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Glasair-List Digest: 1 Msgs - 04/14/10

 
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glasairpilot(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Thu Apr 15, 2010 11:59 am    Post subject: Glasair-List Digest: 1 Msgs - 04/14/10 Reply with quote

I too have noticed "shimmy" when Aircraft Spruce changed over to the Chinese nose tire (Shin). Keeping it inflated to the max helps a lot. (I replaced the friction pad last year too, which helped a lot. 3000 hrs.)

Where does one get a balancer?

Are there alternative sources for this tire. Desser? I forget the size of the nose gear just now, but I see Desser has oddball sizes.
http://www.desser.com/tailwheel.shtml
Would be worth paying a little more to have the smoothness.

Mike Palmer <><

Quote:
----------------------

1. 08:15 AM - GL 11 FT nose wheel. (Craymondw(at)aol.com)



________________________________ Message 1 _____________________________________


Time: 08:15:29 AM PST US
From: Craymondw(at)aol.com
Subject: GL 11 FT nose wheel.

I have always had a vibration from my nose strut and as the tire wore down
it would become even more noticeable. When I related this to an A&P he
asked if I balanced my nose wheel? So I decided to purchase a new tire, mount

it and have it balanced. This tiny wheel took well over four ounces to
balance!! Another hint is that Chin tires are notorious for being out of round

so be sure to check for the tire being out of round. After installing the
wheel assembly and test flying the plane, for the first time I felt I was
landing on glass!!
I have been reporting on my new Blended Foil prop and was able to
adjust the hub to get it up to 2750 RPM. After making that adjustment the new

prop had so much P factor I could hardly keep the plane on the center line
when I added full power. Witnesses say the plane only rolls a short distance
before it appears to leap off the runway. After take off I have to apply
full right rudder and aileron to keep the plane and haven't seen that since I

flew my little 215 Hp S1S Pitts Special. The increased cruise performance
appears to be keeping in the added 15 to 20 mph ground speed along with a
higher rate of climb. With these warmer temperatures I have been noticing
that my oil temperatures have been running hotter than usual with this new
prop. Before the new prop my oil temperature ranged between 190 to 200
degrees during the summer months. But with the upper seventy to low eighty degree

outside temps I am now flying in I am seeing oil temps in the 200/215
range at altitudes below 3,000 feet. I find slowing the plane down before
entering the airport traffic area to 100 mph the oil temperature shoots up. But

if I keep the cruise up to over 140 mph and slow the plane down in the
down wind the oil temp doesn't shoot up as quickly. I haven't been able to
figure out if this is because the new prop works the engine harder or if
because of the design that less air is blown into the cowling. One other hint

in keeping cylinder and oil temps down on climb out is to maintain full
throttle on injected engines. There is a jet in the throttle body that dumps
extra fuel on full throttle. To reduce power use your prop control on climb
out. After take off and reaching 600 feet I adjust the RPM back to 2550 RPM
and climb another few hundred feet and adjust it to 2450 rpm before setting
everything when I reach my cruise settings and altitude and have found
that keeps my temperatures cooler.











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bgray(at)glasair.org
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PostPosted: Thu Apr 15, 2010 12:10 pm    Post subject: Glasair-List Digest: 1 Msgs - 04/14/10 Reply with quote

Take your wheel to a motorcycle shop.

Bruce
www.Glasair.org

--


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Craymondw(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Thu Apr 15, 2010 4:22 pm    Post subject: Glasair-List Digest: 1 Msgs - 04/14/10 Reply with quote

The Chin tire costs about $18. Aircraft Spruce has a premium tire for $46.00.

In a message dated 4/15/2010 3:59:50 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, glasairpilot(at)cox.net writes:
Quote:
--> Glasair-List message posted by: <glasairpilot(at)cox.net>

I too have noticed "shimmy" when Aircraft Spruce changed over to the Chinese nose tire (Shin). Keeping it inflated to the max helps a lot. (I replaced the friction pad last year too, which helped a lot. 3000 hrs.)

Where does one get a balancer?

