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		jbhart(at)onlyinternet.ne Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sat Oct 06, 2007 6:54 pm    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				FireFlyer's
 
 After lightly plopping my FireFly and being surprised as to how easy it was 
 to bend the legs, I started thinking about how to support the existing legs. 
  I took some measurements, made some assumptions, and ran some numbers.  I 
 found that at gross weight the gear legs can support a 1.8G to 3.4G landing. 
  Where the 1.8G represents landing on a very slick surface, and the 3.4G 
 represents landing on dry pavement.  The FireFly landing gear is very tire 
 to surface friction dependent in that there is nothing but the legs to keep 
 the wheels from spreading.
 
 I looked at attaching a 1/8 inch diameter cable to the axle to leg 
 attachment bolt and running it to either the leg attachment bolt in the cage 
 or to the opposite leg just below the socket.  By doing this, the 1.8G 
 improved to 3.9G for the leg attachment bolt, and to 5.2G when connecting to 
 the top of the opposite leg just below the socket.
 
 This may be a good low cost and light weight improvement.  More about how 
 these numbers were calculated can be seen at:
 
 http://www.thirdshift.com/jack/firefly/firefly134.html
 
 When, I get the parts fabricated and installed, I will put up another page. 
 
 Jack B. Hart FF004
 Winchester, IN
 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Sat Oct 06, 2007 7:38 pm    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				> This may be a good low cost and light weight improvement.
 
   > Jack B. Hart FF004
 
 Jack H:
 
 I have a few hours flying the FF, so I consider myself a Fireflyer also.
 
 We horse around with the airplanes at the factory and Sun and Fun, and 
 Oshkosh.  In other words, they get flown hard and to extreme most of the 
 time.  Knock on wood, I have not stalled one in and bent a leg or two. 
 That's the only way they bend, unless you run over an obstacle or through a 
 deep rut or in a hole.  Next time you see Dick Rayhill flying the FSII at 
 OSH or S&F, the gear legs will be bent and sagging.  Reason, he approaches 
 and lands the FS right on the edge of the stall.  Sometimes he screws up and 
 stalls prematurely.  If ya drop it in, the gear legs will bend.
 
 Seems to me putting a cable brace on your gear leg will take most of the 
 flex out of it, then load up a point where stress is concentrated and fail 
 again.
 
 Cables hanging down there also invite noseovers if you should land in the 
 beans, high grass, weeds, or brush.  For sure cotton and corn.  They'll put 
 you on your nose with or without gear leg cable bracing.
 
 As long as i have been flying Kolbs, I still bend gear legs.  Not because 
 they are poorly designed.  They were never designed to be stalled and 
 dropped in a couple feet or more above the ground.  I screwed up and bent a 
 gear leg this summer because I stalled the mkIII too high with a wing low. 
 That will get them quicker than stalling and falling in a wings level 
 attitude where both gear legs are sharing the load.  Looks like you dropped 
 yours in on one leg too.
 
 Let us know how your experiment turns out.
 
 john h
 mkIII
 
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 _________________ John Hauck
 
MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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		1planeguy(at)kilocharlie. Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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		Thom Riddle
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1597 Location: Buffalo, NY, USA (9G0)
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				 Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2007 10:37 am    Post subject: Re: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				Jack,
 
 I very much enjoyed your detailed description of calculations and intended remedy for gear leg bending. Please keep us posted on how that works out.
 
 For what its worth, on my recent stall from a few feet into a pothole at Bob Bean's field which broke the left wheel axle fitting and resulted in me ending the landing upside down, the longer than standard 4130 tubing gear legs were not bent in the process.  This, even when the leg without the axle fitting dug into the ground as I was still moving forward at about 30 mph.
 
 I've become a believer in heat treated 4130 tubing gear legs. I have no idea if they are heavier or lighter than the stock gear legs, which I know is always important to you for staying under 254#.
 [/i]
 
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 _________________ Thom Riddle
 
Buffalo, NY (9G0)
 
 
 
 
Don't worry about old age... it doesn't last very long. 
 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2007 11:19 am    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				the longer than standard 4130 tubing gear legs were not bent in the 
 process.
 
