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Main gear fire
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kevino



Joined: 21 Sep 2010
Posts: 13
Location: United States

PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 4:22 am    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

Yesterday flew to Bangor Maine. Has a very long taxi for rw 15 from ga ramp. Near end lost left brake. Ac did several loops getting it stopped. Called ground who is over a mile away and told him I lost brake and he advised I was on fire. Evacuated all four people and grabbed fire ext. Fire was in full force with flames close to reaching wing. Used ext 2.5 halon and snuffed flame. Restarted in about 15 sec. Did it again. Looked up and crash was on their way. They were there in two minutes from ground telling me was on fire. Never knew I had fire until they told me. The fire ext and outstanding crash rescue saved the day. Lost the tire, wheel pant, brakes. Maine aero jumped on the airplane when I finally worked thru the red tape and got it towed in. Replaced tire, rebuilt brakes, pulled wheel pants and flew home last nite. An outstanding response from the crash crew, airport crew and Maine aero, ray lane and his whole crew.
Cause was probably brake slightly dragging and needing to keep hitting left brake for directional control while taxiing several miles.
Thought you all might be interested. The lack of awareness that a fire had started was frightening.without ground telling me I would not have got it in time not to mention an air force crash crew that was outstanding.
Anybody have a spare left wheel pant?


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Tim Olson



Joined: 25 Jan 2007
Posts: 2872

PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 6:13 am    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

Sorry to hear about the fire and associated headaches. Can you say which brake fluid you used....the high temp stuff or the standard stuff? That would be good info.
Tim

On Jul 9, 2011, at 7:22 AM, "kevino" <kevino(at)worldwarehouse.com> wrote:

Quote:


Yesterday flew to Bangor Maine. Has a very long taxi for rw 15 from ga ramp. Near end lost left brake. Ac did several loops getting it stopped. Called ground who is over a mile away and told him I lost brake and he advised I was on fire. Evacuated all four people and grabbed fire ext. Fire was in full force with flames close to reaching wing. Used ext 2.5 halon and snuffed flame. Restarted in about 15 sec. Did it again. Looked up and crash was on their way. They were there in two minutes from ground telling me was on fire. Never knew I had fire until they told me. The fire ext and outstanding crash rescue saved the day. Lost the tire, wheel pant, brakes. Maine aero jumped on the airplane when I finally worked thru the red tape and got it towed in. Replaced tire, rebuilt brakes, pulled wheel pants and flew home last nite. An outstanding response from the crash crew, airport crew and Maine aero, ray lane and his whole crew.
Cause was probably brake slightly dragging and needing to keep hitting left brake for directional control while taxiing several miles.
Thought you all might be interested. The lack of awareness that a fire had started was frightening.without ground telling me I would not have got it in time not to mention an air force crash crew that was outstanding.
Anybody have a spare left wheel pant?




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Kelly McMullen



Joined: 16 Apr 2008
Posts: 1188
Location: Sun Lakes AZ

PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 6:32 am    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

That would be Mil 83282 brake fluid as opposed to Mil 5606.

On Sat, Jul 9, 2011 at 7:10 AM, Tim Olson <Tim(at)myrv10.com> wrote:
Quote:


Sorry to hear about the fire and associated headaches.  Can you say which brake fluid you used....the high temp stuff or the standard stuff?  That would be good info.
Tim

On Jul 9, 2011, at 7:22 AM, "kevino" <kevino(at)worldwarehouse.com> wrote:

>
>
> Yesterday flew to Bangor Maine. Has a very long taxi for rw 15 from ga ramp. Near end lost left brake. Ac did several loops getting it stopped. Called ground who is over a mile away and told him I lost brake and he advised I was on fire. Evacuated all four people and grabbed fire ext. Fire was in full force with flames close to reaching wing. Used ext 2.5 halon and snuffed flame.


