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Bent Nose Wheel Axle

 
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dons701



Joined: 22 May 2009
Posts: 80
Location: Hershey, PA

PostPosted: Wed Jul 21, 2010 8:13 pm    Post subject: Bent Nose Wheel Axle Reply with quote

Recently, a hard landing resulted in a bent nose wheel axle. I was extremely
lucky as there was evidence that the tire made very light contact with the bolts
on the underside of the fork doubler / strut tube assembly. The tire basically
sprung back down away from making permanent contact and locking up which would
have been disastrous. There are plenty of pictures out there to see what
typically happens.... :0
After talking to ZAC about upgrading this axle tubing to something like solid
bar stock, I was told that the axle from the CH750 is the same size and is a solid
update to what I had for my 701. I ordered CH750 part number 75L1-5 and new
bolts and washers.
The date on my plans is June 30 2005 with the axle tube dimension .625" x
.058" wall tubing. I checked the 701 update list and found nothing to indicate
a change was made in this axle since my drawing date.

In the end, ZAC is kindly sending me a free axle.

Does anyone know or, has anyone used this "new" axle and can tell me if it is a
solid piece of bar stock as claimed or has at least a thicker tube wall than .058
thousandths??
PS: For safety's sake, inspect your nose wheel axles. To me the width
between the wheel bearings seems narrow relative to the span of the axle
required for tire width. The bearing hub of the wheel should be wider. Or was it
designed this way to absorb impact?
Thanks for you time, Don


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PostPosted: Thu Jul 22, 2010 3:44 pm    Post subject: Bent Nose Wheel Axle Reply with quote

Sorry to hear of your bent axle experience but I had the same misfortune about a year ago which resulted in several thousand dollars damage.  I had obviously bent the nose wheel axle while doing touch and goes at a rough grass strip and when I landed on a paved runway the wheel bent further and locked into the fork.  This resulted in the nose gear collapsing, lower firewall damage, and prop strike.  Fortunately my wife had insisted  that I insure the plane so most of the damage was covered.  I sent email to Chris Heinz with pictures of the bent axle complaining of this obvious weak link in an otherwise fine piece of engineering.  He responded expressing regret at my misfortune but stating hundreds of successful landings had been made on rough terrain without incident.  Well you, I, and many others disagree.  That piece of hollow pipe with two nuts welded on the end is a sad joke designed for for the sake of 1lb at the most.  I took my bent piece of tubing to a machine shop and had them manufacture a solid steel axle with threads on each end.  So much for feedback from Zenith.  Cheers
On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 12:13 AM, dons701 <burdon1(at)comcast.net (burdon1(at)comcast.net)> wrote:
[quote] --> Zenith701801-List message posted by: "dons701" <burdon1(at)comcast.net (burdon1(at)comcast.net)>

Recently, a hard landing resulted in a bent nose wheel axle. I was extremely
lucky as there was evidence that the tire made very light contact with the bolts
on the underside of the fork doubler / strut tube assembly. The tire basically
sprung back down away from making permanent contact and locking up which would
have been disastrous. There are plenty of pictures out there to see what
typically happens.... :0
After talking to ZAC about upgrading this axle tubing to something like solid
bar stock, I was told that the axle from the CH750 is the same size and is a solid
update to what I had for my 701. I ordered CH750 part number 75L1-5 and new
bolts and washers.
The date on my plans is June 30 2005 with the axle tube dimension .625" x
.058" wall tubing. I checked the 701 update list and found nothing to indicate
a change was made in this axle since my drawing date.

In the end, ZAC is kindly sending me a free axle.

Does anyone know or, has anyone used this "new" axle and can tell me if it is a
solid piece of bar stock as claimed or has at least a thicker tube wall than .058
thousandths??
PS: For safety's sake, inspect your nose wheel axles. To me the width
between the wheel bearings seems narrow relative to the span of the axle
required for tire width. The bearing hub of the wheel should be wider. Or was it
designed this way to absorb impact?
Thanks for you time, Don

--------
Zenith 701 #76120
Jabiru 2200A #2456  67 hours
Sensenich Wood 64-PJ-36 Prop




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dons701



Joined: 22 May 2009
Posts: 80
Location: Hershey, PA

PostPosted: Thu Jul 22, 2010 9:48 pm    Post subject: Re: Bent Nose Wheel Axle Reply with quote

I have also posted this message at the Yahoo Groups to find out if anyone with a CH701 is using the "new" solid axle that was designed and is used on the heavier CH750. So far, no responses. Hopefully the UPS truck will land in my driveway Friday and I will see for myself how sturdy this new shaft is.

