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Second that -
From a couple of years back when someone made a ground loop with ours my recollection is that the whole plot is largely held in placed by "Bulkhead 14" which is the complex pressing made out of some unusual alloy. (Probably common in USSR in 1970 - unobtanium in South Africa in 200x)The principle is that it is a cone shape ending at this bulkhead. Any distortion of the cone (e.g. dents in the sides of the fuselage) , or damage to the end plate will compromise the strength. Bulkhead 14 is the one that the rudder hinges attach to (rudder post bulkhead), as does all sorts of hardware in the end of the fuselage cone. What we had was a tailwheel mod that caused the bottom of this assembly to collapse under the torsion/compression force. When it was reverse engineered by a specialist AMO - the alloy used proved too brittle and it failed on the second or third landing. The resulting horisontal crack had similar effect to your reported problem. In our case it allowed the back of the rudder to lift. Might be worth a look to see if this is the problem. The second repair was not too expensive - given that it is an "experimental" here, and we had the apprentices at the local airways repair shop do the work as a project. (It helps to have a D-check mechanic in the club...) The real party trick apparently, was finding an alloy that could give the spring/stiffness/strength of the original part. wrote: On Aug 17, 4:48 pm, "John Scott" wrote: Our club Blanik L-13 has on several occasions had the lower rudder hinge lift out of the bearing. This results in the rudder cables (under tension) pulling the rudder forward so that it rubs on the Vert Stab spar. Today when we took it to the shop, the AP looked it over and determined that the vertical stab could rock forward slightly. Since the rudder is held in place vertically by the top hinge, when the stab rocks forward, this lifts the rudder and allows it to come out of the lower bearing. Once solution is to reinforce the rear of the fuselage to keep the vert stab from rocking forward. The price quoted is almost more then the Blanik is worth. We're waiting for replies from other Blanik repair shops to see if there are alternatives. Has anyone else experienced this with an L-13? If so, how was it resolved? Thanks, John Scott I doubt you have found the real problem yet. If the fin moves as you describe, something is pretty wrong. Look for missing or loose rivets or a cracked component. Good Luck UH |
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