dcastor Posted February 3, 2014 Report Posted February 3, 2014 I'm doing some work which has resulted in the loss of a number of tinnerman nuts which appear to be A1890-4Z-1. I can't seem to find a source for these...has anyone else had luck with A1776-4Z-1 instead? Or know of a place to find the 1890s? Dave C Quote
N601RX Posted February 3, 2014 Report Posted February 3, 2014 I ran into this a few years ago and don't remember the number I ordered, but selected them from the chart below based on dimension. http://www.aircraftspruce.com/catalog/hapages/tinnerman2.php Quote
jetdriven Posted February 3, 2014 Report Posted February 3, 2014 http://www.aircraftspruce.com/catalog/hapages/tinnerman.php Quote
Guest Posted February 3, 2014 Report Posted February 3, 2014 Aircraft Spruce lists them. Clarence Quote
0TreeLemur Posted March 22, 2020 Report Posted March 22, 2020 On 2/3/2014 at 5:06 PM, M20Doc said: Aircraft Spruce lists them. Clarence That was then (2014). I can't seem to find them in 2020. MS is a time machine. Sadly its a real-time time machine, so we have to wait six years to go six years into the future... Quote
Guest Posted March 22, 2020 Report Posted March 22, 2020 18 minutes ago, 0TreeLemur said: That was then (2014). I can't seem to find them in 2020. MS is a time machine. Sadly its a real-time time machine, so we have to wait six years to go six years into the future... The Tinnerman used by Mooney had turned up ends and may be gone, this one from Spruce should be fine. Clarence Quote
N201MKTurbo Posted March 22, 2020 Report Posted March 22, 2020 Mill spec parts are a weird deal. The specs rarely go away. There are lots of companies that will make you some to the specs if you order them. Especially if you want thousands and don't mind waiting a few months for them. My son works for Boeing in purchasing, he deals with this every day. The engineers specify parts from the specs with no regard to availability. For us the problem is finding someone who has ordered the part numbers we want and stocks them. Quote
0TreeLemur Posted March 23, 2020 Report Posted March 23, 2020 8 hours ago, M20Doc said: The Tinnerman used by Mooney had turned up ends and may be gone, this one from Spruce should be fine. Clarence @M20Doc, can or should we reuse the old Tinnerman nuts that my co-pilot found lost in the grease, or just use all new ones? Quote
carusoam Posted March 23, 2020 Report Posted March 23, 2020 O’tree... If able toss the old and replace with new... they get less springy each use... and only cost cents to replace... Or you can test each one... by feel. When the springiness is gone you feel it while tightening the screw in... I used to buy a bunch to have on hand... and replace the old ones as required... similar to replacing other related hardware... PP thoughts as usual... not a mechanic... Best regards, -a- Quote
Guest Posted March 23, 2020 Report Posted March 23, 2020 8 hours ago, 0TreeLemur said: @M20Doc, can or should we reuse the old Tinnerman nuts that my co-pilot found lost in the grease, or just use all new ones? If they still grip the screw and tighten, there is nothing wrong with using them. More often it’s the Phillips drive in the screw or a worn screwdriver that prevents proper tightening. Clarence Quote
Bob Weber Posted March 23, 2020 Report Posted March 23, 2020 On 2/3/2014 at 5:22 PM, dcastor said: I'm doing some work which has resulted in the loss of a number of tinnerman nuts which appear to be A1890-4Z-1. I can't seem to find a source for these...has anyone else had luck with A1776-4Z-1 instead? Or know of a place to find the 1890s? Dave C Replacing these should be elementary as indicated above. I would be more concerned about where the loss occurred. If they failed when removed or reinstalled, and not "lost", replacement should be routine. It's when they're lost and floating around the belly of an aircraft among components that don't react well with things like this.. These are one of the most common things I found while cleaning bellies, I was a stickler for "debris free under the floor" and often presented the client with a bag of such that "people behind me" had missed during their work. The older and more sloppy maintained aircraft can get pretty scary when dug real deep into. Fly Safe Bob Weber webairconsulting.com 1 1 Quote
bradp Posted March 27, 2020 Report Posted March 27, 2020 I found my favorite snap on 1/4 ratchet some time after maintenance. I wasn’t gonna give that one back. Quote
Yetti Posted March 27, 2020 Report Posted March 27, 2020 3 hours ago, bradp said: I found my favorite snap on 1/4 ratchet some time after maintenance. I wasn’t gonna give that one back. AW crap fess up time. Have 3 or 4 pairs of snap on needle nose, they can float between 3 or 4 locations. Car, home, hangar, barn. There is only one pair that have the red covers. I knew they had gone missing but like a dog they will usually show back up. Doing the Dynon install, they were found under the comm shelf in the tail. Found by feel and not by sight. Quote
bradp Posted March 27, 2020 Report Posted March 27, 2020 I guess I should clarify - snap on is typically above my pay grade. Found one rattling around in the empennage one year - must have come from Mx- decided that could be my only snap in tool in the box. Quote
0TreeLemur Posted March 27, 2020 Report Posted March 27, 2020 So, parts arrived from A/C Spruce. Pop quiz: Are Tinnerman nuts installed as in A) or B)? I think I know which one it is, just want to be sure. Thx. Quote
Guest Posted March 27, 2020 Report Posted March 27, 2020 1 hour ago, 0TreeLemur said: So, parts arrived from A/C Spruce. Pop quiz: Are Tinnerman nuts installed as in A) or B)? I think I know which one it is, just want to be sure. Thx. Both will work, but A is correct. Clarence Quote
0TreeLemur Posted March 27, 2020 Report Posted March 27, 2020 That's what I thought. Thanks @cliffy and @M20Doc . Much appreciated. Quote
PT20J Posted March 27, 2020 Report Posted March 27, 2020 7 hours ago, 0TreeLemur said: So, parts arrived from A/C Spruce. Pop quiz: Are Tinnerman nuts installed as in A) or B)? I think I know which one it is, just want to be sure. Thx. You get this year's the prize for the best illustration accompanying a question 3 1 Quote
PT20J Posted March 27, 2020 Report Posted March 27, 2020 12 hours ago, Yetti said: AW crap fess up time. Have 3 or 4 pairs of snap on needle nose, they can float between 3 or 4 locations. Car, home, hangar, barn. There is only one pair that have the red covers. I knew they had gone missing but like a dog they will usually show back up. Doing the Dynon install, they were found under the comm shelf in the tail. Found by feel and not by sight. Had a friend that worked in United's maintenance facility at SFO. They found so many tools left inside wings and other cavities that they made a rule that you could not ever lay a tool down on or in an aircraft. Try that. It's really hard. I have another mechanic friend that lined all his tool chest drawers with foam cut out for each tool so that he can quickly spot any that are missing. At the museum, the mechanic makes us stop an hour before quitting time and clean everything up and inventory all the tools. Skip 1 Quote
0TreeLemur Posted March 27, 2020 Report Posted March 27, 2020 (edited) 1 hour ago, PT20J said: You get this year's the prize for the best illustration accompanying a question Thanks. Teleworking brings out the P.E. in me. Edited March 27, 2020 by 0TreeLemur Revised to show correct type "B" screw. 2 Quote
Kelpro999 Posted May 28, 2020 Report Posted May 28, 2020 Turned up ends of the original speed nuts provide the opportunity to use a 5/16 end wrench to tighten from the backside. Helps when working alone Quote
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