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#1
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When I stepped on the wing of my Cherokee 235 today, the strut went
completely flat. I got underneath the wing and lifted the plane back up to a normal strut position where it stayed until I put any weight on it; again it went completely flat. I pushed it back up one more time and put my air gauge on it. I measured 200 psi in the strut so I assumed the lower o-ring went bad and I needed to get a strut seal kit. Again I put weight on the strut and it flopped right back down to bottoming out against the landing gear. While looking for the parts on line I came across Granvilles' Strut Seal. I have never heard of this and am wondering if anyone has had any experience with it. Also welcome is any other input you may have regarding Piper main gear struts and replacement of the o-rings, or other workarounds available to avoid needing to replace them. When I extended the strut after collapse I did notice a small amount of fluid on the oleo which is leading me to believe the lower end went bad. The only thing that confuses me is how there could be such a high air pressure in the strut if it could completely collapse. Wouldn't the air/nitrogen escape out of the strut as well? TIA for any responses. z |
#2
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References:
In-Reply-To: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Lines: 45 Message-ID: . net Date: Mon, 29 Aug 2005 22:36:52 GMT NNTP-Posting-Host: 64.105.84.174 X-Complaints-To: X-Trace: newsread2.news.atl.earthlink.net 1125355012 64.105.84.174 (Mon, 29 Aug 2005 15:36:52 PDT) NNTP-Posting-Date: Mon, 29 Aug 2005 15:36:52 PDT Organization: EarthLink Inc. -- http://www.EarthLink.net Xref: number1.nntp.dca.giganews.com rec.aviation.owning:169639 Struts on a Piper main usually run 210 lbs. unloaded (strut fully extended). This rises to around 550lbs at "normal" height. Yes, you could have an upper air leak. More likely (if you have noticed seepage) is that the main lower seals are wearing. You could have both. If you see a small puddle, its usually the main lowers. No puddle and it may be the upper seal washer OR the valve core itself. Don't try to use automotive cores, they are not made for this application and pressure range. Granville will help seeping lower seals to soften up and seal again. Given the low cost of new seals (less than $100 for all 3 on a Cherokee), I opted to just replace the seals. A messy 1/2 day job made easier if the plane is up on jacks. Also, putting in Granville requires a bit of work. Since mine were 25+ years old, that was the clincher for replacement. Good Luck, Mike zatatime wrote: When I stepped on the wing of my Cherokee 235 today, the strut went completely flat. I got underneath the wing and lifted the plane back up to a normal strut position where it stayed until I put any weight on it; again it went completely flat. I pushed it back up one more time and put my air gauge on it. I measured 200 psi in the strut so I assumed the lower o-ring went bad and I needed to get a strut seal kit. Again I put weight on the strut and it flopped right back down to bottoming out against the landing gear. While looking for the parts on line I came across Granvilles' Strut Seal. I have never heard of this and am wondering if anyone has had any experience with it. Also welcome is any other input you may have regarding Piper main gear struts and replacement of the o-rings, or other workarounds available to avoid needing to replace them. When I extended the strut after collapse I did notice a small amount of fluid on the oleo which is leading me to believe the lower end went bad. The only thing that confuses me is how there could be such a high air pressure in the strut if it could completely collapse. Wouldn't the air/nitrogen escape out of the strut as well? TIA for any responses. z |
#3
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On Mon, 29 Aug 2005 22:36:52 GMT, Mike Spera
wrote: Struts on a Piper main usually run 210 lbs. unloaded (strut fully extended). This rises to around 550lbs at "normal" height. Yes, you could have an upper air leak. More likely (if you have noticed seepage) is that the main lower seals are wearing. You could have both. If you see a small puddle, its usually the main lowers. No puddle and it may be the upper seal washer OR the valve core itself. Don't try to use automotive cores, they are not made for this application and pressure range. Granville will help seeping lower seals to soften up and seal again. Given the low cost of new seals (less than $100 for all 3 on a Cherokee), I opted to just replace the seals. A messy 1/2 day job made easier if the plane is up on jacks. Also, putting in Granville requires a bit of work. Since mine were 25+ years old, that was the clincher for replacement. Good Luck, Mike Thanks for the info. Ordered a seal kit today and after reading the manual it doesn't seem like too bad a job. z |
#4
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sounds as if the strut is out of oil
jon |
#5
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When the new seals are installed, you might wish to put the recommended
amount of Granville's in with the new hydrualic fluid to fill it up. It will help keep your new seals in better condition for longer time than hydraulic fluid alone, and also help avoid the dreaded Piper "sticky strut syndrome". I used to think Granville's was snake oil too, until after seeing it work great in about a half dozen different planes. Rumor has it that a small amount of automotive power steering fluid sealer & treatment works just about as well as Granville's, but of course none of us here would ever dream of putting any unapproved substances into our certificated airplane oleo struts, lest it make the wings fall off or cause premature impotence or something like that. zatatime wrote: On Mon, 29 Aug 2005 22:36:52 GMT, Mike Spera wrote: Struts on a Piper main usually run 210 lbs. unloaded (strut fully extended). This rises to around 550lbs at "normal" height. Yes, you could have an upper air leak. More likely (if you have noticed seepage) is that the main lower seals are wearing. You could have both. If you see a small puddle, its usually the main lowers. No puddle and it may be the upper seal washer OR the valve core itself. Don't try to use automotive cores, they are not made for this application and pressure range. Granville will help seeping lower seals to soften up and seal again. Given the low cost of new seals (less than $100 for all 3 on a Cherokee), I opted to just replace the seals. A messy 1/2 day job made easier if the plane is up on jacks. Also, putting in Granville requires a bit of work. Since mine were 25+ years old, that was the clincher for replacement. Good Luck, Mike Thanks for the info. Ordered a seal kit today and after reading the manual it doesn't seem like too bad a job. z |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Cherokee Strut Lower Strut Seal Replacement Report | Mike Spera | Owning | 3 | July 23rd 05 07:07 PM |