Another area of concern is the side flexing of the lower nose wheel fork where the axle is attached. This flexing has allowed the side wall of my tire to rub the inside of the fork if the nose wheel is not aligned with the runway, such as when needing to use the rudder till the nose sets down in a sudden crosswind. Admittedly, one should always maintain alignment but everyone knows this does not always happen. My possible solution would be to add triangular gussets to the wheel spacers that would extend upward from the spacer tubes and could attach to the two bolts currently used to join the aluminum forks as one. An additional bolt could be used midway, above the axle bolt. This would, I believe, greatly stiffen the lower fork where axial side loads are delivered.
Has anyone else experienced this ? Or has any comment on this ?
All thoughts welcome... Don


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John Bolding



Joined: 23 May 2006
Posts: 281

PostPosted: Fri Jul 23, 2010 4:34 am    Post subject: Bent Nose Wheel Axle Reply with quote

Betcha this will stir the pot some, In my never ending quest to shave #'s
from my 701 under construction I've discovered that the nose wheel fork from
a Cessna 150 will slip right on the 701 nose gear tube. Of course you have
to cut off the plate the Zenith fork bolts to.

Pros:
Complete assy , modified tube, fork, tire,wheel, axel is ALMOST 5# lighter
than the plans built pieces.
Cost (to me anyway) was half , got my stuff from Air Salvage of Dallas.
Smaller tire means less drag and more importantly less forward mass, easier
to balance a slightly heavier engine if you've refused to use a Rotax.
PROBABLY less adverse yaw too but that is a WAG at this point.
GOTTA be stronger than the bent up plates, if Cessna uses it on an airplane
several hundred pounds heavier than the 701 it outta work for us.

Cons:
You lose the "cool" factor of the tundra tire in the front. Fortunately I'm
old enough to have gotten over all that foolishness. I've several hundred
hours of beach, dirt road, cow pasture ect operation in an RV3 with 5:00x 5
tires and for me to have one on the nose of a 701 which takes off 15-20 mph
slower than the RV is a non-issue. If the plane is within CG you can taxi
around with the nose wheel in the air anyway, that's assuming you practice
as much as Grant Rappe did.

I haven't measured EXACTLY but I don't think I'll have to remake the tube,
even if I have to fab a new one a little longer, saving 5# is MONUMENTAL,
especially on the front end. A no brainer for me.

There may be other hick-ups I haven't found yet.

LO&SLO

John


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PostPosted: Fri Jul 23, 2010 7:33 am    Post subject: Bent Nose Wheel Axle Reply with quote

Excuse me for jumping in here then running to Oshkosh, every once in
awhile this topic comes up. The Older 960 gross 701 was designed for
lighter loads and used the smaller Azula wheels, just before the 1100
gross design change most people were installing 912's or heavier engines
and some people had issues with hard landings.

With today's 1100 gross designed STOL 701 and the Tundra tire I believe we
have one of the toughest and best designed systems out there in it's
weight class. The nose gear is designed to absord a tremendus amount of
energy before being deformed or causing damage to the firewall.

In Kitchener, we have used the STOL 701 for flight training for the past
12 years and yes students have really put the plane throgh it's pace. Over
that time the plane has been dropped from the air on several occasions, on
two seperate occasions it was pounded hrd enogh to actuall bend the main
landing gear, (Almost a 15-20 foot full stall above the runway). We
re-bent the main gear on one occasion adn replaced it on another. I have
watched teh 701 get wheelbarrowed down teh runway many a time and teh nose
gear holds up just fine. Rough feid landings are a pounder to any
aircraft's landing gear and we tend to land more on grass strips than
pavement, we hold the weight of the nose off teh ground to smooh out the
ride down the strip.