Are there alternative sources for this tire. Desser? I forget the size of the nose gear just now, but I see Desser has oddball sizes.
http://www.desser.com/tailwheel.shtml
Would be worth paying a little more to have the smoothness.

Mike Palmer <><

Quote:
----------------------

  1. 08:15 AM - GL 11 FT nose wheel. (Craymondw(at)aol.com)



________________________________ Message 1 _____________________________________


Time: 08:15:29 AM PST US
From: Craymondw(at)aol.com
Subject: Glasair-List: GL 11 FT nose wheel.

I have always had a vibration from my nose strut and as the tire wore down
it would become even more noticeable. When I related this to an A&P he
asked if I balanced my nose wheel? So I decided to purchase a new tire, mount

it and have it balanced. This tiny wheel took well over four ounces to
balance!! Another hint is that Chin tires are notorious for being out of round

so be sure to check for the tire being out of round. After installing the
wheel assembly and test flying the plane, for the first time I felt I was
landing on glass!!
I have been reporting on my new Blended Foil prop and was able to
adjust the hub to get it up to 2750 RPM. After making that adjustment the new

prop had so much P factor I could hardly keep the plane on the center line
when I added full power. Witnesses say the plane only  rolls a short distance
before it appears to leap off the runway. After take off I have to apply
full right rudder and aileron to keep the plane and haven't seen that since I

flew my little 215 Hp S1S Pitts Special. The increased cruise performance
appears to be keeping in the added 15 to 20 mph ground speed along with a
higher rate of climb. With these warmer temperatures I have been noticing
that my oil temperatures have been running hotter than usual with this new
prop. Before the new prop my oil temperature ranged between 190 to 200
degrees during the summer months. But with the upper seventy to low eighty degree

outside temps I am now flying in I am seeing oil temps in the 200/215
range at altitudes below 3,000  feet. I find slowing the plane down before
entering the airport traffic area to 100 mph the oil temperature shoots up. But

if I keep the cruise up to over 140 mph and slow the plane down in the
down wind the oil temp doesn't shoot up as quickly. I haven't been able to
figure out if this is because the new prop works the engine harder or if
because of the design that less  air is blown into the cowling. One other hint

in keeping cylinder and oil temps down on climb out is to maintain full
throttle on injected engines. There is a jet in the throttle body that dumps
extra fuel on full throttle. To reduce power use your prop control on climb
out. After take off and reaching 600 feet I adjust the RPM back to 2550 RPM
and climb another few hundred feet and adjust it to 2450 rpm before setting
everything when I reach my cruise settings and altitude and have found
that keeps my temperatures cooler.








========================e the ties Day ================================================ - MATRONICS WEB FORUMS ================================================ - List Contribution Web Site sp;   ===================================================


[quote][b]


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Use the List Feature Navigator to browse the many List utilities available such as the Email Subscriptions page, Archive Search & Download, 7-Day Browse, Chat, FAQ, Photoshare, and much more:

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Craymondw(at)aol.com
Guest





PostPosted: Thu Apr 15, 2010 4:22 pm    Post subject: Glasair-List Digest: 1 Msgs - 04/14/10 Reply with quote

The A&P that balanced my nose wheel used a rod that slid through the inner races. The rod had two conical shaped attachments that screwed up against both inner races. The outer ends of the rod had bearings that rested between two tripods. After setting the wheel in the jig the tire's heavy end spun down and by trial and error, he was able to stick on the exact weight onto the rim to balance it. I have seen these wheel balancers I think, in Aircraft Tool Supply company catalogs. I rolled out the tire over a yard stick and found it only rolls 34 inches to complete one revolution. If you factor in how many revolutions that tire makes between 65 mph and even 20 mph, it wouldn't surprise me if the four ounces out of balance my wheel was and considering centrifugal force dynamics, that four ounces could factor out to be several hundred pounds of out of balance force.
t
In a message dated 4/15/2010 4:10:27 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, bgray(at)glasair.org writes:
Quote:
--> Glasair-List message posted by: "Bruce Gray" <bgray(at)glasair.org>

Take your wheel to a motorcycle shop.

