I am very excited to share my progress refurbishing my PA-30 landing gear. It's still in progress but I think I'm on the "downhill side" of the effort as it's all coming back to together.
A year ago I put in a new Dukes transmission and motor from Comanche Gear, the Webco Teflon push-pull conduits, and Comanche Gear's wiring kits and microswitches. Cliff and his team at Heritage Aero did a great job installing all that, rigging the gear and taking care of AD 77-13-21. We didn't do AD 79-01-01 R1 at the time since it had 500+hrs to go (but we are now redoing all the gear ADs).
Fast forward to this January and my IA and I started the annual together. We've been doing a number of upgrades including Airwolf remote oil filter kits, some LED panel lighting and LED landing lights. When it came to the gear it was mechanically in great shape but aesthetically it wasn't up to standards with the rest of the plane so I decided to refurbish it.
At first I thought I'd just take it apart enough to more easily paint it in place. However, the more I got into it the more I wanted to take apart. Finally I just got to the point I knew I wouldn't be happy unless I took everything completely apart and refurbished everything.
A big influence for me was watching Matt Kurke's YouTube video of the process refurbishing his Comanche 400 landing gear. I confess I watched it more than just a few times and for a year I've pined to have my gear look like Matt's. I also saw pics of the gear wells on Bill Schnauffer's beautiful "Miss Scarlet" (Comanche Flyer Oct 2013). Then as I was getting into my gear project Cliff sent me pics of George Ahlsten's awesome PA-30 gear refurb and that just pushed me over the edge to total commitment....
We (my IA and I) pulled the gear completely apart - and I do mean completely. I separated all aluminum and steel parts. Every part was tagged and part numbered in accordance with the IPC. Every nut, bolt, washer, bushing was measured for size, thread-pitch, thickness, etc... and cataloged in a database showing where it came from. Detailed photos were taken of all parts as they came apart (thank goodness for digital photography). Left Main Gear, Right Main Gear, and Nose Gear parts were kept in separate groups and I started glass beading everything to bare metal.
I took all the Aluminum parts to Royal Aircraft Services, in Hagerstown, MD (HGR). RAS is a 145 Repair Station with fabrication and paint facilities. They fabricated new gear well liners for me and trimmed them with new rubber (by the way - don't do this... I just learned that Webco carries new liners ready for paint and I just spent much more fabricating them from scratch). Matt Kurke supplied me with a brand new never used RH Main Gear Door. My left was in fairly good shape but had a small patch at the top near the hinge. Since these doors commonly crack near the hinge and near the point where the door rod connects I had both doors reinforced with flush doublers on these points and flush riveting on the doubler where the door rod connects. They did a great job. Both doors are now stronger, look great, match, and if you didn't know otherwise you'd think they came from the factory that way. All these aluminum parts were stripped, acid etched, alodine tanked, and then primed with Dupont two-part epoxy and then top coated with Dupont Imron Matterhorn White.
I sent the side-brace studs off to Aircraft Specialties for magnaflux inspection. When the returned I took all the Steel Parts to a facility in Newport News, VA where they were stripped and cadmium plated. It's getting hard to find cadmium plating due to the stringent EPA filtration requirements involved with the cyanide-cadmium plating process. After cad plating the parts were chromated. It's the chromate that gives hardware that nice gold finish. Like the cyanide-cadmium the chromate is nasty stuff to work with. It contains a heavy dose of hexavalent chromium (aka "Chrome 6") the subject of the movie "Erin Brockovich". Finally, after cad and chromate, for any parts that are easily visible, or are brackets (basically most things besides nuts and bolts) I then had them powder-coated white over-top of the cad plating. While I like the look of the gold chromate I didn't want the gear to look too "bling bling"
For the gear wells themselves I spent countless days and nights, sometimes til 4am stripping them, cleaning them and prepping them for paint. It's an arduous process and there are so many "nooks and crannies" in those gear wells and it took a very long time to get all the old grease and grime out. After several weeks of diligent work they were very clean. I hired a painter to come to the hangar to help me as I thought it would be a bit difficult to fly to the plane to the paint shop with no landing gear . We alodined the bare aluminum of the gear wells (warning: alodine also contains chrome6) and then did the same two part epoxy primer and DuPont Imron paint as was used on the individual aluminum parts.
I drove almost 700 miles in 2 days picking up all the finished parts. We now have all but a few of the parts back and should get the few remaining bits from cad plating this week. We've started reassembling the nose gear and over the coming week or two I hope we will have it all back together. We are doing things slowly, checking everything and rigging everything by the Service Manual. When it comes to torque we are using a dial torque indicator to check the nut turning torque first before torquing with a regular torque wrench. This way we get the proper final torque factoring in the resistance of the lock nuts on the bolts. In addition to the refinished parts many new parts are going in. Brake disks, linings, various hardware. A new nose gear wheel from Matt Kurke (stripping mine revealed it was too pitted to reuse). Attached are a few pics of the progress so far...
Thanks to all the ICS members that have helped me and continue to help me with this project including; Cliff Wilewski, Matt Kurke, Zach Grant, George Ahlesten and others.
- Charles
Picture of empty painted gear well:
Another of empty gear well:
All nose gear parts back from refinishing (steel and aluminum):
All main gear parts back from refinishing (steel and aluminum):
Here's a lower drag link from the main gear. It's been cad plated and chromated. Then the threads and non-paint areas are masked off and white powder-coat over the rest of the part. The second low temp bake from the powder-coat does darken the gold chromate a bit.
Finally here are some of the nose gear components partly reassembled: