FlySafe Posted September 19 Report Posted September 19 Hello all, I recently had my 1974 M20C Ranger in for its annual inspection (a new shop, not an MSC, but some experience in make and model), and they noticed some play in the nose gear. I’ve attached a video link for reference. There’s no ground shimmer during taxi or landing, and everything feels stable, but the play caught our attention. I’ve searched through the maintenance manual but couldn’t find any specific tolerance limits regarding nose gear play. https://drive.google.com/file/d/15VBGaubPO-E5mtGMee9vACe65R7zJ1XG/view?usp=sharing Has anyone else encountered this? Is this level of play typical for the M20C, or is it something that needs to be addressed? I appreciate any insights or advice. Thanks in advance for your help! Best, Kurt Quote
47U Posted September 19 Report Posted September 19 12 minutes ago, FlySafe said: Has anyone else encountered this? Is this level of play typical for the M20C, or is it something that needs to be addressed? I appreciate any insights or advice. Mine was way worse than that and I didn’t have any shimmy either. I don’t think what you have is all that unusual, but someone with experience over many airframes will be along shortly. To address it, I’d start with the steering link. LASAR overhauled mine, just north of one amu. And they added a zerk so it can be lubricated. 1 Quote
N201MKTurbo Posted September 19 Report Posted September 19 That doesn't look bad. You already have the upgraded steering horn. You are moving the rudder linkage a little, so it isn't all slop. After 40 years of steering horn ownership and maintenance, I would wait till it gets real annoying while taxiing, or you are just wasting money. After it gets annoying, you can shim it up and get a few more hours out of it. When you have to shim it too often, then buy a new one. It is always the shaft the horn rotates around when it retracts. It seems it should have a steel bushing there, but they didn't ask me during the design meetings. 5 Quote
FlySafe Posted September 19 Author Report Posted September 19 15 minutes ago, 47U said: Mine was way worse than that and I didn’t have any shimmy either. I don’t think what you have is all that unusual, but someone with experience over many airframes will be along shortly. To address it, I’d start with the steering link. LASAR overhauled mine, just north of one amu. And they added a zerk so it can be lubricated. much appreciated Quote
FlySafe Posted September 19 Author Report Posted September 19 12 minutes ago, N201MKTurbo said: That doesn't look bad. You already have the upgraded steering horn. You are moving the rudder linkage a little, so it isn't all slop. After 40 years of steering horn ownership and maintenance, I would wait till it gets real annoying while taxiing, or you are just wasting money. After it gets annoying, you can shim it up and get a few more hours out of it. When you have to shim it too often, then buy a new one. It is always the shaft the horn rotates around when it retracts. It seems it should have a steel bushing there, but they didn't ask me during the design meetings. You all are awsome, thank you! Quote
AJ88V Posted September 19 Report Posted September 19 https://lasar.com/stc-kits/oversize-bushing-kit-laskit122a https://lasar.com/chassis-hardware/nose-bushing-and-bolt-kit-kit012 1 Quote
N201MKTurbo Posted September 19 Report Posted September 19 1 hour ago, AJ88V said: https://lasar.com/stc-kits/oversize-bushing-kit-laskit122a https://lasar.com/chassis-hardware/nose-bushing-and-bolt-kit-kit012 Those are good fixes, but have nothing to do with the slop he is showing. 1 Quote
PT20J Posted September 19 Report Posted September 19 I agree with Rich. Mine was taking a lot of footwork to taxi straight so I had the steering horn shimmed and a rod end replaced. It’s much better now. 1 Quote
Kelpro999 Posted September 19 Report Posted September 19 Inspect the torque tube assembly to chassis hardware, found mine loose causing pedal/ steering free play . 1 Quote
FlySafe Posted September 19 Author Report Posted September 19 6 minutes ago, Kelpro999 said: Inspect the torque tube assembly to chassis hardware, found mine loose causing pedal/ steering free play . thank you 1 Quote
Ragsf15e Posted September 19 Report Posted September 19 (edited) 7 hours ago, FlySafe said: Hello all, I recently had my 1974 M20C Ranger in for its annual inspection (a new shop, not an MSC, but some experience in make and model), and they noticed some play in the nose gear. I’ve attached a video link for reference. There’s no ground shimmer during taxi or landing, and everything feels stable, but the play caught our attention. I’ve searched through the maintenance manual but couldn’t find any specific tolerance limits regarding nose gear play. https://drive.google.com/file/d/15VBGaubPO-E5mtGMee9vACe65R7zJ1XG/view?usp=sharing Has anyone else encountered this? Is this level of play typical for the M20C, or is it something that needs to be addressed? I appreciate any insights or advice. Thanks in advance for your help! Best, Kurt I mean @N201MKTurbo rich answered it well, but once it’s on jacks, you can hold the nosewheel straight while wiggling the linkage to see exactly where it’s coming from. Mine would “wander” a bit while taxiing and the new bolt/shim was back ordered (I did finally get it) so my IA shimmed it and it’s so much better. There are lots of rod ends, bolts, shims that can affect it, so make sure it’s nailed down before throwing parts at it (or wait until it’s worse). Now that I think about it, I think we actually held the linkage still while wiggling the nose gear (up on jacks) to see where the loose parts were. Edited September 19 by Ragsf15e 2 Quote
FlySafe Posted September 19 Author Report Posted September 19 2 hours ago, Ragsf15e said: I mean @N201MKTurbo rich answered it well, but once it’s on jacks, you can hold the nosewheel straight while wiggling the linkage to see exactly where it’s coming from. Mine would “wander” a bit while taxiing and the new bolt/shim was back ordered (I did finally get it) so my IA shimmed it and it’s so much better. There are lots of rod ends, bolts, shims that can affect it, so make sure it’s nailed down before throwing parts at it (or wait until it’s worse). Now that I think about it, I think we actually held the linkage still while wiggling the nose gear (up on jacks) to see where the loose parts were. thanks @Ragsf15e, very helpful Quote
EricJ Posted September 19 Report Posted September 19 +1 that that looks like the usual play that is fixed with shims in the horn. I reshimmed mine last year and it tightened up nicely. Reshimming just buys more time since it doesn't really address the shaft wear, but it keeps it working nicely for much longer. 2 Quote
MB65E Posted September 20 Report Posted September 20 The actuating rod end threads appear like they are moving too. Make sure the jam nut on the steering link from the rudder pedals is secure. Play looks acceptable to me. -Matt 1 Quote
cliffy Posted September 28 Report Posted September 28 When you have it up on jacks try moving the nose wheel fore and aft for play there also. The main vertical bolt and bushing can get play in it also especially if it is not lubed at every Annual AND having the bolt and nut retightened every annual as a SB (IIRC) says to do AND again the torque was lessened many years ago by that SB. 1 Quote
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