Teh 701 is a rough little bird and handles it's itended purpose with
amzing grace, it peforms like no other plane can and we have nothing short
of a grand time with it. YES it does require a different skill set to
understand a

Quote:


I have also posted this message at the Yahoo Groups to find out if anyone
with a CH701 is using the "new" solid axle that was designed and is used
on the heavier CH750. So far, no responses. Hopefully the UPS truck will
land in my driveway Friday and I will see for myself how sturdy this new
shaft is.

Another area of concern is the side flexing of the lower nose wheel
fork where the axle is attached. This flexing has allowed the side wall
of my tire to rub the inside of the fork if the nose wheel is not
aligned with the runway, such as when needing to use the rudder till
the nose sets down in a sudden crosswind. Admittedly, one should always
maintain alignment but everyone knows this does not always happen. My
possible solution would be to add triangular gussets to the wheel
spacers that would extend upward from the spacer tubes and could attach
to the two bolts currently used to join the aluminum forks as one. An
additional bolt could be used midway, above the axle bolt. This would,
I believe, greatly stiffen the lower fork where axial side loads are
delivered.
Has anyone else experienced this ? Or has any comment on this ?
All thoughts welcome... Don

--------
Zenith 701 #76120
Jabiru 2200A #2456 67 hours
Sensenich Wood 64-PJ-36 Prop


Read this topic online here:

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PostPosted: Fri Jul 23, 2010 7:57 am    Post subject: Bent Nose Wheel Axle Reply with quote

Sorry about the previous unfinished post, my laptop keyboard is not
working well and misses many of the keystrokes, which I edit before
release, The last message went by a wrong tap of the send key. Below is
the finished letter that has been quickly edited.

Mark
Excuse me for jumping in here then running off to Oshkosh, every once in
awhile this topic comes up. The Older 960 gross 701 was designed for
lighter loads and used the smaller Azula wheels, just before the 1100
gross design change most people were installing 912's or heavier engines
and some people had issues with hard landings, this stemmed more from
asking the design to operate beyond it's limits for extended periods.

With today's 1100 gross designed STOL 701 and the Tundra tires I believe we
have one of the toughest and best designed systems out there in it's
weight class. The nose gear is designed to absorb a tremendous amount of
energy before being deformed or causing damage to the firewall, the tundra
tires absorb an amazing amount of impact.

In Kitchener, we have used the STOL 701 for flight training for the past
12 years and yes students have really put the plane through it's pace. Over
that time the plane has been dropped from the air on several occasions, on
two separate occasions it was pounded hard enough to actually bend the main
landing gear, (Almost a 15-20 foot full stall above the runway). We
re-bent the main gear on one occasion and replaced it on another. I have
watched the 701 get wheelbarrowwed down the runway many a time and the nose
gear holds up just fine, I have seen students bounce the plane so high
that even Gus would b proud ( if you do not catch the jib, checkout You
tube for 701 with corvair) . Rough field landings are a pounder to any
aircraft's landing gear and we tend to land more on grass strips than
pavement, we hold the weight of the nose off the ground to smooth out the
ride down the strip.

The 701 is a rough little bird and handles it's intended purpose with
amazing grace, it performs like no other plane can and we have nothing short
of a grand time with it. YES it does require a different skill set to
understand albeit not a difficult task to achieve. I believe this subject
is very similar to he VG issue, with knowledge, practice, the STOL 701 is
a perfectly and well designed plane that is better then a barrel of
Monkeys for fun. Also note that the bungee does have a 5 year life span ad
I have seen quite a few frayed and tired bungees over the years.

Now I am going to attach my bubble doors to our newest 701 and head to
Oshkosh. Hope to see you there.

Also check out
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s9mCkpw9nYE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p74etfecaSk
See you at Oshkosh

Mark Townsend

[quote]
<jnbolding1(at)teleshare.net>

Betcha this will stir the pot some, In my never ending quest to shave
#'s
from my 701 under construction I've discovered that the nose wheel fork
from
a Cessna 150 will slip right on the 701 nose gear tube. Of course you
have
to cut off the plate the Zenith fork bolts to.

