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  • #31
    Originally posted by jaredyates View Post

    For sure, just give the strut a good tug. If it doesn't come off in your hand, you are good to go.
    This should be promulgated as a necessary check before every flight in my view. You will notice a crack.
    Ours cracked 90% the way through slowly, before it finally let go. A small push at the base of the strut would easily show the problem long before it broke.

    Comment


    • jaredyates
      jaredyates commented
      Editing a comment
      Before the fire it was on my to-do list to make a video version of the ground school portion of my transition training course, which includes this and other things. It's still on the to-do list, but unfortunately it's pretty far down.

  • #32
    Originally posted by whee View Post
    How you you guys have your strut rigged? IE, during preflight is the strut in tension, compression or neutral? I wiggle my h-stab and strut during preflight and the tiny bit of slop I feel in the strut makes me wonder if I should rig it differently. Currently I have it rigged neutral.
    That will allow for more and slightly larger stress cycles, at full power especially. I suggest taking a turn off each side to put a little pre-load on the fittings.

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    • #33
      Originally posted by Battson View Post

      That will allow for more and slightly larger stress cycles, at full power especially. I suggest taking a turn off each side to put a little pre-load on the fittings.
      Preload in which direction; compression and tension? I think they should be preloaded in compression but I wanted to know what others had done.
      Scratch Built 4-place Bearhawk. Continental IO-360, 88" C203 McCauley prop.

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      • Battson
        Battson commented
        Editing a comment
        They are loaded in compression in cruise flight, so that is the way to load them. Fewer stress cycles doing in that way. However it will depend on the build, some people may end up with compression on side and tension the other, that is no problem.

    • #34
      My H stab struts have a bolt in each end, no adjustment. I thought the later addition of adjustment at the bottom of the strut was to make fabrication easier, not to make adjustments. No?

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      • #35
        Originally posted by alaskabearhawk View Post
        My H stab struts have a bolt in each end, no adjustment. I thought the later addition of adjustment at the bottom of the strut was to make fabrication easier, not to make adjustments. No?
        If they are perfect without requiring any adjustment, then you hit the jackpot. Refer to the thread on rigging Bearhawks to understand why they need to be exactly right.

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        • Nev
          Nev commented
          Editing a comment
          Jon could you add a link to this thread - thanks.

      • #36
        I really am missing something here. The plans (#708) are unambiguous. H stab straight using a laser level, weld the struts. The only adjustment possible before the strut is welded is where the forward H stab spar attaches to the fuselage. My plans say negative 4 degrees for a flat (non-airfoil) H stab setting. I put an airfoil shape in my H stab and it generates more down thrust. Per Bob’s recommendation I went to a negative 2 degrees. There is no other adjustment available to me.

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      • #37
        This string is an eye opener. I would rather build solid bolt on struts, fly them and if necessary build additional struts until it is dialed in. In the grand scheme of things, steel is cheap.

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        • Mark Goldberg
          Mark Goldberg commented
          Editing a comment
          Gerald, the above discussion is about the 4 place. On the Patrols - the bottom is pinned in place and on the top we use an AN5 bolt with the head cut off and forged. They cut a few more threads with a die. Has worked well. Mark

      • #38
        Mark, your confidence in the Patrol design difference is reassuring. I'm not as confident I can build the hardware.

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