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kevino



Joined: 21 Sep 2010
Posts: 13
Location: United States

PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 7:45 am    Post subject: Re: Main gear fire Reply with quote

5606. Hadn't thought about that

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PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 7:54 am    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

What kind of brake line did you have attached to the wheel cylinder???
I'm guessing that the fire was due to a brake fluid leak ..... how did
it escape???
Linn
On 7/9/2011 8:22 AM, kevino wrote:
Quote:


Yesterday flew to Bangor Maine. Has a very long taxi for rw 15 from ga ramp. Near end lost left brake. Ac did several loops getting it stopped. Called ground who is over a mile away and told him I lost brake and he advised I was on fire. Evacuated all four people and grabbed fire ext. Fire was in full force with flames close to reaching wing. Used ext 2.5 halon and snuffed flame. Restarted in about 15 sec. Did it again. Looked up and crash was on their way. They were there in two minutes from ground telling me was on fire. Never knew I had fire until they told me. The fire ext and outstanding crash rescue saved the day. Lost the tire, wheel pant, brakes. Maine aero jumped on the airplane when I finally worked thru the red tape and got it towed in. Replaced tire, rebuilt brakes, pulled wheel pants and flew home last nite. An outstanding response from the crash crew, airport crew and Maine aero, ray lane and his whole crew.
Cause was probably brake slightly dragging and needing to keep hitting left brake for directional control while taxiing several miles.
Thought you all might be interested. The lack of awareness that a fire had started was frightening.without ground telling me I would not have got it in time not to mention an air force crash crew that was outstanding.
Anybody have a spare left wheel pant?


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kevino



Joined: 21 Sep 2010
Posts: 13
Location: United States

PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 8:41 am    Post subject: Re: Main gear fire Reply with quote

Aluminum lines. No evidence of leaking prior to fire.

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PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 8:58 am    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

Very well handled by all and I'm glad things didn't get any worse than they did. This is by no means a dig and may not apply to your situation, but food for thought for all based on some experiences I've seen regarding using the brakes. I've seen a lot of folks ride the brakes lightly during long taxis to avoid getting fast. Having flown little airplanes with great big engines and small wheels/brakes I was taught long ago to let the airplane roll, then apply moderate braking periodically to keep the speed under control. Brakes will heat up a lot more when a little pressure is applied over a long time than periodic more aggressive braking. We used to have an academic slide show that showed two guys sitting in two kettles of water, one that had a big, rapid fire that while unpleasant flashed over quickly with no big deal, while the other simmered over a low continuous fire until it boiled. Probably an odd analogy but pretty good overall. I saw an Airbus captain taxiing behind a very slow airplane do the same thing just a few days ago and we had to delay takeoff because of brakes temps. In short, let the airplane get going without brakes as fast as you are comfortable then hit the brakes and slow to a crawl, release the brakes and start over again and your brakes will be much happier and will also be there for you when you need them.

Marcus
40286
On Jul 9, 2011, at 8:22 AM, kevino wrote:

Quote:


Yesterday flew to Bangor Maine. Has a very long taxi for rw 15 from ga ramp. Near end lost left brake. Ac did several loops getting it stopped. Called ground who is over a mile away and told him I lost brake and he advised I was on fire. Evacuated all four people and grabbed fire ext. Fire was in full force with flames close to reaching wing. Used ext 2.5 halon and snuffed flame. Restarted in about 15 sec. Did it again. Looked up and crash was on their way. They were there in two minutes from ground telling me was on fire. Never knew I had fire until they told me. The fire ext and outstanding crash rescue saved the day. Lost the tire, wheel pant, brakes. Maine aero jumped on the airplane when I finally worked thru the red tape and got it towed in. Replaced tire, rebuilt brakes, pulled wheel pants and flew home last nite. An outstanding response from the crash crew, airport crew and Maine aero, ray lane and his whole crew.
Cause was probably brake slightly dragging and needing to keep hitting left brake for directional control while taxiing several miles.
Thought you all might be interested. The lack of awareness that a fire had started was frightening.without ground telling me I would not have got it in time not to mention an air force crash crew that was outstanding.
Anybody have a spare left wheel pant?




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http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=345552#345552












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AV8ORJWC



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

PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 9:46 am    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

Great information. The mass of our rotors absorbs converted energy in
the form of heat created through friction from the pad contact.
Sustained "deep" heat is worse than momentary higher concentrated heat.
Energy transfer is nearly the same. Vented, drilled rotors and cooling
ductwork can help. More mass, more pad contact area, use of less
flammable brake fluid H-83282 versus H-5606 can only help. On Recips,
lower rpm often also can lead to clinkers forming on the lower plugs.
It is all about appropriate tradeoffs.