 
 Hi Thom:
 
 To what RC rating were your gear legs heat treated?
 
 I have been using 48 RC since we started experimenting with and using 4130 
 gear legs in 1988, on my FS and mkIII.
 
 IIRC the weight of the mkIII aluminum legs were about the same or a tad more 
 than the 4130 legs.
 
 I use 1 1/8" .120" wall 4130 legs on the mkIII and also on my FS.
 
 In addition, my tailwheel strut is .120" wall 3/4" RC 48.  I think the OD is 
 3/4.
 
 john h
 mkIII
 
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 _________________ John Hauck
 
MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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		jindoguy(at)gmail.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2007 1:02 pm    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				Thom, Of course, the other side of this coin, as Travis reminded me, is that aluminum gear legs save cages. 
 No use speculating on how your arrival would have gone if you'd have had aluminum legs, but I've done some real whack's, straightened the legs that night, and flown the next day. 
 
 Rick
 
 On 10/8/07, John Hauck <jhauck(at)elmore.rr.com (jhauck(at)elmore.rr.com)> wrote:[quote] --> Kolb-List message posted by: "John Hauck" <jhauck(at)elmore.rr.com (jhauck(at)elmore.rr.com)>
 
   the longer than standard 4130 tubing gear legs were not bent in the
 process.
  
 
 Hi Thom:
 
 To what RC rating were your gear legs heat treated?
 
 I have been using 48 RC since we started experimenting with and using 4130
 gear legs in 1988, on my FS and mkIII. 
 
 IIRC the weight of the mkIII aluminum legs were about the same or a tad more
 than the 4130 legs.
 
 I use 1 1/8" .120" wall 4130 legs on the mkIII and also on my FS.
 
 In addition, my tailwheel strut is .120" wall 3/4" RC 48.  I think the OD is 
 when you live at the airport.  [quote][b]
 
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		Thom Riddle
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1597 Location: Buffalo, NY, USA (9G0)
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				 Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2007 5:14 pm    Post subject: Re: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				John,
 
 I have no idea to what RC the legs were heat treated to because it was done by someone else before I bought it. I only know that it was done or the tubes would have buckled in a heartbeat without the heat treating. They look sort of funny because even with the FS empty, they are slightly bowed and have visually obvious negative camber but no toe-in/out that I can tell. When loaded with me and fuel I'm sure it looks even stranger but they track straight and true and don't bounce much at all with imperfect touchdown. I expect that with much use on paved runways, where I'm located, the inside sides of the tires will wear first, then I'll turn them around and wear out the other side.
 
 Great gear legs is all I can say. If my pothole landing did not result in damaged sockets it is unlikely I'll ever have that problem, without breaking a lot more too.
 
 Almost done with the wingtip structural repair. Boom tube is next.
 
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 _________________ Thom Riddle
 
Buffalo, NY (9G0)
 
 
 
 
Don't worry about old age... it doesn't last very long. 
 
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		ElleryWeld(at)aol.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2007 5:25 pm    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				Thom
  What is wrong with your Boom Tube? that you have to do a structural repair on  that sounds  scary
   
  Ellery or Curious George on this one 
   
  do not archive
 
 
   [quote][b]
 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2007 5:37 pm    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				They look sort of funny because even with the FS empty, they are slightly 
 bowed and have visually obvious negative camber
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   --------
  Thom in Buffalo
 
 | 	  
 
 Thom:
 
 The 4130 legs can be pressed straight or a little past straight to give you 
 some positive camber.  Not only does it look much better, but when loaded up 
 from landing forces, the positive camber will get pulled toward neutral 
 camber and load everthing more evenly.
 
 Negative camber makes the airplane look like it just finished making a hard 
 landing.
 
 One can also persuade the axles to bend the wheels back to positive camber 
 by blocking up the gear leg/axle socket, pulling off the wheel, slipping a 
 piece of water pipe over the axle snugly, and stepping on the pipe.  That is 
 how I kept my FS axles happy.
 
 john h
 mkIII
 
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 _________________ John Hauck
 
MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2007 5:52 pm    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				> The 4130 legs can be pressed straight or a little past straight to give 
 you
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   some positive camber.
 
 | 	  
 
 Gang:
 
 Forgot to add something to the last.
 
