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Old July 21st 05, 10:49 PM
SteveR SteveR is offline
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First recorded activity by AviationBanter: Jul 2005
Location: Dallas, TX
Posts: 8
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I had one of the local prop shop guys come by today and check my hub torque. He gave it a good twist using an ~18" rod, and it didn't budge. I torqued it to approximately 150ft/lbs using my torque wrench, so that is where it is still at, AND where the safety bolt holes line up. There is no way they are going to line up if it is torqued another 50ft/lbs. The prop shop guy said it seemed plenty tight to him, and he thought it was fine.

Should I just leave it at ~150ft/lbs?

Thanks,

Steve Ruse

Quote:
Originally Posted by SteveR
I installed the hub last night, although my torque wrench doesn't go all the
way to 200ft/lbs, so I only torqued it to about 150-160ft/lbs. Interestingly enough, that is where the holes in the hub and crank lined up. I am planning on going to a prop shop today to have them torque it to 200ft/lbs, but I am nearly positive that will just make the holes NOT line up. I should have marked the hole the safety bolt was in before I took it apart. I bet that is he hole that lined up at 150ft/lbs, as there are only two holes in the crank that this bolt will fit in, and it was in one of them before I took it apart. I don't think adding another 50ft/lbs is going to turn the hub exactly 90 degrees, which is what it would take to line up the other holes.

Hope that makes sense without reading it eight times...

I did coat the threads and tapered surface with anti-seize compound. That
was used last time it was assembled, and I saw that in a service manual
somewhere too. There were no cracks that I could see with the naked eye, I
did check it closely. Next time I'll probably magnaflux it.

Thanks for the tips, I'm not sure what to do at this point, leave it at 150ft/lbs, or go to 220ft/lbs or so to see if it will line up with another hole for the safety bolt. Hopefully the prop shop or someone here will shed some light on it.

Steve Ruse
N6383J - KFTW