The only H36 with a sprung tailwheel that I know of in Australia is GJD owned by John Mason. The sprining consists of two rubber blocks which take the bumps out of the tail compared to the non sprung version. It does raise the tail slightly. There is a drawing on page 4.10 in the H36 parts catalogue. I did replace the top section on GJD when I imported it as there was a very slight bend in the vertical spindle and this caused tailwheel shimmy. The faulty part is still in the workshop.
There's no place like cloudbase. John Callahan. ----- Original Message ----- From: John Mason To: [email protected] Sent: Thursday, January 28, 2010 11:09 AM Subject: Re: [DOG mailing list] H36 spung tailwheel I'd certainly be interested in that... John Mason - GJD ----- Original Message ----- From: Rob Thompson To: [email protected] Sent: Thursday, January 28, 2010 11:03 AM Subject: [DOG mailing list] H36 spung tailwheel I'm keen on the idea of getting a sprung tailwheel on our H36 - the rigid one is not at all good on rough surfaces. I think the sprung wheels may also reduce the "bunny hopping" on rough runways....can anyone enlighten me as to whether this is the case or not? Last time I saw a sprung one I didn't think it would be particularly difficult or costly to manufacture - perhaps we could get some plans drafted from one of the dimonas with a sprung wheel and see about getting a few made up with appropriate approvals. How many of you would be interested? cheers Rob PO Box 129, Lawson, NSW, 2783. mobile 0429 493828 ............................................. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Ian Mc Phee <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Wed, 27 January, 2010 11:39:22 PM Subject: Re: [DOG mailing list] Dimona 1984 Interesting about tail wheel mod from Michael - sure gives smoother ride. You mention the heads/valves lasting only 300hrs. I would recommend to all analysis of exhaust at FULL POWER with lamdameter etc. You may find it is running slightly lean on full power (actually plugs look OK) but gas analysis does not lie. More recently i have been using digital CHT and you can really see what is happening. I set them up so full power CHT rises to about 170degC then very slowly falls. If you bring throttle back just a bit in revs CHT will quickly rise to 180degC and beyond. This proves to me you are running rich on full power- also confirmed on EGT. To achieve this it may be necessary to carefully thin out the end 6mm to 8mm of each the needle in carby and thus achieve the low CHT on full power. (do not think of touching jet) Fuel is cheap when compared to repairing heads. Limbach Tech bull 53 makes mention of max on climb of 180degC (forget what max the manual says - that is stupid value) Also Tech bull 44 (11page edition) is well worth a read. Ian mcPhee 2010/1/27 Michael Grimwood <[email protected]> Hi John and Lasse I have owned a Mk1 H36 since 1988 (G-MRG in the UK, now VH-VRG in Australia). It originally came with an un-sprung ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Yahoo!7: Catch-up on your favourite Channel 7 TV shows easily, legally, and for free at PLUS7. Check it out.