John

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Tim Olson



Joined: 25 Jan 2007
Posts: 2872

PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 10:53 am    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

I'm FAR from an expert on the stuff, as you can tell by
how Kelly remembers the milspec numbers by heart and I
can't even do that....but here is what Wiki says:
Mil-H-5606: Mineral base, flammable, fairly low flashpoint, usable from
-65 °F (-54 °C) to 275 °F (135 °C), red color
Mil-H-83282: Synthetic hydrocarbon base, higher flashpoint,
self-extinguishing, backward compatible to -5606, red color, rated to
-40 °F (-40 °C) degrees.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_fluid
Given that, it's pretty easy to see how brakes can heat up to over
275F on a long taxi. So with our castering nosewheel planes that
kind of invite the bad habit of riding brakes, I think it's
kind of a good idea to just switch it out. It's about $9
for plenty to do the whole plane and have a lot of spare.
I can't find the flash point on the 83282 stuff, but, this
link says it's over 200F HIGHER than the 5606.

http://www.tpub.com/content/aviation/14018/css/14018_178.htm

So that would be my first move now. I should add that to my
page of things to definitely change or do. I think maybe we
as a group should try to keep this info out there so that
nobody uses 5606 at all....none of the fleet. A good friend
of mine with an RV-10 had a wheel fire as well. Wrecked the
tire and causes a bit of other damage. Just a no good situation.

Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD

On 7/9/2011 10:45 AM, kevino wrote:
Quote:


5606. Hadn't thought about that



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PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 12:07 pm    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

Brake fires are caused by a failure of the system to contain the brake
fluid. We know that cracking of the hard aluminum will allow fluid to
escape. We also know that when brake pads are allowed to wear way down,
the brake puck can extend out far enough so that fluid can escape around
the O-ring. So far, we haven't heard how the fluid escaped or if
"kevino" really knows. Years ago when the 'plastic' aircraft were all
the rage, the failure was caused by the heat melting the plastic brake
lines. Not so, in this case.

So I started to search for some numbers. I found a document here:
http://www.everyspec.com/MIL-SPECS/MIL+SPECS+%28MIL-H%29/MIL-H-83282C_6037/
which lists minimum flash point at 205 C (405 F) and minimum fire point
at 245 C (473 F). Auto ignition is 345 C (653 F). Minimum pour point
-55 C (-67 F).
For 5606 minimum flash point at 82 C (180 F) (minimum fire
point is missing). (Auto ignition is missing).
Minimum pour point -60 C (-76 F).

Different numbers from Tim's but still significantly different than 5606.

So Tim's suggestion to go to 83282 is a good one.
The 5606 spec was written in 1986 and 83282 in 1994.

Linn


On 7/9/2011 2:50 PM, Tim Olson wrote:
Quote:


I'm FAR from an expert on the stuff, as you can tell by
how Kelly remembers the milspec numbers by heart and I
can't even do that....but here is what Wiki says:
Mil-H-5606: Mineral base, flammable, fairly low flashpoint, usable
from -65 °F (-54 °C) to 275 °F (135 °C), red color
Mil-H-83282: Synthetic hydrocarbon base, higher flashpoint,
self-extinguishing, backward compatible to -5606, red color, rated to
-40 °F (-40 °C) degrees.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_fluid
Given that, it's pretty easy to see how brakes can heat up to over
275F on a long taxi. So with our castering nosewheel planes that
kind of invite the bad habit of riding brakes, I think it's
kind of a good idea to just switch it out. It's about $9
for plenty to do the whole plane and have a lot of spare.
I can't find the flash point on the 83282 stuff, but, this
link says it's over 200F HIGHER than the 5606.

http://www.tpub.com/content/aviation/14018/css/14018_178.htm

So that would be my first move now. I should add that to my
page of things to definitely change or do. I think maybe we
as a group should try to keep this info out there so that
nobody uses 5606 at all....none of the fleet. A good friend
of mine with an RV-10 had a wheel fire as well. Wrecked the
tire and causes a bit of other damage. Just a no good situation.

Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD

On 7/9/2011 10:45 AM, kevino wrote:
>
>
> 5606. Hadn't thought about that
>



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PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 12:07 pm    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

On 7/9/2011 2:50 PM, Tim Olson wrote:
Quote:

I can't find the flash point on the 83282 stuff, but, this
link says it's over 200F HIGHER than the 5606.

