo Melendez

--- On Mon, 5/31/10, FamilyGage(at)aol.com <FamilyGage(at)aol.com> wrote:
Quote:

From: FamilyGage(at)aol.com <FamilyGage(at)aol.com>
Subject: Re: Nose Wheel
To: lightning-list(at)matronics.com
Date: Monday, May 31, 2010, 3:31 PM

Earl,
Thank you. Will check out the tension on the block, and see if it needs replacement.
Ray Gage

In a message dated 5/31/2010 8:42:35 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, EAFerguson(at)AOL.COM writes:
Quote:
In a message dated 5/29/2010 9:52:42 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, FamilyGage(at)AOL.COM writes:
Quote:

I know that this has been discussed many times on our site. Would like to present the nose wheel shimmy, just in case someone has had additional experience.
I fly a 2005 Esquil, that is Lightning cowl forward and all three gear legs.
There is no nose wheel shimmy at take off, but often becomes rather severe on landing after I allow the weight off of the main gear onto the nose wheel. By this time she is going rather slow, about 35-40 mph. The shaking will stop at about 15-20 mph. And does not recur during taxi operations. What is interesting is that even when the plane is not moving, should I take the prop and put lateral forces i.e., right and left, there is a clanking noise as if the tire is rubbing against the wheel pant.
I have checked out the nose wheel installation, changed tire pressures, balanced all tires, changed tire brands; however, the symptom remains unchanged.
I am out of ideas. Have learned to live with the shimmy, but this seems to be a mechanical mystery. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Ray Gage
83TW Spruce Creek Florida


Ray,

This is a common problem with aircraft that have free swiveling nose wheels and may have nothing to do with tire balance. Check the nylon block for tightness. If the joint is too loose the wheel shimmies. We don't have an adjustment, so the only solution would be to replace parts, i.e. the nylon blocks.

On Grumman singles, which do have adjustable swivels, a force of 10 lbs to turn the wheel is standard. Less than that will produce shimmy. Since our Lightings and Esquals weight about half a Grumman, I'd look for less than 10 lbs.

Good luck fixing it.
 
Earl Ferguson
Atlanta
Quote:
===========t href="http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Lightning-List">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Lightning-List====================================ms.matronics.com/">http://forums.matronics.com====================================tp://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/contribution===========

Quote:

[quote][b]


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