by Zach Grant L1011jock » Fri Jul 22, 2016 1:08 am
LeWayne,
First you are correct in that the strength of the gear is in the over center position. How do you think the gear stays "over center? If you said anything but spring tension, you don't See the big picture. In short, the springs on the nose gear are so important to keeping the gear over center, that Piper incorporated a kit to double the spring strength, and we know this because they went from one to two springs, and that was mandated by Paragraph A of AD 77-13-21. It is circular reasoning, but if you rig the gear as per the maintenance manual, you actually time the nose gear to go over center slightly after the main gear does, causing a preload situation on the main gear sidebraces. Without these items installed, properly maintained, and properly rigged, including removing excessive play in the bolts and bushings that would allow the properly tensioned over center action to not be maintained (SL 782), the gear will not remain in the down and "locked" (over center) position regardless of whether the transmission is engaged or disengaged, as the transmission mount is no match for the weight of the complete aircraft.
Zach
"Keep it above 5 feet and don't do nuthin dumb!"