Tail wheel bolt- Scott

How to keep the Cessna 170 flying and airworthy.

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rudymantel
Posts: 451
Joined: Sat Nov 23, 2002 4:03 pm

Tail wheel bolt- Scott

Post by rudymantel »

Last week I was enjoyng my favorite recreation, doing touch & goes.
All went swimmingly well until the last landing, a full stop. When the tail wheel came down, the airplane swerved to the left. I straightened it, but thought- how clumsy of me. (there was a 10 knot 45 degree crosswind from the right !).
A few days later I took my grandchldren for a lttle flight and on landng the same thing happened. Hmmm... So I decided to check my tailwheel. The pressure was low- only about 20 psi- and the bolt holdng the tailwheel to the main spring was slightly loose! The curious thing is that this bolt was tightened at the last annual (I think) and it is held by a castillated nut and a cotter pin. You wouldn't think it could come loose- it wasn't very loose- maybe 3/4 turn tightened it.
That's a pretty heavy bolt, and the only way I think it could have loosened was by the bolt stretching slightly.
I always make wheel landings and the tailwheel s treated very gently.
Has anyone else had a similar experience ?
Rudy
C-170B N4490B
Plantation Florida
(Based at North Perry Airport,
KHWO, Miramar FL)
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johneeb
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Post by johneeb »

Rudy,
Did tightening up the mounting bolt solve the swerving problem :?:
Johneb
John E. Barrett
aka. Johneb

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rudymantel
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Post by rudymantel »

John, I haven't flown the airplane since tightening the bolt. Have a trip scheduled for tomorrow and will know then.
Rudy
C-170B N4490B
Plantation Florida
(Based at North Perry Airport,
KHWO, Miramar FL)
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jrenwick
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Post by jrenwick »

I think I would want to understand why a safetied nut and bolt became loose before I flew the airplane again. The tailwheel on my J3 used to loosen up over time, and I retightened the main bolt that holds it a couple of times before I discovered that it was crushing the tubing inside the fuselage. (I had the fuselage structure rebuilt with a bigger tube with a bushing inside it, and I believe that's fixed now.)

Rudy, if your bolt is stretching, how long before it fails?

Best Regards,

John
John Renwick
Minneapolis, MN
Former owner, '55 C-170B, N4401B
'42 J-3 Cub, N62088
'50 Swift GC-1B, N2431B, Oshkosh 2009 Outstanding Swift Award, 2016 Best Continuously Maintained Swift
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GAHorn
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Post by GAHorn »

Rudy, isn't this the same sort of problem we diagnosed at the Wilmington Convention? Seems I recall Ol' Gar and I taxiing your airplane around because of your complaint that the airplane sometimes simply took a turn, and we discovered your tailwheel leafspring stack was twisting/sliding due to loose bolts and a loose tailwheel assy. :?:
'53 B-model N146YS SN:25713
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention.
An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons. ;)
N170CT
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Post by N170CT »

Rudy,

FWIW, I had a similar situation with my 170 in that the airplane would swerve uncontollably to the left. Departed the runway (always left) three times before I sorted out the problem. In this case, the left Outboard MLG bracket (the large bracket the flat spring passes through) had exfoliated and allowed the left main leg to shift aft which apparently caused the aircraft to go left. This was difficult to detect by inspection and required a good flashlight and a mirror through the hole in the floor. Replaced the bracket with one from P-Ponk which was a difficult 8O but perfect fit. No problem since. Sooo, you might want to take a look at that. Chuck
rudymantel
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Post by rudymantel »

Yes, this was a similar problem to the one in Wilmington which George and Gary (Ol'Gar) diagnosed. I don't recall the springs being loose but the tailwheel casting was loose where it bolted to the main spring, same as this time. Gary tightened it and it made a huge improvement.
A few weeks later it again was loose and I replaced the bolt and nut with a castillated nut secured with a cotter pin. No more problems till the other day, when I found that the locked nut had come slightly loose, which is worrying.
I tightened the nut and yesterday flew a trip with three landings, all of which felt normal. But I will look into it further. Something must be wearing- I'll replace that AN7 bolt in any event.
George, that eyebolt you ordered- P/N 0642105, does it have a hole for a cotter pin ?
Rudy
C-170B N4490B
Plantation Florida
(Based at North Perry Airport,
KHWO, Miramar FL)
rudymantel
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Post by rudymantel »