 Not a good idea to try flying with 4130 gear legs that have not been heat 
 treated.  Prior to heat treating they will be extremely stiff, and bend 
 permanently if stressed to much.
 
 After heat treating the legs become very springy, because they are springs. 
 At 48 RC they make a good spring, but when pushed over the limit, they will 
 bend before they break.  I do not know where that RC number is that will 
 make them brittle.  I have had great luck with 48 RC.
 
 john h
 mkIII
 
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 _________________ John Hauck
 
MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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		Thom Riddle
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1597 Location: Buffalo, NY, USA (9G0)
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				 Posted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 3:30 am    Post subject: Re: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				Ellery (aka Curious George),
 
 Along with the relatively minor wing tip damage, the nose cone was destroyed and the front of the cage was bent as was the left upper longeron, one wing strut bowed, the sacrifical PowerFin prop was destroyed (blades only) and the boom tube broke just aft of the H-truss. Bob Bean repaired the cage before I removed the remains from his place where the incident occurred. The engine is fine and the empenage was untouched. 
 John,
 
 Thanks for the pointers about pre-stressing the 4130 tubes to remove the static negative camber. Once I get the FS flying again next spring, I'll see about fixing that. It DOES look strange.
 
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 _________________ Thom Riddle
 
Buffalo, NY (9G0)
 
 
 
 
Don't worry about old age... it doesn't last very long. 
 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 5:49 am    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				> Along with the relatively minor wing tip damage,  
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   --------
  Thom in Buffalo
  
 | 	  
 
 Thom:
 
 Sounds, to me, like a major accident.
 
 Your FS1 a 5 rib wing?
 
 john h
 mkIII
 
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 _________________ John Hauck
 
MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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		ElleryWeld(at)aol.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 6:18 am    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				Now Im wondering if there wer any survivors sounds like a Total wreck 
   
  Ellery
   
  do not archive
 
 
   [quote][b]
 
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		Thom Riddle
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1597 Location: Buffalo, NY, USA (9G0)
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				 Posted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 6:23 am    Post subject: Re: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				John,
 
 Yes it is a FS1 w/ 5 rib wing. 
 
 When you start listing the damage it sounds worse than it was. One wing received no damage at all nor did the tail. Yes it is a good bit of work to fix but nothing like building from scratch. The only bodily damage to me was very bloody shins from the instrument panel trying to occupy the space reserved for my legs. All healed now.
 
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 _________________ Thom Riddle
 
Buffalo, NY (9G0)
 
 
 
 
Don't worry about old age... it doesn't last very long. 
 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 7:06 am    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				 	  | Quote: | 	 		   When you start listing the damage it sounds worse than it was.
  --------
  Thom in Buffalo
 
 | 	  
 Thom:
 
 I have to disagree with you.
 
 The damage you describe indicates the FS took some tremendous hits.  The 
 tailboom does not snap unless there was another action that caused it.  Did 
 the tailboom fail laterally or vertically?
 
 If it failed laterally toward the tip of the wing that took the hit, I have 
 no idea how much stress was placed on the wing prior to the tailboom 
 failing.
 
 The ribs of the FS were constructed of .028" wall 5/16" 6061.  Five of the 
 little rib noses carry the flight loads.  If they decide to come out of 
 column, the leading edge will possibly fail up and rearward to the main 
 spar.
 
 The reason I am concerned is because this is what happened to my own FS in 
 flight.
 
 On two occassions, that I can remember, I got the right wing tip.  Was able 
 to repair it both times without removing all the fabric.  To have more than 
 perceived damage in the wing never concerned me until after I survived a 
 failure of both wing leading edges.  The right wing failed (which had been 
 previously damaged and repaired), followed almost simultaneously by the left 
 wing.
 
 I might add, I never had a 5" tailboom fail on me, but I did snap a 6" 
 tailboom when I crashed on the tip of the left wing, which took all the 
 initial impact.  It failed left and toward the left wing tip.
 
 Might be a good idea to consider some suggestions I made recently to insure 
 there is more than adquate lateral bracing of the leading edges of both 
 wings.
 
