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Apis motorglider



 
 
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  #1  
Old May 5th 10, 07:09 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Darryl Ramm
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Posts: 2,403
Default Apis motorglider

On May 5, 10:19*am, Mark Jardini wrote:
Andy

Avionic does not have a "jacked ramp". The cradle has an over center
cam that lifts the aircraft off its main wheel. Agreed, the jack would
be better for rigging purposes.

The belt can be seen and inspected through it s length. The center
portion of the mast is enclosed trapping the belt within by some mid
shaft cross sectional enclosings. I can only assume this is one of
those fiberglass impregnated toothed belts they use in cars that last
60k miles.

My guess would be you send the mast back to be opened and reclosed or
you buy a new one.....

Mark


And for those Cobra trailers with hydraulic jacked ramps and heavy
motorgliders, I'd rather trust the hand cranked gears in my one-man
rigger or the person holding my wingtip than trust the hydraulic jack
with the weight of my motorglider while tweaking the jack height. I
slide in a triangular wooden block as a safety device under the ramp
scissors. If the jack fully collapses, I don't think the jack has the
leverage to jack up mu ASH-26E again.

Darryl
  #2  
Old May 6th 10, 03:27 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
5Z
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 405
Default Hydraulic ramp jack

I've routinely used the hydraulic jack to align the wing pins on my
ASH-26E. And to keep the wings at a comfortable height, that means
it's operating near the bottom of its range. Really nice during
disassembly to have one hand on the jack and the other on a main pin,
then slowly lower the fuselage until the pin starts to rotate.

I did disassemble the jack assembly recently to replace an O ring in
the jack. The base plate was warped due to the horizontal force being
applied to lift the glider from a completely lowered jack.
Straightened it out in a hydraulic press, and might try to reinforce
it next winter, but it will likely last another 5-10 years if I do
nothing.

-Tom

On May 5, 11:09*am, Darryl Ramm wrote:
And for those Cobra trailers with hydraulic jacked ramps and heavy
motorgliders, I'd rather trust the hand cranked gears in my one-man
rigger or the person holding my wingtip than trust the hydraulic jack
with the weight of my motorglider while tweaking the jack height. I
slide in a triangular wooden block as a safety device under the ramp
scissors. If the jack fully collapses, *I don't think the jack has the
leverage to jack up mu ASH-26E again.

  #3  
Old May 6th 10, 04:11 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Eric Greenwell
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Posts: 1,096
Default Apis motorglider

On 5/5/2010 11:09 AM, Darryl Ramm wrote:
And for those Cobra trailers with hydraulic jacked ramps and heavy
motorgliders, I'd rather trust the hand cranked gears in my one-man
rigger or the person holding my wingtip than trust the hydraulic jack
with the weight of my motorglider while tweaking the jack height. I
slide in a triangular wooden block as a safety device under the ramp
scissors. If the jack fully collapses, I don't think the jack has the
leverage to jack up mu ASH-26E again.

I routinely lower my Cobra hydraulic ramp jack to the bottom to assemble
my ASH 26 E. It has no problem raising the fully assembled glider from
the bottom to the height needed to lower the gear. I've done that for
over 400 rig/derig cycles.

--
Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me)

- "Transponders in Sailplanes - Feb/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://tinyurl.com/yb3xywl

- "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation Mar/2004" Much of what you need to know tinyurl.com/yfs7tnz

 




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