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Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation

 
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Deems Davis



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 925

PostPosted: Wed Jan 13, 2010 5:22 pm    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

I've been watching the tire wear, and after 110 hrs, the left( pilot)
side tire is showing extreme wear on the outside of the tire, the Right
is also showing wear on the outside, but not as extreme.

What have others experienced?

So today, I pulled the wheels off and reversed the tires and tubes to
try and get some more wear out of the tires. When pulling the left tire
off the axel, the brake lining for the inboard brake pad dropped to the
floor! It appears that the shoulder that is supposed to hold the rivet
liner to the pad let go, and the rivet heads were "floating" inside of
the countersunk area. Fortunately there is minimal brake wear, and
therefore little movement in the brake when activated. But, if the brake
wear had been greater, there's a possibility that the pad/liner would
have moved and jammed it self against the brake disc. If this had
happened on landing and braking, I wouldn't have wanted to be along for
that ride. Checking with the locals this is a problem that one person
has seen when the rivets holding the liners are set too tight. since
these were the parts that came with the kit from Cleveland, I would
expect that they should have some quality control in their mfg to
eliminate/minimize this. Upon inspection and comparison with the
inboard rivets to the outboard .liner rivets, it appears that they are
'deeper' into the countersunk area , and possibly the shoulder of the
brake material that holds them was thinner and possibly weaker. Anyway
replacement pads on on there way. Something to keep in mind when you do
your conditionals or change tires.

Deems Davis
N519PJ
www.deemsrv10.com


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partner14



Joined: 12 Jan 2008
Posts: 540
Location: Granbury Texas

PostPosted: Wed Jan 13, 2010 5:52 pm    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

Deems, You did better than I did.... I switched mine at 90 hours... and the pilot side was worse than the other side. At the same time I installed air stop tubes. Guess It's getting time to get an order together for tires. Brakes looked good.
Which pads did you order?
Any word on the Alaska trip you hinted about?
Weather here in the SAC area has been terrible... at least for flying. Just enough overcast/fog to keep you on the ground. Going up tomorrow though.
Don McDonald

--- On Wed, 1/13/10, Deems Davis <deemsdavis(at)cox.net> wrote:

Quote:

From: Deems Davis <deemsdavis(at)cox.net>
Subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation
To: rv10-list(at)matronics.com
Date: Wednesday, January 13, 2010, 5:14 PM

--> RV10-List message posted by: Deems Davis <deemsdavis(at)cox.net (deemsdavis(at)cox.net)>

I've been watching the tire wear, and after 110 hrs, the left( pilot) side tire is showing extreme wear on the outside of the tire, the Right is also showing wear on the outside, but not as extreme.

What have others experienced?

So today, I pulled the wheels off and reversed the tires and tubes to try and get some more wear out of the tires. When pulling the left tire off the axel, the brake lining for the inboard brake pad dropped to the floor! It appears that the shoulder that is supposed to hold the rivet liner to the pad let go, and the rivet heads were "floating" inside of the countersunk area. Fortunately there is minimal brake wear, and therefore little movement in the brake when activated. But, if the brake wear had been greater, there's a possibility that the pad/liner would have moved and jammed it self against the brake disc. If this had happened on landing and braking, I wouldn't have wanted to be along for that ride. Checking with the locals this is a problem that one person has seen when the rivets holding the liners are set too tight. since these were the parts that came with the kit from Cleveland, I would expect that they should have some quality control in their mfg to eliminate/minimize this. Upon inspection and comparison with the inboard rivets to the outboard .liner rivets, it appears that they are 'deeper' into the countersunk area , and possibly the shoulder of the brake material that holds them was thinner and possibly weaker. Anyway replacement pads on on there way. Something to keep in mind when you do your conditionals or change tires.

Deems atronics.com/Navigator?RV10-List" target=_blank>http://www.matronics.com/= - MATRONICS cs.com/" ; -Matt Dralle, List Admin==========



[quote][b]


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ricksked(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 13, 2010 6:08 pm    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

Same for me Deems.....I called Van's and Ken Scott said you and I need to lose weight....actually my landings are so sweet that I still have the little nibs on the tire after almost 80 hours Smile

Rick
Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 13, 2010 6:19 pm    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

John G. Cumins
President

JC'S Interactive Systems
2499 B1 Martin Rd
Fairfield Ca 94533
707-425-7100
707-425-7576 Fax

Your Total Technology Solution Provider

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 13, 2010 6:22 pm    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

Rick

It is not that you need to loose weight cause if that was the issue the wear
would be in the inside on the outside. Outside wear is very common on
spring steel gear give it time and it might get better as the gear gets more
wear and tare on it. Either that Vans needs to correct the axel angle on
the gear leg it self.