 I never considered a wing failure on my FS until it was too late.  The 
 thought of flying the way I did, back then, on those little wings, still 
 scares me.  It has been more than 17 years ago.
 
 Give me a call and we can discuss this in more detail if you wish.
 
 john h
 mkIII
 
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 _________________ John Hauck
 
MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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		rrhoyt_list(at)msn.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 7:32 am    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				<?xml:namespace prefix="v" /><?xml:namespace prefix="o" /><![endif]-->  Jack
   
  One of the energy absorption features of the spreading struts is the  scrubbing of the tires on the ground for spring strut planes like the Cesnas.  This is the principal dampening mechanism for the bouncing of the plane  down the runway during landing.
   
  If you are seriously looking at the design of wheel struts, take a look at  "Landing Gear Design For Light Aircraft" Vol I by Ladislao Pazmany, ISBN  0-9616777-0-8. Chapter 9 will walk you through the FAA  FAR23  requirements.  While you don’t need to meet these requirements you should  understand their implications.
  [quote]   ---
 
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		Thom Riddle
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1597 Location: Buffalo, NY, USA (9G0)
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				 Posted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 9:35 am    Post subject: Re: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				John H,
 
 I truly appreciate your comments. I know you are looking out for me and sharing your experience graciously. Thanks. Attached are the photos of the damaged areas, including the right wing tip, the nose, and the boom tube.
 
 Bob Bean witnessed the arrival so he may be in a position to add to this conversation. I understand why the boom broke the way it did but could not communicate it effectively to Bob Bean even when he saw the whole thing so I'm not sure I can communicate it to you and the rest of the group.
 
 Picture this, if you can:
 You have a long stick with heavy weights on each end (boom tube with empenage on one end and cage etc. on other end). Somewhere sort of near the middle of the stick you have two smaller sticks(gear legs) attached to it that extend downwards as the stick is falling (more or less horizontally). Remember I stalled 2-3 feet above the ground. The two sticks attached to the big stick hits the ground first and the momentum of the heavy weights on each end want to keep going when the short sticks stop dropping downward. The result is a tremendous bending moment in the middle of the big stick. One of the photos shows where the big stick gave up the effort to resist the bending moment.... at the aft end of the H-truss.
 
 The wing tip damage was confined to the outer most full rib, the stabilizing tubes going from the end of the main spar and the wing tip bow, the two most outbard false ribs, the wing tip bow and about two feet of the leading edge tube. All of the full ribs have the aluminum angle braces at the upper and lower camber going from the main spar to the leading edge tube. The new full rib I bought from Travis did not come with the angles but I'm adding them to the replaced full rib. I thought they would have come with the rib but they did not.
 
 I've already done prop flange run-out check and closely examined the gearbox for cracks and it is clean. No damage to the engine nor the tail nor the left wing except for a slight bow in the left wing strut, which will be replaced.
 Any more thoughts on this you might have will be welcome.
 
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 _________________ Thom Riddle
 
Buffalo, NY (9G0)
 
 
 
 
Don't worry about old age... it doesn't last very long. 
 
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		APilot(at)webtv.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 12:25 pm    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				I have tried the cables between the wheel axles on a Mark III Classic.
 They work great.  I am sure that some cruising speed is lost.  I intend
 to put a fairing over them.  I now use one 7/64" and two 1/16" cables so
 that they will break at different times when overstressed.  On one
 landing recently, I did not account for the wind gradient cause by a 25
 mph headwind and dropped it in hard.  Both 7/64" tension wires ripped,
 but the gear leg did not bend.  That proved a point to me.  Most agree
 that wheel landings are the way to go.  I definitely agree.  These hard
 landings are probably having a negative effect on the boom tube.  I was
 wondering how to inspect it. Vic in Sacramento
 
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		capedavis(at)yahoo.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 12:37 pm    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				John , Just a question after reading the distuction of those "tiny wings" on your firestar, I take it I don't remember but you had a5 rib Firestar didn't you ?how do the wings on a Firefly compare to a 5 rib fire star ? I know they are a lot longer but being so what do you think ? Just asking before I order , Your friend , Chris 
 
