Garry Edson Posted May 16, 2023 Report Posted May 16, 2023 I have been looking for a master cylinder for M20J for a client now for several months. All of the usual places new & used, not much success to date. Only option so far is a new unit @ close to 2.8K and owner is flipping on price (that's with me absorbing shipping etc.). Under the new VARMA rules, I am hearing about for older aircraft does anyone feel comfortable with rolling in a Spruce experimental in place of FAA-PMA unit, Mooney calls for. Garry Quote
EricJ Posted May 16, 2023 Report Posted May 16, 2023 What's wrong with the old one? They're not difficult to rebuild and parts are available. I just ordered parts to rebuild one of mine (a 10-49) and it's about $30 worth of parts. FWIW, there don't seem to be any VARMA "rules", new or otherwise, from the FAA, just a rehashing of old ACs, as far as I can tell, anyway. 1 Quote
Garry Edson Posted May 16, 2023 Author Report Posted May 16, 2023 Rod is bent and internal seal inside of piston is leaking past. This part is no-longer supported in any repair kit I have ever located. Beach has same issue with a similar cylinder they used a few years back. Quote
LANCECASPER Posted May 16, 2023 Report Posted May 16, 2023 1 hour ago, Garry Edson said: Rod is bent and internal seal inside of piston is leaking past. This part is no-longer supported in any repair kit I have ever located. Beach has same issue with a similar cylinder they used a few years back. Which master cylinder (part number)? I bet Dan at LASAR or Don Maxwell could point you in the right direction for either parts or ideas. Also, here are the basic rebuild kits: https://planepartsinc.com/?s=mooney&post_type=product Quote
carusoam Posted May 16, 2023 Report Posted May 16, 2023 If you can’t rebuild the one you have… Consider rebuilding one from another Mooney… a pre-flown part… See if @alan fox @Alan Fox has what you need… If swapping in non-Mooney parts… be on the look out for control interference…. Things are really tight in that area… PP thoughts only, not a mechanic… Best regards, -a- Quote
Rwsavory Posted May 17, 2023 Report Posted May 17, 2023 https://aircraftpartsandsalvage.com/aircraft-parts/airframe/general-airframe/landing-gear/wheels-and-brakes/parker-brake-master-cylinder-2/ 1 Quote
EricJ Posted May 17, 2023 Report Posted May 17, 2023 Or of that's not it: https://www.ebay.com/itm/334828765790 Quote
MB65E Posted May 17, 2023 Report Posted May 17, 2023 Bill Goetschel Is your guy. He helped on mine when I couldn’t find any master cylinders. He bought a bunch of stock years back and just sticks with master cylinders. He’ll probably even have an exchange unit. (507) 581-9761 -Matt 1 Quote
Jay Bird Posted November 15, 2023 Report Posted November 15, 2023 Old thread but I know a guy that has an uncle who’s neighbor has a friend in California with an early mid body M20 with the Cleveland 10-49 master cylinders. Allegedly, according to that guy, who I don’t know and have never met, Grove 670-50 master cylinders are a direct reproduction to the Cleveland 10-49. Same bore, stroke, length, fluid displacement, and port alignment as the Cleveland. I hear they perform quite well and are $379 each vs $2332 each for new versions of the 10-24D. 2 Quote
Pete Moe Posted February 11, 2024 Report Posted February 11, 2024 Hi all, my first post on Mooneyspace. I have a similar problem to Gary Edson. My airplane is a 1979 M20K (N231TH). The left brake went spongy over time. I have the Cleveland 10-24D master cylinder. Bought a $16 rebuild kit from Lasar, then removed the offending master cylinder. The plunger rod has rough scoring in it as shown in the attached pic. I rebuilt it anyway but of course the pedal is still soft. Roughly $3,000 for a replacement master cylinder is all I can find online. Does anyone have a used 10-24D? Also, there’s a few 10-24C’s for sale (a Cirrus part). The pictures look very similar to my master cylinder. Is the Cirrus part compatible? I just sent a message to Don Maxwell and hope for a quick response. Obviously I don’t want to shell out the $3,000, so I thought I’d throw it out to the pro’s and see if there is a better answer. Quote