John G. Cumins
President

JC'S Interactive Systems
2499 B1 Martin Rd
Fairfield Ca 94533
707-425-7100
707-425-7576 Fax

Your Total Technology Solution Provider

--


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ricksked(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 13, 2010 6:40 pm    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

Not my issue!!!! Ken Scott or aka...the ego deflator..told me that...not
really...just thought it was funny that both Deems and I had tire wear on
the left more than the right...you still coming in on the 20th?

Rick

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dlm46007(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 13, 2010 6:53 pm    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

air stop tubes came with the kit.

From: owner-rv10-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-rv10-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Don McDonald
Sent: Wednesday, January 13, 2010 6:52 PM
To: rv10-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation

Deems, You did better than I did.... I switched mine at 90 hours... and the pilot side was worse than the other side. At the same time I installed air stop tubes. Guess It's getting time to get an order together for tires. Brakes looked good.
Which pads did you order?
Any word on the Alaska trip you hinted about?
Weather here in the SAC area has been terrible... at least for flying. Just enough overcast/fog to keep you on the ground. Going up tomorrow though.
Don McDonald

--- On Wed, 1/13/10, Deems Davis <deemsdavis(at)cox.net> wrote:

Quote:

From: Deems Davis <deemsdavis(at)cox.net>
Subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation
To: rv10-list(at)matronics.com
Date: Wednesday, January 13, 2010, 5:14 PM

--> RV10-List message posted by: Deems Davis <deemsdavis(at)cox.net (deemsdavis(at)cox.net)>

I've been watching the tire wear, and after 110 hrs, the left( pilot) side tire is showing extreme wear on the outside of the tire, the Right is also showing wear on the outside, but not as extreme.

What have others experienced?

So today, I pulled the wheels off and reversed the tires and tubes to try and get some more wear out of the tires. When pulling the left tire off the axel, the brake lining for the inboard brake pad dropped to the floor! It appears that the shoulder that is supposed to hold the rivet liner to the pad let go, and the rivet heads were "floating" inside of the countersunk area. Fortunately there is minimal brake wear, and therefore little movement in the brake when activated. But, if the brake wear had been greater, there's a possibility that the pad/liner would have moved and jammed it self against the brake disc. If this had happened on landing and braking, I wouldn't have wanted to be along for that ride. Checking with the locals this is a problem that one person has seen when the rivets holding the liners are set too tight. since these were the parts that came with the kit from Cleveland, I would expect that they should have some quality control in their mfg to eliminate/minimize this. Upon inspection and comparison with the inboard rivets to the outboard .liner rivets, it appears that they are 'deeper' into the countersunk area , and possibly the shoulder of the brake material that holds them was thinner and possibly weaker. Anyway replacement pads on on there way. Something to keep in mind when you do your conditionals or change tires.

Deems atronics.com/Navigator?RV10-List" target=_blank>http://www.matronics.com/= - MATRONICS cs.com/" ; -Matt Dralle, List Admin==========



[quote]

href="http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?RV10-List">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?RV10-List
href="http://forums.matronics.com">http://forums.matronics.com
href="http://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/c
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 6:28 am    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

After 750 hours our tires still wear on the outside. The tires sit fairly straight when on the ground, but most of the wear comes from the little squeek when the tires go from 0-60kts at touchdown. When flying, the outside of the tire is lower than the inside. The more landings you do, the more your tires will wear. We just got about 150+ hours on the outside and just rotated them to the inside. The nose tire was just replaced. How have people been seeing the wear on the nose? It should be much less than the mains, or course, unless you get a bad shimmy, but I don't remember if we have changed that before or not. I'd have to go back and check through the logs.

Jesse Saint
Saint Aviation, Inc.
jesse(at)saintaviation.com
Cell: 352-427-0285
Fax: 815-377-3694

On Jan 13, 2010, at 9:19 PM, John Cumins wrote:

[quote]

Rick

It is not that you need to loose weight cause if that was the issue the wear
would be in the inside on the outside. Outside wear is very common on
spring steel gear give it time and it might get better as the gear gets more
wear and tare on it. Either that Vans needs to correct the axel angle on
the gear leg it self.

John G. Cumins
President

JC'S Interactive Systems
2499 B1 Martin Rd
Fairfield Ca 94533
707-425-7100
707-425-7576 Fax

Your Total Technology Solution Provider

--


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msausen



Joined: 25 Oct 2007
Posts: 559
Location: Appleton, WI USA

PostPosted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 7:43 am    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

Too bad Deems is flying, maybe he could come up with a way to pre-accelerate the tires to landing speed for smoother landings with less tire wear. Heh.