Skygeek has some specs on it:

http://www.skygeek.com/royco-782-synthetic-fire-resistant-hydraulic-fluid.html

then click the "Specifications" tab.

Flash point 218C, 424F
Fire point 251C, 483F

-Dj

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PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 12:28 pm    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

When swapping over to the high temp fluid I recall one has to replace all
the seals is in the system. Is this correct? How much effort is involved
in that change?

Robin

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PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 12:33 pm    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

For what it's worth, here is what I have been using in my bird since day one.
Valvoline DEX/MERC automatic transmission fluid VV324, flash point 202° C / 395° F
grumpyN184JM
On Jul 9, 2011, at 1:50 PM, Tim Olson wrote:
[quote]--> RV10-List message posted by: Tim Olson <Tim(at)myrv10.com (Tim(at)myrv10.com)>

I'm FAR from an expert on the stuff, as you can tell by
how Kelly remembers the milspec numbers by heart and I
can't even do that....but here is what Wiki says:
Mil-H-5606: Mineral base, flammable, fairly low flashpoint, usable from -65 °F (-54 °C) to 275 °F (135 °C), red color
Mil-H-83282: Synthetic hydrocarbon base, higher flashpoint, self-extinguishing, backward compatible to -5606, red color, rated to -40 °F (-40 °C) degrees.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_fluid
Given that, it's pretty easy to see how brakes can heat up to over
275F on a long taxi. So with our castering nosewheel planes that
kind of invite the bad habit of riding brakes, I think it's
kind of a good idea to just switch it out. It's about $9
for plenty to do the whole plane and have a lot of spare.
I can't find the flash point on the 83282 stuff, but, this
link says it's over 200F HIGHER than the 5606.

http://www.tpub.com/content/aviation/14018/css/14018_178.htm

So that would be my first move now. I should add that to my
page of things to definitely change or do. I think maybe we
as a group should try to keep this info out there so that
nobody uses 5606 at all....none of the fleet. A good friend
of mine with an RV-10 had a wheel fire as well. Wrecked the
tire and causes a bit of other damage. Just a no good situation.

Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD

On 7/9/2011 10:45 AM, kevino wrote:
Quote:
--> RV10-List message posted by: "kevino"<kevino(at)worldwarehouse.com>

5606. Hadn't thought about that


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Kellym



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 1705
Location: Sun Lakes AZ

PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 12:43 pm    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

What is the difference in viscosity of ATF vs mil spec brake fluid? I'm
fairly certain that mil spec brake fluid has some requirements on
viscosity at various temps and other characteristics that make it more
desirable for brake applications. If you need to top up the resevoir at
an airport, you are pretty sure to find 5606, not so much the ATF or
83282. You know that 5606 and 83282 are proven to be compatible, even if
you lower the flash point some. ATF saves you maybe $5 over the high
price 83282?
On 7/9/2011 1:29 PM, Miller John wrote:
Quote:
For what it's worth, here is what I have been using in my bird since
day one.

Valvoline DEX/MERC automatic transmission fluid VV324,flash point
202°C / 395°F

grumpy

N184JM

*
*


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Kellym



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 1705
Location: Sun Lakes AZ

PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 12:52 pm    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

No seal replacement required. Remember 83282 is 100% compatible with
5606. If you want a slightly more durable seal you can go from MS seals
to Viton. Don't know any reason to, other than it probably resists high
temp better while is less flexible at low temps. If your mission is
between ElK Mound and International Falls year round you probably want
the standard 5606 and MS seals.
The calipers are no more than popping the brake cylinder out of the
caliper and changing the O-rings. At the master cylinders, you get to
rebuild them...but they aren't ever going to see the temps the calipers do.
All depends on how much effort you want to do, and what your normal
mission profile is. Those that get OHare and Hartsfield taxi routes
probably want the higher temps, like those of us on the southern fringe
of the country.
Do you want to go into procurement mode, get the fluid, get Viton
O-rings after figuring out exact size needed, and so on, just like the
rest of the build process? The mechanical work on the calipers is
child's play. Draining your system should get you 90 percent of benefit,
vs flushing system and then adding 83282. You get the fun of bleeding
the system either way.
On 7/9/2011 1:23 PM, Robin Marks wrote:
[quote]

When swapping over to the high temp fluid I recall one has to replace all
the seals is in the system. Is this correct? How much effort is involved
in that change?

