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On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 03:43:50 GMT, "Cy Galley"
wrote: My question is Why oh Why didn't you check the carb screws before to put in on your plane? You can't. The screws have bend up tabs that are bent up to keep the hex head screws from backing out. The only way you would know the case was loose would be if it were so loose you could see the gap in the seam, or bend the tabs down and then tighten the screws, and then bend the tabs back up. But who would think that would be necessary with a newly rebuilt carb shipped from the manufacturer? I think they did tighten the screws, but the threads were worn out inside the carb body, the screw threads slipped. Wasn't my fault! It was carb manufacturers for shipping such a sloppy piece of crap. |
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Oh, come on. If the manufacturer did really "tighten" the bolts, then they
would have had to "slip" an entire thread on every pitch. Fixed threads don't "slip" if they are worn, they jump threads. If the carb body was this worn, the "tightening" would have completely stripped every pitch and they wouldn't have been able to torque the bolts down. BTW, a screw has a slot, a cross, or a keyway. A bolt has a hex head. Me? I use the hex bolts but I replace them with drilled head bolts and use both the bendmeup tabs and safety wire as well. There is nothing in the manual that says you can't ADD safety, you just can't do less. Jim -- "If you think you can, or think you can't, you're right." --Henry Ford "four-oh-four" wrote in message ... On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 03:43:50 GMT, "Cy Galley" wrote: My question is Why oh Why didn't you check the carb screws before to put in on your plane? You can't. The screws have bend up tabs that are bent up to keep the hex head screws from backing out. The only way you would know the case was loose would be if it were so loose you could see the gap in the seam, or bend the tabs down and then tighten the screws, and then bend the tabs back up. But who would think that would be necessary with a newly rebuilt carb shipped from the manufacturer? I think they did tighten the screws, but the threads were worn out inside the carb body, the screw threads slipped. Wasn't my fault! It was carb manufacturers for shipping such a sloppy piece of crap. |
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On Tue, 6 Nov 2007 08:01:07 -0800, "RST Engineering"
wrote: Oh, come on. If the manufacturer did really "tighten" the bolts, then they would have had to "slip" an entire thread on every pitch. Fixed threads don't "slip" if they are worn, they jump threads. If the carb body was this worn, the "tightening" would have completely stripped every pitch and they wouldn't have been able to torque the bolts down. BTW, a screw has a slot, a cross, or a keyway. A bolt has a hex head. Me? I use the hex bolts but I replace them with drilled head bolts and use both the bendmeup tabs and safety wire as well. There is nothing in the manual that says you can't ADD safety, you just can't do less. Jim If the threads didn't slip, then they were never torqued correctly. And the bolts were the type that had hex heads, and also a phillips slot for a screw driver. Not sure how to label those. And who receives a new carb from the manufacturer and disconnects all saftey wire/tabs to check for tightness of all screws/bolts? virtually no one you idiot! To suggest such a procedure is ridiculous. But there are always those who will defend the manufacturer and blame the pilot/mechanic regardless. You seem to fit nicely into that catagory. I'm the one who flew the plane home with a leaking, brand new carb, not you mister know-it-all. |
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four-oh-four wrote:
On Tue, 6 Nov 2007 08:01:07 -0800, "RST Engineering" wrote: Oh, come on. If the manufacturer did really "tighten" the bolts, then they would have had to "slip" an entire thread on every pitch. Fixed threads don't "slip" if they are worn, they jump threads. If the carb body was this worn, the "tightening" would have completely stripped every pitch and they wouldn't have been able to torque the bolts down. BTW, a screw has a slot, a cross, or a keyway. A bolt has a hex head. Me? I use the hex bolts but I replace them with drilled head bolts and use both the bendmeup tabs and safety wire as well. There is nothing in the manual that says you can't ADD safety, you just can't do less. Jim If the threads didn't slip, then they were never torqued correctly. And the bolts were the type that had hex heads, and also a phillips slot for a screw driver. Not sure how to label those. And who receives a new carb from the manufacturer and disconnects all saftey wire/tabs to check for tightness of all screws/bolts? virtually no one you idiot! To suggest such a procedure is ridiculous. But there are always those who will defend the manufacturer and blame the pilot/mechanic regardless. You seem to fit nicely into that catagory. I'm the one who flew the plane home with a leaking, brand new carb, not you mister know-it-all. Oh my golly... Jim tried to give you some good advice. I guess I must be an idiot too, because I have no problem opening up a new carb for inspection. Mister Know-It-All, huh? I guess that could fit a whole bunch of us who know how to care for a flying machine. But, oh no, not you. You don't know squat. And to suggest otherwise is ridiculous. Here he is, gents. This is the guy that makes everybody look bad. Sloppy workmanship. Dangerous pilot. Arrogant mouth. Won't take instruction and can't take criticism. 404 - Document not found... Seems appropriate to me. Very Sincerely, Richard Lamb |
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F.U. bud, what good advise? None I saw.
