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On Jan 28, 11:50*pm, Uncle Fuzzy wrote:
In going over some very old (15 years) RAS threads on gear collapse problems, I found a reference to a service bulletin that mandates replacing the gas spring with an aluminum bar. *JJ also mentioned doing the same. Alas, the 15 year old link is inoperative. *On the DG website I found a listing of service bulletins, but not the service bulletin itself. *If anyone can send me a link or explain how to obtain the reference service bulletin, I'd be very grateful. TIA Good points below, but a friend who just repaired the following on his LS-3 reminds me... Many of these LS gliders have rubber shock absorbing gizmos built into the landing gear - and they are now getting very old and turning to mush. The glider will typically sit much lower to the ground then when new (and has less shock absorption, wrong angle of attack on ground etc). If the strut wasn't recently replaced, you'll want to have a good look at that part as well ! Hope this helps, Best Regards, Dave "YO electric" |
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On Jan 31, 8:34*am, DRN wrote:
On Jan 28, 11:50*pm, Uncle Fuzzy wrote: In going over some very old (15 years) RAS threads on gear collapse problems, I found a reference to a service bulletin that mandates replacing the gas spring with an aluminum bar. *JJ also mentioned doing the same. Alas, the 15 year old link is inoperative. *On the DG website I found a listing of service bulletins, but not the service bulletin itself. *If anyone can send me a link or explain how to obtain the reference service bulletin, I'd be very grateful. TIA Good points below, but a friend who just repaired the following on his LS-3 reminds me... Many of these LS gliders have rubber shock absorbing gizmos built into the landing gear - and they are now getting very old and turning to mush. The glider will typically sit much lower to the ground then when new (and has less shock absorption, wrong angle of attack on ground etc). If the strut wasn't recently replaced, you'll want to have a good look at that part as well ! Hope this helps, Best Regards, Dave "YO electric" Speaking of these rubber bushings used for shock absorbing, can anyone point me to any documentation that describes how to measure the amount of allowable "give"? I have an LS1f and I have nothing in my maintenance log that shows these were ever replaced. Would my energy be better spent on just replacing them? Or is it worth finding the information needed to measure their current condition? By the way, my "f" does not have any gas struts any where in the landing gear system (although some other f's do). I've never had any issues with it, although it sure is a nice ride on the "sprung" gear. Thanks, Dave |
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