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The Aircraft SPruce Catalog lists Azusalite nylon wheels for
landing gear and also brake kits for the same wheels. However there is no illustartion fo the brake kits or of the brakes or wheels after assembly and installation fo the brakes. The parts list for the brake kits mentions linings, but does not mention drums or discs. I haven't found any more complete information on the Web either so I remain curious, how (and how well) do these brakes work? Given the low price, I don't expect much for something priced competatively with bicylce wheels and brakes, but I haven;t a clue as to what the Azusas actually are, other than inexpensive. So, does anyone who has seen these care to comment? -- FF |
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Fred the Red Shirt wrote:
The Aircraft SPruce Catalog lists Azusalite nylon wheels for landing gear and also brake kits for the same wheels. However there is no illustartion fo the brake kits or of the brakes or wheels after assembly and installation fo the brakes. The parts list for the brake kits mentions linings, but does not mention drums or discs. I haven't found any more complete information on the Web either so I remain curious, how (and how well) do these brakes work? Given the low price, I don't expect much for something priced competatively with bicylce wheels and brakes, but I haven;t a clue as to what the Azusas actually are, other than inexpensive. So, does anyone who has seen these care to comment? http://www.tracyobrien.com/moreinfo.asp?id=46 I love my Tracy O'Brian's. Beautifully made and powerful as hell. They're all you need for azulalite rims. Jason Marshall Challenger-II C-IEFQ |
#3
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On 8 Jul 2004, Fred the Red Shirt wrote:
the low price, I don't expect much for something priced competatively with bicylce wheels and brakes, but I haven;t a clue as to what the Azusas actually are, other than inexpensive. You can order a set, then send them back if you don't want them. Only cost the freight charges. Those wheels are made for very light airplanes, perhaps ultra-light. George Graham RX-7 Powered Graham-EZ, N4449E Homepage http://bfn.org/~ca266 |
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"George A. Graham" wrote in message ...
On 8 Jul 2004, Fred the Red Shirt wrote: the low price, I don't expect much for something priced competatively with bicylce wheels and brakes, but I haven;t a clue as to what the Azusas actually are, other than inexpensive. You can order a set, then send them back if you don't want them. Only cost the freight charges. Those wheels are made for very light airplanes, perhaps ultra-light. I have in mind using them on a Sky Pup Ultralight, originally designed to use bicycle wheels w/o brakes. There is no question that they'd be adequate, what I don't know is if they would be heavier or harder to install than bicycle disc brakes. After watching someone struggling to taxi a Sky Pup with neither brakes nor a stearable tailwheel I concluded that at least one or the other was a real good idea. Brakes would probably be no harder to install, would be near the CG so as tonot affect ballance, and add less parasitic drag compared to a steerablr tailwheel. A castoring but non-steerable tailwheel looks to be a non-winner too. Makes the Pup into a nice weather vane. I'd kinda like to know SOMETHING about what I'm ordering. The AS catalog doesn't even say if they are mechanical or hydraulic. I can call Aircraft Spruce or Azusa and ask, just thought I'd ask here first for indpendant info. I'd be ****ed to have to pay even shipping, for an item I returned because the vendor's description was inadequate. Thanks, and thanks also to Jason Marshall for the heads up on Tracy O'Brien brakes. -- FF I'd be ****ed to have to pay even shipping, for an item I returned because the vendor's description was inadequate. |
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Fred the Red Shirt wrote ...
I have in mind using them on a Sky Pup Ultralight, ... I'd kinda like to know SOMETHING about what I'm ordering. ... Azusa makes band brakes, drum brakes & disc brakes. All have been adapted to a variety of wheels, including the TuffWheels called for on the Sky Pup. The band brake would be plenty sufficient for taxing & parking. Brakes for stopping a rollout would be rather pointless on a Sky Pup given the extremely short distance involved. To see what you're ordering, check: http://www.azusaeng.com/brakes/brkmain.html Daniel |
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I have in mind using them on a Sky Pup Ultralight, originally
designed to use bicycle wheels w/o brakes. There is no question that they'd be adequate, what I don't know is if they would be heavier or harder to install than bicycle disc brakes. Two things about these wheels: * They have terrible UV resistance. * They are MUCH smaller in diameter than the bicycle wheels the airplane is designed around. This will substanially reduce your ground clearance, and put the wing incidence much lower as well, meaning you'll need more elevator to get off the ground. I think Steve Kiblinger has done some work on mounting brakes on "bicycle" wheels on his Legal Eagle ultralight. There, I've just given you enough to do your own Google search. ;-) Azusa drum brakes generally need a fair amount of tune-up before they work worth a damn. The shoes generally don't fit the drums very well. Gluing sandpaper inside the drums and dragging the brakes for a while generally set things to right after you tear out the sandpaper, and blow out the brake lining dust. Me, I'd stick with the bike wheels. |
#7
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#8
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http://www.azusaeng.com/wheels/whls6n.html
-- Dan D. http://www.ameritech.net/users/ddevillers/start.html .. "Fred the Red Shirt" wrote in message om... The Aircraft SPruce Catalog lists Azusalite nylon wheels for landing gear and also brake kits for the same wheels. However there is no illustartion fo the brake kits or of the brakes or wheels after assembly and installation fo the brakes. The parts list for the brake kits mentions linings, but does not mention drums or discs. I haven't found any more complete information on the Web either so I remain curious, how (and how well) do these brakes work? Given the low price, I don't expect much for something priced competatively with bicylce wheels and brakes, but I haven;t a clue as to what the Azusas actually are, other than inexpensive. So, does anyone who has seen these care to comment? -- FF |
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