Oh my golly... Jim tried to give you some good advice. I guess I must be an idiot too, because I have no problem opening up a new carb for inspection. Mister Know-It-All, huh? I guess that could fit a whole bunch of us who know how to care for a flying machine. But, oh no, not you. You don't know squat. And to suggest otherwise is ridiculous. Here he is, gents. This is the guy that makes everybody look bad. Sloppy workmanship. Dangerous pilot. Arrogant mouth. Won't take instruction and can't take criticism. 404 - Document not found... Seems appropriate to me. Very Sincerely, Richard Lamb |
#6
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![]() "four-oh-four" wrote in message ... On Tue, 6 Nov 2007 08:01:07 -0800, "RST Engineering" wrote: Oh, come on. If the manufacturer did really "tighten" the bolts, then they would have had to "slip" an entire thread on every pitch. Fixed threads don't "slip" if they are worn, they jump threads. If the carb body was this worn, the "tightening" would have completely stripped every pitch and they wouldn't have been able to torque the bolts down. BTW, a screw has a slot, a cross, or a keyway. A bolt has a hex head. Me? I use the hex bolts but I replace them with drilled head bolts and use both the bendmeup tabs and safety wire as well. There is nothing in the manual that says you can't ADD safety, you just can't do less. Jim If the threads didn't slip, then they were never torqued correctly. And the bolts were the type that had hex heads, and also a phillips slot for a screw driver. Not sure how to label those. And who receives a new carb from the manufacturer and disconnects all saftey wire/tabs to check for tightness of all screws/bolts? virtually no one you idiot! To suggest such a procedure is ridiculous. But there are always those who will defend the manufacturer and blame the pilot/mechanic regardless. You seem to fit nicely into that catagory. I'm the one who flew the plane home with a leaking, brand new carb, not you mister know-it-all. You don't need to disconnect the safety devices to check for tightness. First, you wiggle the bowl. If it wiggles or twists, the bolts are loose. Then, you put a screwdriver on the screws. If they wiggle back and forth against the safety tab (or if they have any in/out slop indicating a jumped thread), *then* you remove the safety tab and figure out why the screws are loose. Alternately, you could skip all those steps and save enough time to make a handful of obnoxious posts on usenet. KB |
#7
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RST Engineering wrote:
Oh, come on. If the manufacturer did really "tighten" the bolts, then they would have had to "slip" an entire thread on every pitch. Fixed threads don't "slip" if they are worn, they jump threads. If the carb body was this worn, the "tightening" would have completely stripped every pitch and they wouldn't have been able to torque the bolts down. BTW, a screw has a slot, a cross, or a keyway. A bolt has a hex head. Me? I use the hex bolts but I replace them with drilled head bolts and use both the bendmeup tabs and safety wire as well. There is nothing in the manual that says you can't ADD safety, you just can't do less. Jim Damn, I got ripped off, my machine supply house just sold me a couple pounds of 1/2" SAE hex head cap screws. Must be some kind of government conspiracy though, as I also have a bucket of AN21 "Bolts" out here in the shop that obviously aren't bolts no matter what the AN spec calls them. What else have I been lied to about? Looking in the bin under my bench now...Oh my god, I really am screwed now -- I have bins full of NAS stuff, all labeled "bolts" that can't possibly be bolts. At least my Torx screws are authentic. Charles |
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