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Nose Wheel Steering for Retracts



 
 
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  #1  
Old June 24th 09, 02:13 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Dan[_12_]
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Posts: 451
Default Nose Wheel Steering for Retracts

I'm looking for a simple design for nose wheel steering for
retractable gear. Any ideas?

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired
  #2  
Old June 24th 09, 03:07 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Morgans[_7_]
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Posts: 37
Default Nose Wheel Steering for Retracts



"Dan" wrote in message
...
I'm looking for a simple design for nose wheel steering for retractable
gear. Any ideas?


Cables with the cables running over a pulley close to the pivot point on the
retract mechanics, with another spring and pulley keeping tension on any
slack that does develop.
--
Jim in NC

  #3  
Old June 24th 09, 03:51 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
bildan
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Posts: 646
Default Nose Wheel Steering for Retracts

On Jun 24, 7:13*am, Dan wrote:
* *I'm looking for a simple design for nose wheel steering for
retractable gear. Any ideas?

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired


"T-bar" above the gear strut retraction pivot point which swings back
into contact with roller bearings connected to the pedals as the nose
gear down-lock engages. Pedals would push roller bearings against T-
bar which would rotate gear strut to steer.

The roller motion would have to be reversed relative to the pedals so
pushing on the right pedal would make the nose gear steer right.

Strut would have to be spring loaded to keep it centered and steering
dampers would be needed.
  #4  
Old June 24th 09, 04:44 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
[email protected][_2_]
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Posts: 33
Default Nose Wheel Steering for Retracts

On Jun 24, 7:13*am, Dan wrote:
* *I'm looking for a simple design for nose wheel steering for
retractable gear. Any ideas?

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired


Morse cables?
============
Leon McAtee
  #6  
Old June 24th 09, 07:37 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
bildan
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Posts: 646
Default Nose Wheel Steering for Retracts

On Jun 24, 10:57*am, Dan wrote:
wrote:
On Jun 24, 7:13 am, Dan wrote:
* *I'm looking for a simple design for nose wheel steering for
retractable gear. Any ideas?


Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired


Morse cables?
============
Leon McAtee


* *I came up with a fairly simple idea using hydraulics with brake
master cylinders to supply pressure. Problem is the wheel will either
still steer when retracted making for a big wheel well or any disconnect
system I can think of becomes complex beyond my pay grade.

* *I had considered cables but every sketch or model I can think of
tends to put a lot off stress on the cables or downloads tension when
retracted depending on which side of the pivot point the pulleys are.
This makes for some interesting spring configurations. If anyone has
solved that I'd like to hear what solution was derived.

* *The T bar idea Bildan suggests is interesting. I will have to do some
cogitation on that one.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired


The system I described is used in some nose gear retract systems.
However, it is very direct steering with no 'give'. Some systems use
springs or elastomers to provide some 'softness' to the system.

One reason for softness is crosswind landings. If you touch down with
the controls crossed, (downwind rudder and upwind aileron) the nose
wheel steering will cause the airplane to dart to the downwind side of
the runway when the nosewheel touches unless the pilot remembers to
center the rudder. Adding some torsional "give" and some caster helps
with this.

An alternative to the T-Bar is a small "rudder post" connected to the
pedals with cables. The post is directly above and in line with the
nose strut when it's extended. The nose strut makes a rotary
connection with the post as the downlock engages. Sometimes this is a
slot-and-tang or other coupling method. The slot-&-tang will have a
bull nose on the tang and "V"lead-in on the slot so it engages
smoothly even if the pedals and nose strut aren't exactly aligned at
gear extension.

Landing gear design is a tricky business and a lot of things aren't
intuitive. One of my favorite stories is the last of the tailwheel
piston fighters. Enough 20 year old 2nd Lt's ground looped these
aircraft that the designers took notice and went back to their drawing
boards (Literally).

One solution was main gear struts that rotated outboard as they were
compressed. The idea was that when a swerve leading toward a
groundloop began, you wanted to "steer into the skid" as with a car.
The rotating main struts did this aromatically as the aircraft weight
shifted to the outboard main gear, compressing the strut, hopefully
giving the 2nd Louie another few seconds to save his butt.
  #7  
Old June 24th 09, 10:25 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Morgans[_7_]
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Posts: 37
Default Nose Wheel Steering for Retracts



" I came up with a fairly simple idea using hydraulics with brake
master cylinders to supply pressure. Problem is the wheel will either
still steer when retracted making for a big wheel well or any disconnect
system I can think of becomes complex beyond my pay grade.

I had considered cables but every sketch or model I can think of tends
to put a lot off stress on the cables or downloads tension when retracted
depending on which side of the pivot point the pulleys are. This makes for
some interesting spring configurations. If anyone has solved that I'd like
to hear what solution was derived.


Tension the cables correctly when gear is in the down position, and have the
pulley at the pivot point arranged so some slack develops when gear is up.
Keep the cable under slight tension while up, so it does not jump a pulley
and so cables will not move the gear while up. That could be achieved by
putting a pulley around the cable in a long run attached to a light spring
going at a right angle to the cable run. That would keep things snug but
allow movement.
--
Jim in NC

  #8  
Old June 25th 09, 01:44 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Rip[_3_]
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Posts: 13
Default Nose Wheel Steering for Retracts

bildan wrote:
On Jun 24, 7:13 am, Dan wrote:
I'm looking for a simple design for nose wheel steering for
retractable gear. Any ideas?

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired


"T-bar" above the gear strut retraction pivot point which swings back
into contact with roller bearings connected to the pedals as the nose
gear down-lock engages. Pedals would push roller bearings against T-
bar which would rotate gear strut to steer.

The roller motion would have to be reversed relative to the pedals so
pushing on the right pedal would make the nose gear steer right.

Strut would have to be spring loaded to keep it centered and steering
dampers would be needed.


That's exactly how the gear on a Navion works, except that there is a
"V" slot to center the strut during retraction instead of spring
loading, and there are no dampers.

Rip

  #9  
Old June 25th 09, 03:11 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Drew Dalgleish
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Posts: 143
Default Nose Wheel Steering for Retracts

On Wed, 24 Jun 2009 08:13:28 -0500, Dan wrote:

I'm looking for a simple design for nose wheel steering for
retractable gear. Any ideas?

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired


Have you considered just having a castering nosewheel? That's what I
have on my floats and it works pretty well steering with the brakes.
  #10  
Old June 25th 09, 03:18 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Dan[_12_]
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Posts: 451
Default Nose Wheel Steering for Retracts

Drew Dalgleish wrote:
On Wed, 24 Jun 2009 08:13:28 -0500, Dan wrote:

I'm looking for a simple design for nose wheel steering for
retractable gear. Any ideas?

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired


Have you considered just having a castering nosewheel? That's what I
have on my floats and it works pretty well steering with the brakes.


Yes, differential braking is probably the simplest method. I'm not
discarding it, just poking around at options.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired
 




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