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Deems Davis



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 925

PostPosted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 8:44 am    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

Thanks all for the feedback re tires. It appears that uneven outside
wear is the 'norm'. I wonder if we're all landing left wheel 1st? Or if
Van's has a slight error in the gear weldment? I reject Rick's
hypothesis regarding 'unequal weight distribution' Smile . I've got em
flipped and will watch closer for the next period. I've also had a
couple of positive recommendations for retreads for future replacements.
I haven't worked on Alaska, my hangar neighbor from AK just returned, so
I'll have to ping him.
I don't want to make everyone green, but it's 70 deg and CAVU here in
PHX. Cool

Deems Davis
N519PJ
www.deemsrv10.com

Don McDonald wrote:
Quote:
Deems, You did better than I did.... I switched mine at 90 hours...
and the pilot side was worse than the other side. At the same time I
installed air stop tubes. Guess It's getting time to get an order
together for tires. Brakes looked good.
Which pads did you order?
Any word on the Alaska trip you hinted about?
Weather here in the SAC area has been terrible... at least for
flying. Just enough overcast/fog to keep you on the ground. Going up
tomorrow though.
Don McDonald

--- On *Wed, 1/13/10, Deems Davis /<deemsdavis(at)cox.net>/* wrote:
From: Deems Davis <deemsdavis(at)cox.net>
Subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation
To: rv10-list(at)matronics.com
Date: Wednesday, January 13, 2010, 5:14 PM


<http://us.mc537.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=deemsdavis(at)cox.net>>

I've been watching the tire wear, and after 110 hrs, the left(
pilot) side tire is showing extreme wear on the outside of the
tire, the Right is also showing wear on the outside, but not as
extreme.

What have others experienced?

So today, I pulled the wheels off and reversed the tires and tubes
to try and get some more wear out of the tires. When pulling the
left tire off the axel, the brake lining for the inboard brake pad
dropped to the floor! It appears that the shoulder that is
supposed to hold the rivet liner to the pad let go, and the rivet
heads were "floating" inside of the countersunk area. Fortunately
there is minimal brake wear, and therefore little movement in the
brake when activated. But, if the brake wear had been greater,
there's a possibility that the pad/liner would have moved and
jammed it self against the brake disc. If this had happened on
landing and braking, I wouldn't have wanted to be along for that
ride. Checking with the locals this is a problem that one person
has seen when the rivets holding the liners are set too tight.
since these were the parts that came with the kit from Cleveland,
I would expect that they should have some quality control in
their mfg to eliminate/minimize this. Upon inspection and
comparison with the inboard rivets to the outboard .liner rivets,
it appears that they are 'deeper' into the countersunk area , and
possibly the shoulder of the brake material that holds them was
thinner and possibly weaker. Anyway replacement pads on on there
way. Something to keep in mind when you do your conditionals or
change tires.

Deems atronics.com/Navigator?RV10-List"
target=_blank>http://www.matronics.com/= - MATRONICS
cs.com/" ; -Matt Dralle, List Admin==========


*
*


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gengrumpy(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 8:50 am    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

I rotate inner to outer one annual condition inspection, then exchange
left & right next annual and repeat inner to outer at the next one.

Turn nose wheel around each annual.

Works ok to keep all wear about equal.

Remember on inner to outer, be careful and dust up the tube well and
partially inflate it to keep from pinching the tube (learned that one
the hard way.....)

grumpy

On Jan 14, 2010, at 10:43 AM, Deems Davis wrote:

Quote:


Thanks all for the feedback re tires. It appears that uneven outside
wear is the 'norm'. I wonder if we're all landing left wheel 1st? Or
if Van's has a slight error in the gear weldment? I reject Rick's
hypothesis regarding 'unequal weight distribution' Smile . I've got
em flipped and will watch closer for the next period. I've also had
a couple of positive recommendations for retreads for future
replacements.
I haven't worked on Alaska, my hangar neighbor from AK just
returned, so I'll have to ping him.
I don't want to make everyone green, but it's 70 deg and CAVU here
in PHX. Cool