Robin

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PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 1:15 pm    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

Another leak point is the piston seals - they leak when they get too hot. I had the same problem with brakes that got too hot while taxiing a long way with a cross wind. The brakes got very hot and leaked which smoked a lot, but no fire because I used the 83282 fluid. The original seals were bad due to the heat so I replaced them with viton seals which can stand a higher temperature. I would have had a fire if I had used the 5606 fluid.....

Sent from my iPhone

On Jul 9, 2011, at 3:03 PM, Linn Walters <pitts_pilot(at)bellsouth.net> wrote:

Quote:


Brake fires are caused by a failure of the system to contain the brake fluid. We know that cracking of the hard aluminum will allow fluid to escape. We also know that when brake pads are allowed to wear way down, the brake puck can extend out far enough so that fluid can escape around the O-ring. So far, we haven't heard how the fluid escaped or if "kevino" really knows. Years ago when the 'plastic' aircraft were all the rage, the failure was caused by the heat melting the plastic brake lines. Not so, in this case.

So I started to search for some numbers. I found a document here: http://www.everyspec.com/MIL-SPECS/MIL+SPECS+%28MIL-H%29/MIL-H-83282C_6037/
which lists minimum flash point at 205 C (405 F) and minimum fire point at 245 C (473 F). Auto ignition is 345 C (653 F). Minimum pour point -55 C (-67 F).
For 5606 minimum flash point at 82 C (180 F) (minimum fire point is missing). (Auto ignition is missing). Minimum pour point -60 C (-76 F).

Different numbers from Tim's but still significantly different than 5606.

So Tim's suggestion to go to 83282 is a good one.
The 5606 spec was written in 1986 and 83282 in 1994.

Linn




On 7/9/2011 2:50 PM, Tim Olson wrote:
>
>
> I'm FAR from an expert on the stuff, as you can tell by
> how Kelly remembers the milspec numbers by heart and I
> can't even do that....but here is what Wiki says:
>
>
> Mil-H-5606: Mineral base, flammable, fairly low flashpoint, usable from -65 °F (-54 °C) to 275 °F (135 °C), red color
>
>
> Mil-H-83282: Synthetic hydrocarbon base, higher flashpoint, self-extinguishing, backward compatible to -5606, red color, rated to -40 °F (-40 °C) degrees.
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_fluid
>
>
> Given that, it's pretty easy to see how brakes can heat up to over
> 275F on a long taxi. So with our castering nosewheel planes that
> kind of invite the bad habit of riding brakes, I think it's
> kind of a good idea to just switch it out. It's about $9
> for plenty to do the whole plane and have a lot of spare.
> I can't find the flash point on the 83282 stuff, but, this
> link says it's over 200F HIGHER than the 5606.
>
> http://www.tpub.com/content/aviation/14018/css/14018_178.htm
>
> So that would be my first move now. I should add that to my
> page of things to definitely change or do. I think maybe we
> as a group should try to keep this info out there so that
> nobody uses 5606 at all....none of the fleet. A good friend
> of mine with an RV-10 had a wheel fire as well. Wrecked the
> tire and causes a bit of other damage. Just a no good situation.
>
> Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD
>
>
>
> On 7/9/2011 10:45 AM, kevino wrote:
>>
>>
>> 5606. Hadn't thought about that
>>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>









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Tim Olson



Joined: 25 Jan 2007
Posts: 2872

PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 1:32 pm    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

I didn't change my seals in the whole system. I DID go to viton seals in the caliper itself though. They're cheap.
Tim

On Jul 9, 2011, at 3:23 PM, Robin Marks <robin(at)PaintTheWeb.com> wrote:

[quote]

When swapping over to the high temp fluid I recall one has to replace all
the seals is in the system. Is this correct? How much effort is involved
in that change?

Robin

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gengrumpy(at)aol.com
Guest





PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 3:25 pm    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

And bleed from the bottom up!!!

Far easier and a whole lot cleaner way to do it.

Just get a qt pump-type oil can with flex tip on it, get some plastic tubing that fits over the bleed valve, put an overflow tube from the reservoir with a can to collect it, and pump away.