Pros:
Complete assy , modified tube, fork, tire,wheel, axel is ALMOST 5# lighter
than the plans built pieces.
Cost (to me anyway) was half , got my stuff from Air Salvage of Dallas.
Smaller tire means less drag and more importantly less forward mass,
easier
to balance a slightly heavier engine if you've refused to use a Rotax.
PROBABLY less adverse yaw too but that is a WAG at this point.
GOTTA be stronger than the bent up plates, if Cessna uses it on an
airplane
several hundred pounds heavier than the 701 it outta work for us.

Cons:
You lose the "cool" factor of the tundra tire in the front. Fortunately
I'm
old enough to have gotten over all that foolishness. I've several hundred
hours of beach, dirt road, cow pasture ect operation in an RV3 with 5:00x
5
tires and for me to have one on the nose of a 701 which takes off 15-20
mph
slower than the RV is a non-issue. If the plane is within CG you can taxi
around with the nose wheel in the air anyway, that's assuming you
practice
as much as Grant Rappe did.

I haven't measured EXACTLY but I don't think I'll have to remake the tube,
even if I have to fab a new one a little longer, saving 5# is MONUMENTAL,
especially on the front end. A no brainer for me.

There may be other hick-ups I haven't found yet.

LO&SLO

John


---


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dons701



Joined: 22 May 2009
Posts: 80
Location: Hershey, PA

PostPosted: Fri Jul 23, 2010 8:14 am    Post subject: Re: Bent Nose Wheel Axle Reply with quote

Hi John, this site needs a little pot stirring.

I like your idea as I have been thinking of ways to improve the nose gear for some time. The current design works well as it has been used for a long time, but could use some help. Somewhere in the net I have seen a 701 with what looked like a pair of front forks and wheel from a dirt bike. Crazy I know but, if strong enough, this would provide an adjustable spring rate and hydraulic dampening. I have seen pictures here on this site where a small coil over shock was installed inside the top of the nose gear strut on an 801, I have not read how well it worked though but others are trying.
I will admit that I am a relative amateur with flying the 701 but, I have walked on this earth long enough to know some things need improvement based on the problems encountered by me and others.
The 701 is a rugged plane as is and with care can be improved.
Don


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Sensenich Wood 64-PJ-36 Prop
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 23, 2010 9:21 am    Post subject: Bent Nose Wheel Axle Reply with quote

Good luck with the 701708 nose wheel axle.  The nose gear may be "designed to absorb a tremendous amount of energy" but that will not prevent substantial damage if the front tire locks on the fork due to a bent axle read (hollow tube with nuts welded to both ends).   A close inspection of this Zenith part during pre-flight can not be over emphasised.

On Fri, Jul 23, 2010 at 11:33 AM, <zodierocket(at)hsfx.ca (zodierocket(at)hsfx.ca)> wrote:
[quote] --> Zenith701801-List message posted by: zodierocket(at)hsfx.ca (zodierocket(at)hsfx.ca)

Excuse me for jumping in here then running to Oshkosh, every once in
awhile this topic comes up. The Older 960 gross 701 was designed for
lighter loads and used the smaller Azula wheels, just before the 1100
gross design change most people were installing 912's or heavier engines
and some people had issues with hard landings.

With today's 1100 gross designed STOL 701 and the Tundra tire I believe we
have one of the toughest and best designed systems out there in it's
weight class. The nose gear is designed to absord a tremendus amount of
energy before being deformed or causing damage to the firewall.

In Kitchener, we have used the STOL 701 for flight training for the past
12 years and yes students have really put the plane throgh it's pace. Over
that time the plane has been dropped from the air on several occasions, on
two seperate occasions it was pounded hrd enogh to actuall bend the main
landing gear, (Almost a 15-20 foot full stall above the runway). We
re-bent the main gear on one occasion adn replaced it on another. I have
watched teh 701 get wheelbarrowed down teh runway many a time and teh nose
gear holds up just fine. Rough feid landings are a pounder to any
aircraft's landing gear and we tend to land more on grass strips than
pavement, we  hold the weight of the nose off teh ground to smooh out the
ride down the strip.