Deems Davis
N519PJ
www.deemsrv10.com

Don McDonald wrote:
> Deems, You did better than I did.... I switched mine at 90 hours...
> and the pilot side was worse than the other side. At the same time
> I installed air stop tubes. Guess It's getting time to get an
> order together for tires. Brakes looked good.
> Which pads did you order?
> Any word on the Alaska trip you hinted about?
> Weather here in the SAC area has been terrible... at least for
> flying. Just enough overcast/fog to keep you on the ground. Going
> up tomorrow though.
> Don McDonald
>
> --- On *Wed, 1/13/10, Deems Davis /<deemsdavis(at)cox.net>/* wrote:
> From: Deems Davis <deemsdavis(at)cox.net>
> Subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation
> To: rv10-list(at)matronics.com
> Date: Wednesday, January 13, 2010, 5:14 PM
>
>
> <http://us.mc537.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=deemsdavis(at)cox.net>>
>
> I've been watching the tire wear, and after 110 hrs, the left(
> pilot) side tire is showing extreme wear on the outside of the
> tire, the Right is also showing wear on the outside, but not as
> extreme.
>
> What have others experienced?
>
> So today, I pulled the wheels off and reversed the tires and tubes
> to try and get some more wear out of the tires. When pulling the
> left tire off the axel, the brake lining for the inboard brake pad
> dropped to the floor! It appears that the shoulder that is
> supposed to hold the rivet liner to the pad let go, and the rivet
> heads were "floating" inside of the countersunk area. Fortunately
> there is minimal brake wear, and therefore little movement in the
> brake when activated. But, if the brake wear had been greater,
> there's a possibility that the pad/liner would have moved and
> jammed it self against the brake disc. If this had happened on
> landing and braking, I wouldn't have wanted to be along for that
> ride. Checking with the locals this is a problem that one person
> has seen when the rivets holding the liners are set too tight.
> since these were the parts that came with the kit from Cleveland,
> I would expect that they should have some quality control in
> their mfg to eliminate/minimize this. Upon inspection and
> comparison with the inboard rivets to the outboard .liner rivets,
> it appears that they are 'deeper' into the countersunk area , and
> possibly the shoulder of the brake material that holds them was
> thinner and possibly weaker. Anyway replacement pads on on there
> way. Something to keep in mind when you do your conditionals or
> change tires.
>
> Deems atronics.com/Navigator?RV10-List"
> target=_blank>http://www.matronics.com/= - MATRONICS
> cs.com/" ; -Matt Dralle, List Admin==========
>
>
> *
> *



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AV8ORJWC



Joined: 13 Jul 2006
Posts: 1149
Location: Aurora, Oregon "Home of VANS"

PostPosted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 10:21 am    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

Some pilots have better CG than other skinny pilots. The manufacturing
error built into the gear leg, now that is something for Ken Scott to
wax on incessantly.

John
do not archive

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Bob Turner



Joined: 03 Jan 2009
Posts: 885
Location: Castro Valley, CA

PostPosted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 11:07 am    Post subject: Re: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

Which way does the wind blow at your home airport? e.g., do you do more landings with a crosswind from the left, than from the right? Also, where is your hangar with respect to the usual runway? Are you making mostly left turns?

As others have noted, wear on the outside of the tires is due to the spring gear leg,which hangs low prior to touchdown. See the same thing with spring gear Cessnas.


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PostPosted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 12:48 pm    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

Rick

Yep I sure am will arrive about noon so I have the 20 and 21 afternoons
free. Shoot me a e-mail off list and we can get together on of those
afternoons.

John
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partner14



Joined: 12 Jan 2008
Posts: 540
Location: Granbury Texas

PostPosted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 5:39 pm    Post subject: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation Reply with quote

If we actually think about it.... if the gear were perfectly straight, we would simply wear out the center of the tire.... and then we're done. The way it is now, we wear out mostly a part of the tire that would never get used, and then we get to turn them around and it's a brand new part of the tire again. What the hell are we bitching about!
Don McDonald

--- On Thu, 1/14/10, Bob Turner <bobturner(at)alum.rpi.edu> wrote:

Quote:

From: Bob Turner <bobturner(at)alum.rpi.edu>
Subject: Re: Uneven tire wear and brake pad separation
To: rv10-list(at)matronics.com
Date: Thursday, January 14, 2010, 11:08 AM

--> RV10-List message posted by: "Bob Turner" <bobturner(at)alum.rpi.edu (bobturner(at)alum.rpi.edu)>

Which way does the wind blow at your home airport? e.g., do you do more landings with a crosswind from the left, than from the right? Also, where is your hangar with respect to the usual runway? Are you making mostly left turns?

As others have noted, wear on the outside of the tires is due to the spring gear leg,which hangs low prior to touchdown. See the same thing with spring gear Cessnas.

--------
Bob Turner
RV-10 QB


Read this topic online here:

http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=281509#28150om/Navigator?RV10-List" target=_blank>http://www.matronics.com/Navigator? - MATRONICS WEB FORUM; -Matt Dralle, List Admin==========



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