bixmooney Posted March 15 Report Posted March 15 My prior post about emergency gear extension got deleted, but all is working now and I ended up putting an actuator from a J model in my F and the dual relays , new downlock and squat switches and rerigged and working well. i decided to do the shock discs , even though they were not terribly old, 2012. Happy I did that , and fyi, anyone thinking of doing those or waiting, taxi is noticeably smoother for me. 3 hrs mechanic time for the shock discs and I felt like it was well worth it. Quote
DCarlton Posted March 15 Report Posted March 15 12 minutes ago, bixmooney said: My prior post about emergency gear extension got deleted, but all is working now and I ended up putting an actuator from a J model in my F and the dual relays , new downlock and squat switches and rerigged and working well. i decided to do the shock discs , even though they were not terribly old, 2012. Happy I did that , and fyi, anyone thinking of doing those or waiting, taxi is noticeably smoother for me. 3 hrs mechanic time for the shock discs and I felt like it was well worth it. One hour per wheel? Someone must have.. been there done that and knew what they were doing? Quote
bixmooney Posted March 15 Author Report Posted March 15 1 minute ago, DCarlton said: One hour per wheel? Someone must have.. been there done that and knew what they were doing? 3.5 hrs now that I look. Pretty darn quick ! It helped me decide to do it, when he said he has done a lot of them and that is about the time he needs. $1955.25 for 11 discs Happy it is done Quote
bixmooney Posted March 15 Author Report Posted March 15 7 minutes ago, Crawfish said: Curious where you got them done at? In Michigan. Lapeer Aviation based at KFNT They are a mooney service center Quote
Crawfish Posted March 15 Report Posted March 15 Awesome thank you! Been thinking it’s getting close to time, my local A&P said he’s not the biggest fan of doing them. So thinking about having somewhere else knock it out. We did the nose gear pucks about a year ago as we were replacing the truss due to damage anyway. Quote
Bolter Posted March 16 Report Posted March 16 1 hour ago, bixmooney said: 3.5 hrs now that I look. Pretty darn quick ! It helped me decide to do it, when he said he has done a lot of them and that is about the time he needs. $1955.25 for 11 discs Happy it is done Where did you get the disks? Quote
bixmooney Posted March 16 Author Report Posted March 16 9 minutes ago, Bolter said: Where did you get the disks? Aircraft spruce was cheapest 177 1 Quote
Hank Posted March 16 Report Posted March 16 1 hour ago, Crawfish said: Awesome thank you! Been thinking it’s getting close to time, my local A&P said he’s not the biggest fan of doing them. So thinking about having somewhere else knock it out. We did the nose gear pucks about a year ago as we were replacing the truss due to damage anyway. I've been told the main gear pucks can be replaced using the weight of the plane to press everything back into place, if those are all that you're changing out. Quote
cliffy Posted March 17 Report Posted March 17 Yes you can change the mains by jacking the airplane and lowering it on to the new pucks You may need someone to lay on the wing tip (with the wheel on the ground) to help get just that last bit of squish to get the cross bolt in. Just be sure you assemble it correctly 1 Quote
PT20J Posted March 17 Report Posted March 17 Probably helps to have full tanks and some friends in the cabin. Quote
1967 427 Posted March 17 Report Posted March 17 Friends in the cabin and full tanks may help, but recently my mechanic and I did my nose wheel shock discs. We used a ratcheting strap between the upper and lower halves, which generates way more force than a couple of 200lb’ers in the cabin. Quote
EricJ Posted March 17 Report Posted March 17 59 minutes ago, 1967 427 said: Friends in the cabin and full tanks may help, but recently my mechanic and I did my nose wheel shock discs. We used a ratcheting strap between the upper and lower halves, which generates way more force than a couple of 200lb’ers in the cabin. The nosewheel is usually the hard one. Glad to hear that the ratchet strap worked in your case. I know some have had no luck trying that. Quote
47U Posted March 18 Report Posted March 18 2 hours ago, EricJ said: The nosewheel is usually the hard one. Glad to hear that the ratchet strap worked in your case. I know some have had no luck trying that. I was able to use the ratchet strap to get the nose wheel apart, but the get the collar bolt back in I had to go to the bottle jack, modeled after others here on MooneySpace. Quote
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