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		John Hauck
 
  
  Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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				 Posted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 12:41 pm    Post subject: FireFly Landing Gear Leg Strength Improvement | 
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				> Picture this, if you can:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   You have a long stick with heavy weights on each end (boom tube with 
  empenage on one end and cage etc. on other end). Somewhere sort of near 
  the middle of the stick you have two smaller sticks(gear legs) attached to 
  it that extend downwards as the stick is falling (more or less 
  horizontally). Remember I stalled 2-3 feet above the ground. The two 
  sticks attached to the big stick hits the ground first and the momentum of 
  the heavy weights on each end want to keep going when the short sticks 
  stop dropping downward. The result is a tremendous bending moment in the 
  middle of the big stick. One of the photos shows where the big stick gave 
  up the effort to resist the bending moment.... at the aft end of the 
  H-truss.
 
  The wing tip damage was confined to the outer most full rib, the 
  stabilizing tubes going from the end of the main spar and the wing tip 
  bow, the two most outbard false ribs, the wing tip bow and about two feet 
  of the leading edge tube. All of the full ribs have the aluminum angle 
  braces at the upper and lower camber going from the main spar to the 
  leading edge tube. The new full rib I bought from Travis did not come with 
  the angles but I'm adding them to the replaced full rib. I thought they 
  would have come with the rib but they did not.
 
  > --------
 | 	  
 
 
 Thom:
 
 Looks like you have it all figured out.
 
 Let me be blunt, if I may.
 
 Based on what little experience I have crashing Kolbs, your crash rates 
 right up there with a hard, very serious crash.  You are lucky you walked 
 away with only bruised shins.
 
 Your idea of how the airplane is set up is somewhat askew from mine.  The 
 tailboom butts up against the gear leg sockets into a steel ring that is 
 welded to them.  The legs are inside these sockets.  They are at the forward 
 end, not in the middle.  The center of the H brace is about (WAG) 1/4 to 1/3 
 of the boom from the forward end.
 
 The tailsection is not that heavy, acts to dampen some of the inertia during 
 a crash as it moves through the air laterally.
 
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  From the looks of the right wing tip, that is what stopped the forward 
 motion, in conjunction with the nose of the fuselage.  This is based on 
 | 	  
 damage I see in your photos.  If the gear legs and/or their sockets did not 
 fail rearward in the crash, it was because the airplane was on its nose and 
 right wing tip.  The gear legs probably did not dig in.  When the legs made 
 contact with the ground, the tail came up and the nose and right wing tip 
 contacted and stuck in the ground.  I am familiar with the terrain at Bob's 
 airstrip.  I think the soil and sod would be perfect to stop a good crash. 
    That wing tip is 12+ feet from the fuselage, a very long lever.  The 
 photo indicates the nose and the wing tip stopped suddenly.  Even though you 
 were only a couple feet in the air, as you say, I think you had already 
 stalled the aircraft higher and did not realize it.  This is a very common 
 experience for Kolb pilots, even though they may be very experienced 
 aviators.  The other major component was your forward speed, coupled with 
 your vertical speed, resulting in a very hard crash.
 
 My thoughts and experience only, for what it is worth.
 
 Personally, I would not fly this airplane until I had pulled the fabric and 
 gone through both wings, not only to insure integrity of standard 
 components, but to also beef up lateral bracing of the leading edge.  Those 
 rib bays are very big.  At the center of the rib bay the leading edge is 
 drilled top and bottom for a false rib that adds no significant strength to 
 the wing.  If anything, it tends to set up this point for failure.  The 
 drilled leading edge is also .028", which is weakened by the drilling.  The 
 center of the rib bay between the 2d and 3d rib from the outboard end is the 
 weakest point of the wing.  That is exactly where the failure of both my 
 right and left wing was initiated.
 
 I won't try to tell you what to do, but wanted to share my experience and 
 thoughts with you.  I have personally experienced the demise of all three of 
 my airplanes, more than once, while sitting in the pilot's seat.  Not 
 bragging.  Trying to prevent someone else from duplicating my mistakes.
 
 Take care,
 
 john h
 mkIII
 
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 _________________ John Hauck
 
MKIII/912ULS
 
hauck's holler
 
Titus, Alabama | 
			 
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