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Folks:
First let me say that I know well that everything is supposed to be in double shear. Lord knows I have busted my butt to make sure everything is in double shear. But. I have a portion of my aileron circuit that has a fork fitting to provide the requisite double shear. However the bolt hole in the crank is seeing some misalignment and is starting to wallow the hole. I really, really should replace the fork fitting with a rod end (i.e. it never should have been a fork fitting to begin with, it was a spur- of-the-moment fix that was really just a band-aid). But the crank being driven by the fork is going to be impossible to replace with a two-armed crank that can nest a rod end. So, I am faced with the possibility of using a rod end in single shear. I know that this is viewed as being undesirable, as the bearing can be popped out of the eye under certain conditions. I also know that the traditional trick to compensate for this is to use a 970 washer (large area washer) on the outer end of the bolt holding the rod end, such that if the bearing leaves the eye the washer prevents the rod from departing the scene. Now, with all of that said, here's my question: How bad is it really to have the rod end in single shear if I do the washer trick? It's an aileron rod, I do not think it sees much load at all--certainly far, far short of it's rated load. I have seen several planes out there with rod ends in single shear, so it can't be complete suicide . . . right? No? Thank you for your thoughts. Steve. |
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On Tue, 25 Sep 2007 21:58:46 -0700, "Steve S."
wrote: Folks: First let me say that I know well that everything is supposed to be in double shear. Lord knows I have busted my butt to make sure everything is in double shear. But. I have a portion of my aileron circuit that has a fork fitting to provide the requisite double shear. However the bolt hole in the crank is seeing some misalignment and is starting to wallow the hole. I really, really should replace the fork fitting with a rod end (i.e. it never should have been a fork fitting to begin with, it was a spur- of-the-moment fix that was really just a band-aid). But the crank being driven by the fork is going to be impossible to replace with a two-armed crank that can nest a rod end. Now, with all of that said, here's my question: How bad is it really to have the rod end in single shear if I do the washer trick? It's an aileron rod, I do not think it sees much load at all--certainly far, far short of it's rated load. I have seen several planes out there with rod ends in single shear, so it can't be complete suicide . . . right? No? Thank you for your thoughts. I have a number of them that have been in service for over 20 years, all with the large washer. Works for me. Ed Sullivan, Jungster II |
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Ed Sullivan wrote:
On Tue, 25 Sep 2007 21:58:46 -0700, "Steve S." wrote: Folks: First let me say that I know well that everything is supposed to be in double shear. Lord knows I have busted my butt to make sure everything is in double shear. But. I have a portion of my aileron circuit that has a fork fitting to provide the requisite double shear. However the bolt hole in the crank is seeing some misalignment and is starting to wallow the hole. I really, really should replace the fork fitting with a rod end (i.e. it never should have been a fork fitting to begin with, it was a spur- of-the-moment fix that was really just a band-aid). But the crank being driven by the fork is going to be impossible to replace with a two-armed crank that can nest a rod end. Now, with all of that said, here's my question: How bad is it really to have the rod end in single shear if I do the washer trick? It's an aileron rod, I do not think it sees much load at all--certainly far, far short of it's rated load. I have seen several planes out there with rod ends in single shear, so it can't be complete suicide . . . right? No? Thank you for your thoughts. I have a number of them that have been in service for over 20 years, all with the large washer. Works for me. Ed Sullivan, Jungster II Long as teh arm and bolt are stiff enough not to deform - who cares... |
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On Sep 26, 12:34 am, cavelamb himself wrote:
Ed Sullivan wrote: On Tue, 25 Sep 2007 21:58:46 -0700, "Steve S." wrote: Folks: First let me say that I know well that everything is supposed to be in double shear. Lord knows I have busted my butt to make sure everything is in double shear. But. I have a portion of my aileron circuit that has a fork fitting to provide the requisite double shear. However the bolt hole in the crank is seeing some misalignment and is starting to wallow the hole. I really, really should replace the fork fitting with a rod end (i.e. it never should have been a fork fitting to begin with, it was a spur- of-the-moment fix that was really just a band-aid). But the crank being driven by the fork is going to be impossible to replace with a two-armed crank that can nest a rod end. Now, with all of that said, here's my question: How bad is it really to have the rod end in single shear if I do the washer trick? It's an aileron rod, I do not think it sees much load at all--certainly far, far short of it's rated load. I have seen several planes out there with rod ends in single shear, so it can't be complete suicide . . . right? No? Thank you for your thoughts. I have a number of them that have been in service for over 20 years, all with the large washer. Works for me. Ed Sullivan, Jungster II Long as teh arm and bolt are stiff enough not to deform - who cares... The single arm may not have the resistance to twisting that the two arms do together. You'd want to compare single-arm setups with what you have. An arm that allows twisting will eventually fail or might allow enough aileron play to start flutter. Both are bad news. Dan |
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On Thu, 27 Sep 2007 01:45:50 -0500, cavelamb himself
wrote: As long as the uiball is tight against the bell crank or horn there will be no play. :Ed True, nut not necessarily the whole story, Ed. Because there is a small moment due to the off-axis pushrod, the arm itself could flex. If the arm is really thin metal (as possible if a sheet steel part were used) it MIGHT be possible to excite the aileron system - ie: cause flutter. Richard That could be true, however I only attached rod end bearings to 4130 tubing. Ed |
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Ed Sullivan wrote:
On Thu, 27 Sep 2007 01:45:50 -0500, cavelamb himself wrote: As long as the uiball is tight against the bell crank or horn there will be no play. :Ed True, nut not necessarily the whole story, Ed. Because there is a small moment due to the off-axis pushrod, the arm itself could flex. If the arm is really thin metal (as possible if a sheet steel part were used) it MIGHT be possible to excite the aileron system - ie: cause flutter. Richard That could be true, however I only attached rod end bearings to 4130 tubing. Ed One end, maybe. But tube arms??? |
#9
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On Thu, 27 Sep 2007 14:12:43 -0500, cavelamb himself
wrote: That could be true, however I only attached rod end bearings to 4130 tubing. Ed One end, maybe. But tube arms??? I'm really not sure I understand where you're coming from, but by arms if you are referring to bellcranks or horns, I would certainly not skimp on thickness. |
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On Thu, 27 Sep 2007 21:18:38 -0400, Ernest Christley
wrote: The horns on the Dyke Delta are .100 4130. The prototype had flown for over 40 years. If the horn was thin enough to deform from the rod end being in single shear, it will bend just as much in double shear. There is room for twist in the rod end even with both sides captured. That may be so, but it has not been my experience. My horns and bell cranks are a bit heavier however. Anyway I'm too old to care Ed |
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