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"never point the plane at anything valuable whilst expecting this brake to
stop it..."?????????? Brakes need to work reliably. If there is more than one incident of this type, there needs to be a service bulletin or AD issued to fix the problem. Mike Schumann wrote in message oups.com... On Sep 1, 8:40 am, Jack Glendening wrote: I am wondering if others have experienced the shearing of a Tost brake bolt resulting in brake failure - I'm speaking about the bolt which extends from the hub and is secured to the aircraft frame (not the bolt which extends for the wire lever attachment). I experienced such a failure on my latest landing with a month-old Tost unit - I was puliing more strongly than usual on the brake but not nearly as hard as I could, and certainly not as hard as I would if it had been an emergency situation. I was amazed that such could produce a bolt shear - I would have thought that some other brake part would fail before such a relatively thick bolt would, but I am no mechanic. It makes me wonder about the quality of the parts Tost is using. Is this a known/common point of failure? Jack Glendening Hi Jack - I believe you are talking about a 4.50 tire mechanical (ie non-hydraulic) Tost brake? The wonder is not that the bolt sheared, rather that your brake shoes (actually, the one shoe doing any work) generated enough force to shear the thing. I don't think this is a common point of failure (though another post here recounts another incident). For these brake assemblies modified to servo-actuate, the torque load is carried through the cast aluminum hub from the cam to this bolt, and the cast hub has been known to fail... Make sure that the end of the bolt isn't sloppy where it attaches to the gear fork, which maybe could provoke a failure, replace the bolt, and never point the plane at anything valuable whilst expecting this brake to stop it... Hope this helps, Best Regards, Dave "YO" ("Miss August") -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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