zero.one.victor wrote:George, take a closer look at your abacus-- 1/16" equals .0625", not .006" (6 thousandths). You're really blowing holes in your credibility for that "perfectly aligned" claim!
Eric
Yeah. Sorry, that was a typo. But the statement is still correct as regards the available shims necessary to change your setup, which was the point. (I had rounded the 0.0625 my calculator gave me off and ,..then misplaced the decimal.)
N170BP wrote: To say the shim's
sole purpose is to adjust toe-in + camber isn't (I think) quite
telling the whole story.
The measuring procedure isn't that big of a deal. I suppose anyone
who thinks it's not crucial is welcome to that opinion.
I don't recall saying shims had a "sole" purpose. But Cessna certainly doesn't describe any other purpose for them other than for toe in/out and camber.
I don't know why folks keep trying to make it seem I'm saying something I'm not. I didn't say it wasn't crucial. I said it doesn't affect toe in/toe out specifications. Whether you have gear legs that point 'em 10-degrees or even 90-degrees to the right, shims are not the correct fix for such wildly bent gear legs.
Certainly the shims (like any shims) are for correction of minor manufacturing differences, and such corrections are important. Cessna consideres it important enough to even stipulate the weight of the aircraft when taking such measurements. But to suggest that a measurement taken from the tailwheel forward to the axle-line is necessary in order to set toe in/toe out is simply not the case. (In an example just as wild as some presently suggested, a string stretched from the tailwheel to the main wheels makes the assumption that the fuselage has no bend it it whatsoever. Without a "jig" there's still plenty of room for error exceeding that of the intended measurement.)
This entire thread has assumed a personality of it's own, not realistically in tune with the problem. One can take a measurement from the tailwheel pivot-pin and walk that string all the way around a 360-degree circle. Just because that fixed-length measurement happens to meet at the right axle just like it does the left axle...does not mean the airplane is "square". In fact, the mismatched 180 gear legs could pass that test.....all it would take would be for one to be spread out from the centerline farther than the other....and they would both measure equi-distant from the tail reference point.
But my point is: By the time such errors are sufficiently large as to cause handling problems, they are probably quite evident to the naked eye,
and ...they are not corrected by shims.