Bruce
www.Glasair.org

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-glasair-list-server(at)matronics.com
[mailto:owner-glasair-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of
glasairpilot(at)cox.net
Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2010 3:29 PM
To: glasair-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Glasair-List Digest: 1 Msgs - 04/14/10

--> Glasair-List message posted by: <glasairpilot(at)cox.net>

I too have noticed "shimmy" when Aircraft Spruce changed over to the
Chinese nose tire (Shin). Keeping it inflated to the max helps a lot. (I
replaced the friction pad last year too, which helped a lot. 3000 hrs.)

Where does one get a balancer?

Are there alternative sources for this tire. Desser? I forget the size
of the nose gear just now, but I see Desser has oddball sizes.
http://www.desser.com/tailwheel.shtml
Would be worth paying a little more to have the smoothness.

Mike Palmer <><

Quote:
----------------------

  1. 08:15 AM - GL 11 FT nose wheel. (Craymondw(at)aol.com)



________________________________ Message 1
_____________________________________

Quote:


Time: 08:15:29 AM PST US
From: Craymondw(at)aol.com
Subject: GL 11 FT nose wheel.

I have always had a vibration from my nose strut and as the tire wore
down

Quote:
it would become even more noticeable. When I related this to an A&P
he

Quote:
asked if I balanced my nose wheel? So I decided to purchase a new
tire, mount

Quote:

it and have it balanced. This tiny wheel took well over four ounces
to

Quote:
balance!! Another hint is that Chin tires are notorious for being out
of round

Quote:

so be sure to check for the tire being out of round. After installing
the

Quote:
wheel assembly and test flying the plane, for the first time I felt I
was

Quote:
landing on glass!!
I have been reporting on my new Blended Foil prop and was able to
adjust the hub to get it up to 2750 RPM. After making that adjustment
the new

Quote:

prop had so much P factor I could hardly keep the plane on the center
line

Quote:
when I added full power. Witnesses say the plane only rolls a short
distance

Quote:
before it appears to leap off the runway. After take off I have to
apply

Quote:
full right rudder and aileron to keep the plane and haven't seen that
since I

Quote:

flew my little 215 Hp S1S Pitts Special. The increased cruise
performance

Quote:
appears to be keeping in the added 15 to 20 mph ground speed along
with a

Quote:
higher rate of climb. With these warmer temperatures I have  been
noticing

Quote:
that my oil temperatures have been running hotter than usual with
this new

Quote:
prop. Before the new prop my oil temperature ranged between 190 to
200

Quote:
degrees during the summer months. But with the upper seventy to low
eighty degree

Quote:

outside temps I am now flying in I am seeing oil temps in the
200/215

Quote:
range at altitudes below 3,000 feet. I find slowing the plane down
before

Quote:
entering the airport traffic area to 100 mph the oil temperature
shoots up. But

Quote:

if I keep the cruise up to over 140 mph and slow the plane down in
the

Quote:
down wind the oil temp doesn't shoot  up as quickly. I haven't been
able to

Quote:
figure out if this is because the new prop works the engine harder or
if

Quote:
because of the design that less air is blown into the cowling. One
other hint

Quote:

in keeping cylinder and oil temps down on climb out is to maintain
full

Quote:
throttle on injected engines. There is a jet in the throttle body
that dumps

Quote:
extra fuel on full throttle. To reduce power use your prop control on
climb

Quote:
out. After take off and reaching 600 feet I adjust the RPM back to
2550 RPM

Quote:
and climb another few hundred feet and adjust it to 2450 rpm before
setting

Quote:
everything when I reach my cruise settings and altitude and have
found

Quote:
that keeps my temperatures cooler.








========================bsp; e the ties Day ================================================ - MATRONICS WEB FORUMS ================================================ - List Contribution Web Site sp;   ===================================================


[quote][b]


- The Matronics Glasair-List Email Forum -
 

Use the List Feature Navigator to browse the many List utilities available such as the Email Subscriptions page, Archive Search & Download, 7-Day Browse, Chat, FAQ, Photoshare, and much more:

http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Glasair-List
Back to top
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