marky_24 Posted October 28, 2016 Report Posted October 28, 2016 I went to go fly my 78 J today and noticed that there was a good bit on oil under the plane , looking in the oil fill door I couldn't see where the oil was coming from . So I removed the cowling and started cleaning up the oil. When I cleaned the oil off the mag I noticed it moving very easily . I Called my mechanic over to retime the mags , but they just wouldn't come into time. So we pulled the mags and sent them off for an overhaul . It was odd timing, pun intended, that the mag had come lose and both sides went bad all at once . I'm just glad it happened on the ground ! Quote
Guest Posted October 28, 2016 Report Posted October 28, 2016 You mean this one. http://davidduffer.com/lycoming/Lycoming_SB_SL/si/SI1508.pdf Clarence Quote
marky_24 Posted October 29, 2016 Author Report Posted October 29, 2016 Yep, I suspect that the mag hold down nuts got loosened to adjust the timing at the last annual in August and they didn't put new lock washers on. 1 Quote
carusoam Posted October 29, 2016 Report Posted October 29, 2016 That challenge is so old, people have forgotten about it. But it hasn't changed. They haven't invented a reusable lock washer yet...(?) Best regards, -a- Quote
Guest Posted October 29, 2016 Report Posted October 29, 2016 Although not called for, I add a pal nut aft torquing the STD1410 nut, especially on engines with a D3000 magneto. http://www.aircraftspruce.ca/catalog/hapages/ms27151palnuts.php?clickkey=3020773 Clarence Quote
mike_elliott Posted October 29, 2016 Report Posted October 29, 2016 Clarence, do you know why Loctite is frowned upon by the powers who govern the installation universe of F * r * sin(theta)? Quote
Guest Posted October 30, 2016 Report Posted October 30, 2016 1 hour ago, mike_elliott said: Clarence, do you know why Loctite is frowned upon by the powers who govern the installation universe of F * r * sin(theta)? Mike, While its not really standard practice, but certainly a dab of blue loctite would work as well. Clarence Quote
carusoam Posted October 30, 2016 Report Posted October 30, 2016 I would think that acrylic glue might be temperature sensitive to elevated temps. Check the operating temperature range for the lock tite materials prior to use... I only looked up one, 302°F was it's limitation... (two part epoxy version) then I looked up Loctite red. They said service temperature is 300°F. To remove parts that have been glued with the red, heat to 482°F is recommended. http://www.loctiteproducts.com/tds/EPXY_HEAVY_tds.pdf http://www.loctiteproducts.com/threadlockers.shtml finally read about the blue... similar temp limitations there as well. http://www.loctiteproducts.com/tds/T_LKR_BLUE_tds.pdf How hot can a Magneto mounting bolt get? About the same temperature as the engine's oil temp? Best regards, -a- Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.