by N3322G » Sat May 25, 2013 11:23 pm
Edit: Poor reading on my parts - I answered this wrt to the nose gear vs what William actually posted as the main gear.
William, I would translate that as the mechanic didn't want to mess with it. Depending upon how bad it is, IMHO it changes the departure angle of attack. Twin's are pitch sensitive enough already without artificially raising the nose beyond spec. It is the equivalent of putting on a larger nose tire and of course, this is not approved. It can also cause the nose to hit first in your normal landing configuration.
Did the mechanic put it on jacks to make sure it still fit in the gear well without hitting anything? If not, he should, at his expense. It would be you with the in-air emergency if his maintenance has put the nose gear out of spec and it jams in the well.
First, I would use the fuselage area forward of the tail to raise and lower the tail and so, make sure the nose strut is really higher. Remember not to push on the nose if yours is fiberglass. After rocking it a few times, if it is still high, ask the mechanic to bring it into Service Manual spec.
In short, Piper publishes specs for a reason. In my opinion, I'd want my aircraft in compliance - especially the gear.
Just my opinion. Hopefully others will chime in with their perspectives.
Last edited by
N3322G on Sun May 26, 2013 3:52 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Pat
Patricia Jayne (Pat) Keefer ICS 08899
PA-39 #10 Texas