Aerodon Posted February 11, 2024 Report Posted February 11, 2024 I have a good set for sale. Removed from a 1986 M20K with 1750 TT for the encore upgrade. Send a pm. The difference between the Mooney and Cirrus 10-24D vs 10-24C is the mounting hole on the back end it drilled 90 degrees differently so the cylinder can be mounter horizontally (pipes out the side instead of the bottom. Aerodon 2 Quote
Shadrach Posted February 11, 2024 Report Posted February 11, 2024 On 5/16/2023 at 5:16 PM, Garry Edson said: Rod is bent and internal seal inside of piston is leaking past. This part is no-longer supported in any repair kit I have ever located. Beach has same issue with a similar cylinder they used a few years back. Hmmm, I just rebuilt the stock master cylinders my 57 year old F model. I think the kit cost me $25 a few years ago. I wouldn’t flip out over $2800, I would politely decline the maintenance and retrieve my aircraft immediately. Rods can be straightened and I’d bet the o rings are off the shelf items. Quote
Pete Moe Posted February 12, 2024 Report Posted February 12, 2024 Thanks for the rapid response to all! And now I see the difference in the Cirrus model master cylinder. I’m so new here I don’t know how to pm Aerodon! I would like to talk to you about your 10-24D’s. Quote
Fly Boomer Posted February 12, 2024 Report Posted February 12, 2024 22 minutes ago, Pete Moe said: Thanks for the rapid response to all! And now I see the difference in the Cirrus model master cylinder. I’m so new here I don’t know how to pm Aerodon! I would like to talk to you about your 10-24D’s. There are some slight differences in the user interface depending on what device (and what screen resolution) you are using, but one foolproof way is to navigate to: https://mooneyspace.com/messenger/ Quote
OR75 Posted February 12, 2024 Report Posted February 12, 2024 questions that come to mind ... what caused the scoring ? and the rod to be bent ? does the scoring have anything to do with brakes being spongy (usually related to seals and/or improper flushing to the hydraulic fluid - air pockets) 1 Quote
MB65E Posted February 13, 2024 Report Posted February 13, 2024 10 hours ago, Pete Moe said: Thanks for the rapid response to all! And now I see the difference in the Cirrus model master cylinder. I’m so new here I don’t know how to pm Aerodon! I would like to talk to you about your 10-24D’s. Hi Pete! Don is great. I Just bought an item from him. Easy transaction. -Matt Quote
A64Pilot Posted February 13, 2024 Report Posted February 13, 2024 Rods can be restraightned and even plated and machined back to size or maybe a new one made. None of this would make sense if a MC were $200 of course, but does at over $3K. The O-rings can be had for pennies, it’s the Stat -O- Seal that’s tough to find. I did find a source of non aviation ones, not abdicating their use though. https://www.pegasusautoracing.com/productselection.asp?Product=3245&utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=3245&gad_source=1&gclid=Cj0KCQiAw6yuBhDrARIsACf94RW4rt-NqlBo5OT9zIMgdUywTPRcGbf7I379ytRiYHw1eun4pSFAxAEaAlLuEALw_wcB 1 Quote
PT20J Posted February 13, 2024 Report Posted February 13, 2024 Parker has a repair kit that lists the o-rings. I just ordered the o-rings and rebuilt my 10-24Ds on my ‘94 J. There’s no stat-o-seal on this master cylinder. I’d figure out how the piston rod got damaged and check price and availability for replacement parts from Parker. https://www.parker.com/literature/Aircraft Wheel & Brake Division/AWB Static Files for Literature/AWBPC0001.pdf#page68 1 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.