Andy95W Posted October 19 Report Posted October 19 Scott- you probably have the 4500. You’ll have to put your eyes on your valve and order what you need. You probably know this, but it’s on the cabin side of the firewall above the pilot’s feet. By the way, I have the 4500 but my parking brake doesn’t hold because of an internal seal that you can’t buy without buying a whole new valve. The seal kits that LASAR sells seem to be if yours is leaking and dripping, not if it’s not holding the brakes. 1 Quote
Andy95W Posted October 19 Report Posted October 19 If you find a supplier for the internal seals, please let me know! 1 Quote
47U Posted October 19 Report Posted October 19 3 hours ago, Echo said: Is this the correct parking brake seal kit for a 65 E? Scott… do you have an external leak? Does the parking brake actuate but not hold pressure to the brakes? Is the cable functional throughout its full travel… or stiff from lack of lubrication and decades of neglect (obviously, neglect from previous owners). 1 Quote
Echo Posted October 19 Author Report Posted October 19 9 hours ago, 47U said: Scott… do you have an external leak? Does the parking brake actuate but not hold pressure to the brakes? Is the cable functional throughout its full travel… or stiff from lack of lubrication and decades of neglect (obviously, neglect from previous owners). The knob pulls and stays in position, but will NOT hold brakes. I have NOT noticed any drips/leaks. My brakes do need to be properly bled as the right is soft until you pump it up. Quote
Echo Posted October 19 Author Report Posted October 19 I only use parking brake during run up. I like using it vs. holding brakes. My Missile held during run up no problem. Quote
Echo Posted October 19 Author Report Posted October 19 Wow. Ordered a battery from Spruce yesterday afternoon and received today. That's Mooney fast. Nice. 2 Quote
47U Posted October 20 Report Posted October 20 11 hours ago, Echo said: The knob pulls and stays in position, but will NOT hold brakes. I have NOT noticed any drips/leaks. My brakes do need to be properly bled as the right is soft until you pump it up. With the 201 windshield, do you have the small triangular panels? Otherwise, I’m guessing access is problematic. When the brakes were solid, did the parking brake hold then? Or was it always slipping… Sounds like @Andy95W has the inside track on troubleshooting. Once you identify which valve you have, the o-ring part numbers are in the mx manual (104). Or, depending on which valve, a replacement/salvage valve might be in your future. 1 Quote
Echo Posted October 20 Author Report Posted October 20 12 hours ago, 47U said: With the 201 windshield, do you have the small triangular panels? Otherwise, I’m guessing access is problematic. When the brakes were solid, did the parking brake hold then? Or was it always slipping… Sounds like @Andy95W has the inside track on troubleshooting. Once you identify which valve you have, the o-ring part numbers are in the mx manual (104). Or, depending on which valve, a replacement/salvage valve might be in your future. Yes. I have SW Texas J type that retains side access to avionics. I guess I will not repair if inner seal (not able to fix without new) is problem) Thanks for knowledge Andy and 47U. Scott Quote
Echo Posted October 22 Author Report Posted October 22 (edited) Wow! Two awesomes today. The new Concorde GETS WITH THE PROGRAM! Spins WAY stronger than old Gill. Tailwinds are awesome! Quick flight today. Edited October 26 by Echo 1 Quote
Echo Posted November 5 Author Report Posted November 5 Happy to report I finally got my Accu-Flite Brittain Directional Heading Bug installed in my Mooney. I had installed the rear controller and replaced old black tubing prior. The suggestion from fellow Mooney spacer to install by right knee was perfect location. Hardest part was finding the left right wires in the cockpit from the old system which are being used with the Accu-Flite. Looking forward to flight/function test. Quote
DCarlton Posted November 6 Report Posted November 6 17 minutes ago, Echo said: Happy to report I finally got my Accu-Flite Brittain Directional Heading Bug installed in my Mooney. I had installed the rear controller and replaced old black tubing prior. The suggestion from fellow Mooney spacer to install by right knee was perfect location. Hardest part was finding the left right wires in the cockpit from the old system which are being used with the Accu-Flite. Looking forward to flight/function test. Nice that your DG Adapter is easy to access. Those test ports can be handy. Mine is tucked away behind the left footwell carpeted panel against the firewall. 1 Quote
T. Peterson Posted November 6 Report Posted November 6 I just stumbled across this thread, but I have thoroughly enjoyed reading! It’s a great story! Thank you @Echo for posting your wonderful ownership experience. Quote
Echo Posted November 6 Author Report Posted November 6 6 minutes ago, T. Peterson said: I just stumbled across this thread, but I have thoroughly enjoyed reading! It’s a great story! Thank you @Echo for posting your wonderful ownership experience. Very nice of you to reply. My Mooney experience really has been wonderful. Scott 2 Quote
Echo Posted Saturday at 04:55 PM Author Report Posted Saturday at 04:55 PM Well the Accu-Flite is eactly as I remembered from my first plane. Works fantastic in keeping the plane on course. I took two 2+ hour flights to Arkansas and the Brittain DG worked flawlessly. Once trimmed I found i could esentially fly hands off. No altitude hold needed. Without the Accu-Flight heading corrections resulted in altitude deviations, wash, rinse, repeat. LOVE THIS SYSTEM in a short-bodied Mooney. All in with installation it cost 2AMU's. I highly recommend this system if you are on a budget. 5 Quote
Z W Posted 16 hours ago Report Posted 16 hours ago Our M20C had one of the Brittain systems, can't remember which any more, but it would fly the heading bug perfectly. No altitude hold, but once you had it trimmed out in cruise, you could usually hold altitude +/- 10 feet by leaning forward in your seat to go nose-down, and back to go nose-up, or bending your knees and pulling up your feet a little closer. Made for a fun game on a long cross-country. 1 Quote
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