REFLECTOR: slow nose gear down indicator

Richard J. Gentil richard at naples-air-center.com
Wed Feb 20 08:23:46 CST 2013


Scott,

The gas strut is supposed to help the nose gear go over center during free fall. 

Richard 

Sent from my iPhone 5

On Feb 20, 2013, at 9:11 AM, Scott Derrick <scott at tnstaafl.net> wrote:

> 
>    I checked the micro switch a while back and it is mounted solid and looks like it works as designed.
> 
>    I will do a thorough inspection of the mechanism, I do every annual and its coming up very soon.
> 
>    So maybe I don't understand what the gas strut is for?  I thought the hydraulic ram pushed the gear strut to full extension but then the gas strut pushed the locking mechanism over center so so you are not relying on hydraulic pressure to keep the nose gear in the down position when the electric pump is not powered up and the pressure eventually leaks down internally.
> 
>    What does the gas strut do?
> 
> Scott
> 
> -------- Original Message --------
> Subject: Re: REFLECTOR: slow nose gear down indicator
> From: Scott Baker <scottb33333 at gmail.com>
> To: Velocity Aircraft Owners and Builders list <reflector at tvbf.org>
> Date: 02/20/2013 05:43 AM
> 
>> On 2/19/2013 7:38 PM, Scott Derrick wrote:
>>> Lately my nose gear down(green) light has take longer and longer to
>>> light up.   The main green lights up, the gear motor stops, 10-15
>>> seconds later I finally get a nose gear green. Actually today it took
>>> maybe 25 seconds before the nose green lit up.  I was starting to wonder.
>>> 
>>> I think my gas strut is getting old,  97 model strut.  Maybe it just
>>> doesn't have the umphh to push it over center?
>>> 
>>> Anybody see this type of behavior?
>>> 
>>> Scott
>> Hi Scott,
>> 
>> First check the nose gear down micro switch and its mount to confirm the
>> switch is functioning as it should and the micro switch mount is solid.
>> 
>> Something other than the gas spring is the culprit.  If the nose gear
>> linkage is rigged as it should, the hydraulic ram (by virtue of
>> extending itself to its most outward travel) should push the linkage to
>> its over-center position.  As you know, when the ram reaches its
>> furthermost travel, hydraulic pressure builds and ultimately turns the
>> pump off when the 'gear down' hydraulic pressure switch reaches its set
>> pressure (about 550psi).  When this happens, the ram should not be
>> capable of any further travel.  This is a long winded way of saying that
>> the strength of gas strut has no bearing on the travel of the nose gear
>> linkage.
>> 
>> Check the travel limits of the nose gear ram to make sure that it is
>> providing full travel and the gear linkage is over-center when the ram
>> reaches its furthermost travel.  Possible problem areas include loose
>> mounting screws at the base of the nose gear cylinder; ram rod end
>> bearing turning (though not likely); some sort of blockage inside the
>> ram that is limiting its full travel; or major slop in the nose gear
>> linkage pivot bolt bearing/bent bolt.
>> 
>> Best,
>> Scott B.
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> -- 
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