This is a link to a topic on Control Stick slop previously reported on other aircraft. I am in the midst of fixing slop in my stick and at the end of this post I will share why I think it's important.
When my control stick its move L to R slop is seen at the red arrow hinge point on both sticks. This is the fulcrum of the slop and the bottom of the stick wiggles inside the torque tube like a teeter totter. I described my slop to Bob and it was deemed excessive, and a fix was concieved. Ream out the hinge tubing and insert an oversize bolt to remove slop.
The sticks are attached inside the toque tube via the interconnect tube. The 1/2" interconnect tube moves for/aft inside the larger torque tube. The yellow arrow points at the connection between the stick and the interconnect tubes. The two tubes have ample space but not excess space. Tight clearances of the design makes slop an issue.
My reamning of the rear stick went well, but the front did not. I admitted defeat early, and aborted the task before things got out of hand. Part of the issue was I reamed the control stick assembly in place instead of removing it from the airframe.
It only took me :40 minutes to remove the entire assembly after my fiasco. Right now the assembly is removed and at my Fabricator in Mason Michigan. They will be boring out the hinge tubing and pressing in a 4130 steel bearing that will give a slop free fit with a 1/4 - 28 bolt iaw the plans.
Why this fix is important. The clearance inside the torque tube is not generous. I had contact between parts inside the torque tube. I dismissed this problem for 5 years and never felt good about it. I trust my problem was a one off issue and the rest of the fleet is kosher. But contact inside there is the a precurser to a jammed elevator. And I just cant get that off my mind. A jammed elevator. So my advice is check your stick for slop, send it to a fabricator if you need to. You can get it out without removing belly fabric, and don't use castle nuts with cotter pins inside there. I see them gettiing hooked up on something. Add checking the stick for slop on your annual inspection checklist too.
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