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#1
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I found my nose gear door detached from the linkage while preflighting
at Boeing Field. In theory all I needed was a phillips head screwdriver, but I had to disassemble the end of the linkage to get to it, which required removing a cotter pin. Leatherman to the rescue! Of course now I'm thinking paranoid thoughts about more elaborate toolkits for the plane, and just how much such a kit would shift my CG... -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#2
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Ben Jackson wrote:
Of course now I'm thinking paranoid thoughts about more elaborate toolkits for the plane, and just how much such a kit would shift my CG... I think you will find that you can put a decent one together that weighs less than 10 pounds. Mine was a small plastic tool box with little compartments in the lid. I kept an assortment of fasteners, cotter pins, and a few feet of safety wire there. Inside was a tailwheel tube, one landing light bulb, an el-cheapo wire twister from Aircraft Spruce, a Crescent wrench, a pair of needle-nose pliers, a can of 3-in-1, and one of those screwdrivers with a million bits. George Patterson Why do men's hearts beat faster, knees get weak, throats become dry, and they think irrationally when a woman wears leather clothing? Because she smells like a new truck. |
#3
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Ben Jackson wrote:
Of course now I'm thinking paranoid thoughts about more elaborate toolkits for the plane, and just how much such a kit would shift my CG... I have a small kit about he size of a lunch box with: Pliers: needlenose and vice grips. A small open end wrench kit A small socket set. A multi-tipped screwdriver kit. Duct Tape (although I regretted that one: long story). Over the years, I might have added: Safety wire, and pliers A spark plug socke. Depending on your plane you might throw in a few bulbs or valve cover gaskets, or whatever you think you might need. Has saved the day a couple of times. |
#4
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![]() Ben Jackson wrote: I found my nose gear door detached from the linkage while preflighting at Boeing Field. In theory all I needed was a phillips head screwdriver, but I had to disassemble the end of the linkage to get to it, which required removing a cotter pin. Leatherman to the rescue! Of course now I'm thinking paranoid thoughts about more elaborate toolkits for the plane, and just how much such a kit would shift my CG... -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ No need to get paranoid or having your CG to shift. Just a leatherman, duct-tape, some tie-raps and superglue. Thats all you need for most (simple)repairs. I know, it sounds a bit A-team style but it works. -Kees |
#5
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re Leatherman saving the day: I read an article several years ago
that I should have clipped and saved. It was a story about three guys in a small helicopter, probably a Hiller 12 or Bell 47, that were doing forestry work or something similar in high country. The machine suddenly started climbing and the pilot had to apply full throttle to keep the RPM in the green, and had lost collective control because an unsafetied nut had fallen off the bolt connecting the collective rod to the swash plate and the bolt had departed. The CP caused the system to go full up. Here's the problem: reducing throttle to come down would result in massive RPM loss, and since centrifugal forces are crucial to keeping the blades out straight, this wasn't an option. Full throttle uses up the limited fuel at an alarming rate. Running out of fuel means no autorotation, since the collective can't be reduced. Prepare to die, or fix the problem. One of the forestry guys, after being briefed by the pilot who could see what had happened through that big canopy, climbed out and stood on the structure, and somehow managed to get the collective rod reconnected to the swash plate using the awl of his Leatherman as a bolt. He stayed there and held it in place, with all that machinery whirling over his head, several thousand feet up, balanced on a steel tube, while the pilot brought the thing to earth. This must be somewhere on the 'net. I wouldn't know where. Dan |
#6
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See that. I should have Googled it *first*:
http://home.earthlink.net/~quade/leatherman.html http://www.avweb.com/news/safety/183041-1.html Same story, two sources. More are listed.Seems to be true enough. Dan |
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