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Well, did my first seal swap on the 140 on all 3 legs. Took me and the
wrench about 5 hours total. Completely slimy, dirty job. Remember, I worked in my father's body shop as a younger man, so I am no stranger to being filthy. This was worse. Being dirty WITH oil/grease involved is way worse than just being dirty from sanding dust and dirt. Completely forgot to take pictures. Sorry about that. To start, you need new seals, scrapers, etc. I bought the complete seal "kits" from Chief Aircraft. You get a nice bag o' parts for each leg. What seemed a shame was, these kits were for a "complete" rebuild. They also included seals for several different models of Cherokee. Since a bottom rebuild only used 2 or 3 of the 7 or 8 seals in the kit, you had lots of extra parts. I just gave them to the wrench for his stock. I also bought new valves. The seal kit has the new crush rings for the valves (seemed odd that the valves did not come with new rings). The wrench advised that these puppies don't seal correctly every time. And the crush seal is a one time deal. So, if one does not seal and you have used your one and only crush ring, you may be walking home. His advice was that, if they ain't leaking, leave them alone. Generally, the cores contain all the necessary sealing stuff. So, if they leak, a new core will usually seal em' up. I agreed to leave them alone. Working at the mechanic's place with the entire plane up on jacks is way easier than trying to do them one at a time (with the other 2 legs on the ground). Once the 3 legs were relieved of air and oil, they are "freed" from the beast by disconnecting one of the torque links. On the mains, I chose to disconnect the bottom link that incorporates the brake line bracket. That way, all you would deal with is the strut tube itself as the links would be left mounted to the bird. Also, if you disconnect the middle or top link, you have to undo the bottom link anyway to free the brake line and caliper. I also disconnected the nose gear lower link. Getting the snap rings out on the mains are a REAL wrestling match. The snap rings are not of the type with the eyelets, rather they are the kind with the ends bent (almost) 90 degrees. Once you have a grip on the ends and squeeze, it is a real bear to work them out. They are pretty "robust". There is a spacer ring above the snap ring that is split. If you find the end and work it a bit the spacer will "spring" closed slightly and remove easily. The nose gear snap ring is of the eyelet type, but the original (circa 1974) rubber scraper is right in the way of compressing the ring and removing it. For the nose, once the snap ring is removed, the gear fork/tube drops out with an inner assembly that holds all the seals. Conversely, on the mains, you work upside down getting out the various scrapers and seals. Installing the main seals, scrapers, spacers, and snap rings back in are a lot easier than taking them all out. The nose gear has the main "quad" seal stuffed in the groove along with a leather "backup" seal. Install the leather one first with the smooth side facing the quad seal, and then the quad seal. Any other order won't work. The service manual does not mention any of this. The nose scraper rubber needs to be cut to size. CUT IT 3/8 inch TOO LONG. I did and it JUST FIT. Another little tidbit the service manual fails to mention. By the way, the new design of the scraper ring makes it so that it does NOT interfere with getting at the snap ring. Made it a lot easier to get the nose snap ring back in. Once the struts are all together you push a hose onto the air valve stem (valve core removed) with the other end in a can of fresh 5606. Raise the strut slowly with an official, FAA approved, calibrated, 8 foot long 2 X 4. lower slowly to draw in fluid (you may have to slap or lightly fist the tire to get it to drop). Compress and extend about 6 or 7 times or until the last 3 or 4 inches on compression shows no air in the hose. Remove from the fluid/hose and let it drop completely before filling with air. The object is to fill the strut completely with fluid when it is completely compressed. Replace the valve cores. You can use a nitrogen bottle, strut pump, or little 12v compressor that can do at least 200 psi to refill the beasts on a Cherokee. The mains take about 190 psi unloaded and the nose takes about 120 psi or so. Some have strong opinions about using air. Mine have been riding on air for 12 years. The bores and strut legs showed absolutely no corrosion. But, we did not take the top end apart. So, the nitrogen fanatics may have the last laugh some day. Taking the beast over to the runway at the wrench's place involves going across his bumpy grass and up onto the pavement. The runway also has some "personality" at his airpark. So, the newly rebuilt legs got a good initial workout. What a remarkable difference when the struts actually move up and down rather than sticking and transferring the bumps into the airframe! It was also cool to see a distinct ring of oil where the strut would bottom as the scrapers and seals actually did what they were supposed to do (namely, scrape and seal). So, how was the "experience"? I usually prefer to perform all service work on the beast myself at my wrench's place under his watchful eye. But, this is one job I would have probably turned over to the local boys. I used to do a lot of work on my own cars too. But, with age, I have come to appreciate the local mechanics to do exhaust, suspension, and coolant related repairs because I have no desire to do that nasty work. Strut seal replacement appears to fall into that category. Unless the mechanics wanted to charge more than about 2 hours labor for each leg, it just did not seem worth it to do it yourself. Good Luck, Mike |
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