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Old December 1st 08, 04:54 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
DRN
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Default Club Class Gliders

On Dec 1, 10:20*am, JJ Sinclair wrote:
On Dec 1, 4:49*am, Andy wrote:



On Nov 30, 2:45*pm, Sam Giltner wrote:


Lubrication was definitely needed!
I recommend that all older Club Class gliders have these bearings
inspected at the next annual. *Thanks, 5U


What type of bearing was it? *Schleicher uses 2 types of rod end
bearings, those with metal seals and those with felt seals. *I know no
way to effectively lubricate the hard sealed bearings but do put a
token amount of lubricant on those I can reach. *The felt sealed
bearings are both easy to lubricate and also very poorly sealed
against contamination. * I lubricate all the ones I can reach but
there are several that cannot be reached without cutting the glider
open.


In my opinion they are best left alone. *If holes have to be cut to
lubricate them I'd rather wait the 30 years until they develop play
then replace them.


Any expert opinions out there? *JJ?


Andy


Hi Sam & Andy,
Our glass slippers are full of bearings that can't be lubed or even
seen without cutting holes. The factory knows this and I assume they
are OK with not ever lubing some bearings, or until a real problem
arises. Older Venti's will develope stiff ailerons due in part to a
hidden bearing that needs lube in the wings. I have a long plastic
tube that fits the spray-can lube nozzle and I'll fish it in as far as
I can see with my 12 volt light also on a long goose-neck and give
everything a shot to loosen the factory grease. That's all we can do
outside of cutting holes. Like I said, the factory must be OK with
this and I only start drilling when the screeching becomes unbearable
or the control becomes stiff.
Hope this helps,
JJ


JJ knows this, but for those that do not...

Older Venti have an innovative ground-breaking (read damn-
peculiar and given up on later models) drive system for the
flaperons, using a cam-follower. Now, the track that the cam
rides in is lined with teflon. Unfortunate lubrication of said track
attracts every bit of dust and fiber-grinding-debris in the wing and
results in stiff control operation and abrasion of the teflon track.

Don't go blasting lubrication in there...

Hope this helps,
See ya, Dave "YO electric"