Chuck, I don't think my problem is main-gear related. I'm sure it's a tailwheel issue-
Rudy
C-170B N4490B
Plantation Florida
(Based at North Perry Airport,
KHWO, Miramar FL)
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johneeb
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Post by johneeb »

Rudy,
Check and see if yu are missing the spacer (IPC page 155, part number 0442011-3) between the main spring and the Bracket Assembly. If it were missing the movement between the spring and the Bracket assembly would over time loosen the bolt.
John E. Barrett
aka. Johneb

Sent from my "Cray Super Computer"
rudymantel
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Post by rudymantel »

Thanks Joneb- I'll certainly check for that spacer-
Rudy
C-170B N4490B
Plantation Florida
(Based at North Perry Airport,
KHWO, Miramar FL)
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Joe Moilanen
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Post by Joe Moilanen »

I've had to tighten the bolt on mine periodically also. I made a spacer the last time that I replaced my mainspring and I'm sure that it is needed but i's still bugging me.

Joe 4518C
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GAHorn
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Post by GAHorn »

rudymantel wrote:Yes, this was a similar problem to the one in Wilmington which George and Gary (Ol'Gar) diagnosed. I don't recall the springs being loose but the tailwheel casting was loose where it bolted to the main spring, same as this time. Gary tightened it and it made a huge improvement.
A few weeks later it again was loose and I replaced the bolt and nut with a castillated nut secured with a cotter pin. No more problems till the other day, when I found that the locked nut had come slightly loose, which is worrying.
I tightened the nut and yesterday flew a trip with three landings, all of which felt normal. But I will look into it further. Something must be wearing- I'll replace that AN7 bolt in any event.
George, that eyebolt you ordered- P/N 0642105, does it have a hole for a cotter pin ?
Rudy
Rudy, the IPC specifies a friction lock nut (AN 365-720) for this installation, and both the original bolt (AN 7-20A) and the L-19 PN 0642105 are undrilled. Mine has never loosened.
'53 B-model N146YS SN:25713
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention.
An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons. ;)
rudymantel
Posts: 451
Joined: Sat Nov 23, 2002 4:03 pm

Post by rudymantel »

This is getting curiouser and curiouser- My leaf springs are 1.5 inches wide and the inside channel of my Scott bracket casting is 1.75 inches wide. There is a wide, shallow, u-channel spacer that fits in the bracket and over the spring to adapt the wide bracket to the narrower leaf spirng.

There is no Lug (0433132) No. 1 on the IPC page 154 illustration.
(Hill Aircraft call this a Tab - $38.64) What is it for and where does it fit ? Does it somehow relieve the stree concentration on the spring?

There also is no Spacer (0442011-3) No.4 on IPC drawing, mentionet by Johneb. Univair's price for this Scott part is $78.08. How does this work ? Would it fit with my wide bracket and narrow leaf spring ? Is that the problem- do I need an entirely different tail wheel that better fits the spring?

Rudy
C-170B N4490B
Plantation Florida
(Based at North Perry Airport,
KHWO, Miramar FL)
JTS
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Post by JTS »

Hey Rudy. To start, I believe the lug (No.1 in drawing) is actually one of the two tabs that attach the springs and chains to the rudder bellcrank(refer to page 28 No.14 in IPC). Secondly, the spacer mentioned by Johneb(No.4 in drawing) is probably the u-channel spacer that you described earlier that fits between the spring and tailwheel casting.
You might want to try some thin sheet metal to shim between the casting and spacer, the spacer and spring, or both. Hope this helps!
Jody
'52 170B CF-FDH Ser# 20841
N2865C
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Post by N2865C »

JTS wrote:Hey Rudy. To start, I believe the lug (No.1 in drawing) is actually one of the two tabs that attach the springs and chains to the rudder bellcrank(refer to page 28 No.14 in IPC).
I think Jody is right. The tabs are not used with the Scott 3200 installation. Scott calls for eye-bolts instead of the tabs. The Scott uses a spacer for the narrower springs. Last time I looked, that little spacer was about $100.00 (ouch). I have a copy of the Scott installation instructions for the 170 I can fax you if you need it.
jc
Last edited by N2865C on Mon Aug 08, 2005 6:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
John
N2865C
"The only stupid question is one that wasn't asked"
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