Can't believe it took me so long to figure that one out........-Smile

grumpy
N184JM
On Jul 9, 2011, at 3:50 PM, Kelly McMullen wrote:

[quote]

No seal replacement required. Remember 83282 is 100% compatible with 5606. If you want a slightly more durable seal you can go from MS seals to Viton. Don't know any reason to, other than it probably resists high temp better while is less flexible at low temps. If your mission is between ElK Mound and International Falls year round you probably want the standard 5606 and MS seals.
The calipers are no more than popping the brake cylinder out of the caliper and changing the O-rings. At the master cylinders, you get to rebuild them...but they aren't ever going to see the temps the calipers do.
All depends on how much effort you want to do, and what your normal mission profile is. Those that get OHare and Hartsfield taxi routes probably want the higher temps, like those of us on the southern fringe of the country.
Do you want to go into procurement mode, get the fluid, get Viton O-rings after figuring out exact size needed, and so on, just like the rest of the build process? The mechanical work on the calipers is child's play. Draining your system should get you 90 percent of benefit, vs flushing system and then adding 83282. You get the fun of bleeding the system either way.


On 7/9/2011 1:23 PM, Robin Marks wrote:
>
>
> When swapping over to the high temp fluid I recall one has to replace all
> the seals is in the system. Is this correct? How much effort is involved
> in that change?
>
> Robin
>
> --


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jcumins(at)jcis.net
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PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 4:04 pm    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

Robin

No seal changes are required to go to 83232 fluid. In 1985 when I was a
crew chief in the air force on the c-5 we flushed and changed out all planes
to 83232 hyd fluid with out any seals changed.

They can even be mixed together if in a tight spot but I would not recommend
it.

I will be swapping out our Saratoga in the next oil change before we put the
wheel [ants back on after the annual.
John Cumins
President
707-425-7100
707-425-7576 Fax

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dave.saylor.aircrafters(a
Guest





PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2011 5:40 pm    Post subject: Main gear fire Reply with quote

I've had mixed results with the pump-can bleeder but we still use one
in the field. I think the problem is that without sufficient flow,
you can still trap bubbles at the top of an arced tube. The fluid
just flows under the bubble.

For the shop, we built a brake bleeder out of a power steering pump.
We turn it with a drill motor. Added a return like John said, a
reservoir and a little plumbing. It works like a champ at about 20-30
psi.

Dave Saylor
AirCrafters
140 Aviation Way
Watsonville, CA 95076
831-722-9141 Shop
831-750-0284 Cell

On Sat, Jul 9, 2011 at 4:22 PM, Miller John <gengrumpy(at)aol.com> wrote:
[quote]

And bleed from the bottom up!!!

Far easier and a whole lot cleaner way to do it.

Just get a qt pump-type oil can with flex tip on it, get some plastic tubing that fits over the bleed valve, put an overflow tube from the reservoir with a can to collect it, and pump away.

Can't believe it took me so long to figure that one out........-Smile

grumpy
N184JM
On Jul 9, 2011, at 3:50 PM, Kelly McMullen wrote:

>
>
> No seal replacement required. Remember 83282 is 100% compatible with 5606. If you want a slightly more durable seal you can go from MS seals to Viton. Don't know any reason to, other than it probably resists high temp better while is less flexible at low temps. If your mission is between ElK Mound and International Falls year round you probably want the standard 5606 and MS seals.
> The calipers are no more than popping the brake cylinder out of the caliper and changing the O-rings. At the master cylinders, you get to rebuild them...but they aren't ever going to see the temps the calipers do.
> All depends on how much effort you want to do, and what your normal mission profile is. Those that get OHare and Hartsfield taxi routes probably want the higher temps, like those of us on the southern fringe of the country.
> Do you want to go into procurement mode, get the fluid, get Viton O-rings after figuring out exact size needed, and so on, just like the rest of the build process? The mechanical work on the calipers is child's play. Draining your system should get you 90 percent of benefit, vs flushing system and then adding 83282. You get the fun of bleeding the system either way.
> On 7/9/2011 1:23 PM, Robin Marks wrote:
>>
>>
>> When swapping over to the high temp fluid I recall one has to replace all
>> the seals is in the system. Is this correct? How much effort is involved
>> in that change?
>>
>> Robin
>>
>> --


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