Posted Sunday, June 1, 2008 @ 11:26 AM
Hi Guys,
We all know how important it is to have the mainwheel locked down before landing, but I recently discovered it’s also important to have it stay locked up during flight.
Like all the others, the red RF4 (G-AWGN) Matthew and I recently bought is now over forty years old, so it has changed through the years, and feels a little different in some ways from my Blue Australian one. Among other things, the Bauer/Scherer metal spring suspension had been incorporated, and it has a superior Teleflex brake cable. Maybe the linkage was less well lubricated. Anyhow the wheel’s operation felt a little different to my other Fournier’s.
Nevertheless, it still came as a surprise when, while pulling 4g, the wheel came crashing down in flight. As a precaution against collapse, the engine was stopped and a glide approach made to a gentle touchdown with no further problems. You could see something was wrong, because the wheel lever was touching the cockpit floor.
Investigation revealed that the locks had gone past the down lock cut-outs in the wheel casting’s quadrant and lodged against the upper end of the quadrant. Luckily they stayed there and supported the aeroplane’s weight, although the mechanism was obviously misplaced, and the aeroplane sat noticeably higher.
Those U-shaped up and down lock cut-outs often become rather V-shaped over the years, but these were still clearly sharp-edged. This is because the castings are not original, and nearly new (the main casting was replaced a couple of years ago after it had cracked) so I really could not see why the wheel did not stay up and locked. I can only think it was not properly locked up in the first place. In future I shall be sure to push and pull that lever to be sure it’s properly locked up.
Anyhow, further investigation unearthed some obvious damage. The pivoting casting had whacked into the woodwork at the rear of the wheel cut-out in the fuselage underside (which appears to have some function as an over-travel stop) and had cut deep grooves into it.
Enquiries to other Fournier owners revealed that this kind of thing had happened before, usually causing distortion to the mainwheel’s backing plate, on the rear of the fuselage’s main bulkhead. (This is the plate that the fifth, crutch, or negative-g seat belt attaches to).
The good news was that I have a couple of Matthew’s spare Fournier fuselages in my garage, so a replacement plate was available. The bad news – we would have to separate our Fournier’s wing from its fuselage to replace it!
Those of you who have done it (myself included) know just what a pain this task can be.
In the ‘maintenance’ area, I will post a checklist for anybody else who wants or need to undertake this laborious process (it took two of us two days to get apart, and myself working alone three and a half days to re-assemble).
G-AWGN (the Old Wagon) is now flying again, and long may she continue to do so.
This was the first RF4 I ever flew, after an RF5 check-out by Rob Dorsey in November 1970.
Yours, Bob
[Edit by Bob Grimstead on Monday, June 2, 2008 @ 03:14 PM]