Teh 701 is a rough little bird and handles it's itended purpose with
amzing grace, it peforms like no other plane can and we have nothing short
of a grand time with it. YES it does require a different skill set to
understand a




> --> Zenith701801-List message posted by: "dons701" <burdon1(at)comcast.net (burdon1(at)comcast.net)>
>
> I have also posted this message at the Yahoo Groups to find out if anyone
> with a CH701 is using the "new" solid axle that was designed and is used
> on the heavier CH750. So far, no responses. Hopefully the UPS truck will
> land in my driveway Friday and I will see for myself how sturdy this new
> shaft is.
>
>    Another area of concern is the side flexing of the lower nose wheel
> fork where the axle is attached. This flexing has allowed the side wall
> of my tire to rub the inside of the fork if the nose wheel is not
> aligned with the runway, such as when needing to use the rudder till
> the nose sets down in a sudden crosswind. Admittedly, one should always
> maintain alignment but everyone knows this does not always happen. My
> possible solution would be to add triangular gussets to the wheel
> spacers that would extend upward from the spacer tubes and could attach
> to the two bolts currently used to join the aluminum forks as one. An
> additional bolt could be used midway, above the axle bolt. This would,
> I believe,  greatly stiffen the lower fork where axial side loads are
> delivered.
>  Has anyone else experienced this ? Or has any comment on this ?
>   All thoughts welcome... Don
>
> --------
> Zenith 701 #76120
> Jabiru 2200A #2456  67 hours
> Sensenich Wood 64-PJ-36 Prop
>
>
>
>
> Read this topic online here:
>
> http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=306055#306055
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


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PostPosted: Fri Jul 23, 2010 10:37 am    Post subject: Bent Nose Wheel Axle Reply with quote

Here is a longer video of the one that Mark sent. It shows the damage.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17yKXFAlqjk&feature=related
Curt

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PostPosted: Fri Jul 23, 2010 10:51 am    Post subject: Bent Nose Wheel Axle Reply with quote

Looks to me like the bolt holding the fork on failed. Firewall pretty bent
up.

Curt

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dons701



Joined: 22 May 2009
Posts: 80
Location: Hershey, PA

PostPosted: Fri Jul 23, 2010 2:53 pm    Post subject: Re: Bent Nose Wheel Axle Reply with quote

Notice the curved sheet aluminum brace attached around the gear strut fire wall stiffener. Don

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Roland Smith



Joined: 02 Jul 2006
Posts: 14

PostPosted: Sun Jul 25, 2010 4:02 am    Post subject: Re: Bent Nose Wheel Axle Reply with quote

Sure, I've bent the front wheel axle-- twice in the first 50 hours. My friends suggested that I try landing on the rear wheels. The second axle I got from Zenith is solid. Have'nt bent it yet. I got the impression from Z that the axle is a good seller. Other observations from my buddies include "it might be better to 'sacrifice' an axle than something more costly; consider thicker sleeves; stop trying to emulate 'Canyon Flying'..." I also note that Matco has a 5/8 wheel bearing, which, of course, would require a different axle but might defeat the idea of a 'sacrifical' part in case of a bad landing.

Really nice to know that I'm not the only one.


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dons701



Joined: 22 May 2009
Posts: 80
Location: Hershey, PA

PostPosted: Sun Jul 25, 2010 7:07 am    Post subject: Re: Bent Nose Wheel Axle Reply with quote

Hi Roland,

Friends are great are'nt they, "try landing on the rear wheels"... I will agree though on the fact that the bending of the axle helps to absorb energy, the unfortunate consequence if bent hard enough is wheel lock up. During the inspection I was shocked to see how close the tire was to the bolt heads where the forks attach to the strut tube. I thought, that was darn close ! It was just then I noticed there were light grooves in the tread of my tire, right in line with the bolt heads!!

The axle is already 5/8" (.625), so I will guess you meant to say 3/4" and will require a different axle?


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