When is your next visit to New Zealand ??

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Rob Thompson
Sent: Tuesday, 6 October 2015 9:29 p.m.
To: [email protected]
Subject: [DOG mailing list] Prop Balancing Demo

 

For those of you who happen to be on the Australian NSW east coast, I will
be going to Warkworth on Friday to help Dieter Hildenbrand dynamically
balance his prop. I have Nigel Baker's balancer which is available if you
want to hire it.

Dynamically balancing your prop makes the world of difference. If you
haven't done it before you will be amazed how smooth it runs after the
balance.

We will also be balancing the carbs on dual manifold pressure gauges which
also makes your engine run sweet.

If you happen to be close by come along.

Rob


Rob Thompson
0429 493828
Please note that my new email address is [email protected]



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To: [email protected]
From: [email protected]
Date: Tue, 6 Oct 2015 06:33:26 +0800
Subject: Re: [DOG mailing list] More on shimmy and tyres

Hi All
          Just putting in my little bit. To balance tail wheel and dynamic
balance of prop go to a Tyre place and get a card of stick on weights as
used on mag wheels there are a range of weights on each card. We have added
10 gms to our new prop and the results are amazing.
 cheers  Wally



On 5/10/2015 3:13 PM, Ian Mc Phee wrote:

Rob
Thanks for that. I would never have thought of balancing tailwheel. I use
square Mc ready tyres 6pr 250x4 as am sick of the bunnings ones from China. 

I can say with PIK20E prop it really helps as with falke fixed pitch prop
but even better do a dynamic balance on the prop. 

Ian Mc Phee 
0428847642 
Box 657 Byron Bay NSW 2481 
AUSTRALIA 

On 5 Oct 2015 4:10 pm, "Rob Thompson" <[email protected]> wrote:

Don't forget that if your tail wheel is out of balance it will be much more
prone to shimmy.

A static balance can be acheived quite easily. 

A tiny bit of lead sheet flashing cut out to size and glued, screwed or
doubled sided taped in place will solve the problem.

Just support the well oiled shaft and see which side of the wheel rotates to
the bottom.


cheers
Rob

Rob Thompson
0429 493828
Please note that my new email address is [email protected]




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From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Date: Mon, 5 Oct 2015 11:21:28 +1100
Subject: [DOG mailing list] Shimmy and tyres

I have suspected for a while now that the square profile tail wheel tyres
are less prone to shimmy than the round ones.

Yesterday we changed to a round profile and for the first time in ages got a
bit of shimmy on bitumen on the take off roll. Landed on grass but I will
test the theory more sometime soon.

Rob

Rob Thompson
0429 493828





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Date: Mon, 5 Oct 2015 11:09:19 +1100
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [DOG mailing list] H36 Tail wheels

I found out my previous message didn't get through because of file size.
Here it is again.

Michael is on the right track. The vertical shaft on any castor wheel has to
be exactly vertical.

What happens with the Dimona h36 is that shaft gets bent slightly due to
potholes etc. and from then on you have shimmy. The bend can be barely
visible.

The more the bend the more the excitement. I have had both the straight
tailwheel and the damped one and the only difference is in height.

I have seen a " repaired " one that was made stronger and that stuffed the C
of G. The one with the damper bracket weighs 725 grams.

 

A new part definitely fixes the problem.

Regards,

John.

 

On 3 October 2015 at 00:08, Michael Stockhill <[email protected]> wrote:

I don't have the W&B info on my friend's H-36 here, but I do remember
weighing it and finding the numbers way aft, somewhere on either side of the
aft limits when flown solo.  My own H-36 is fine.  I can't account for the
difference, suspecting perhaps an undocumented heavy repair, and the very
lavish heavy beautiful refinish that was done.  It has been a few years, but
I did some calculations for adding a weight in the nose, but with the
relatively short arm it was impractical.   

 

Life is great,

 

 

MLS

 

On Thu, Oct 1, 2015 at 8:19 PM, Nigel Baker <[email protected]>
wrote:

I am surprised by your comment on them being tail heavy.

I have weighed 4 different H36 aircraft and they all came in close to each
other in C of G.

See attached for my own aircraft.

Cheers.

Nige.

 

 

From: Michael <mailto:[email protected]>  Stockhill 

Sent: Friday, October 02, 2015 11:04 AM

To: [email protected] 

Subject: Re: [DOG mailing list] H36 Tail wheels

 

My friend tried a later-model tailwheel fork with the rubber dampers on his
H-36. I wasn't present, but recall that it is far heavier and put an already
tail heavy bird way out of CG limits.  There were other issues that
prevented retrofit, if I remember correctly.   

 

 

MLS

 

On Thu, Oct 1, 2015 at 4:56 PM, Rob Thompson <[email protected]> wrote:

The early H36 models had a straight un-damped tail wheel fork which, due the
wheels being forward of the centre of gravity and the heavy tail weight can
induce some quite nasty oscillations. 

As a result of this Hoffman later introduced a new tail wheel which has
shock absorbing rubbers. This reduces dramatically the oscillations but is
more prone to shimmy.

If the tail wheel cables are too tight the steering becomes VERY responsive
to the slightest pedal movement. If the cables are too loose you get shimmy.
Takes a bit of experience to know when it is just right. Real pain when you
have to take the tank out each time to get it right!



Rob Thompson
0429 493828
Please note that my new email address is [email protected]




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From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Date: Thu, 1 Oct 2015 21:09:03 +0200
Subject: Re: [DOG mailing list] Morning Glory Cloud Documentary

Most interesting and helpful thanks Michael. My Dimona is also a bit of a
beast on the ground compared to other taildragger aircraft I have flown. I
will keep you pisted. Thanks for taking the time to write the detail. 

Regards. 

Thys 

 

 

 

Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.



-------- Original message --------
From: Michael Stockhill <[email protected]> 
Date: 01/10/2015 20:57 (GMT+02:00) 
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [DOG mailing list] Morning Glory Cloud Documentary 

Hi, Mathys, 

 

I own an H-36 and also maintain one belonging to a friend.  Between the two
of us, we have had some interesting tailwheel issues.  My bird was the
scariest tailwheel aircraft I had flown ( about 800 hours in various Super
Cubs, Cessna 180's and 185's and DH Beavers, etc.).  If you breathed on the
rudder pedals during takeoff or landing when the tailwheel was on the
ground, it would threaten to leave the runway, and on two or three occasions
I suffered PIO (pilot-induced oscillations) that shook my teeth.  What I
finally discovered was a logbook reference to a tailwheel fork repair.  The
fork was rewelded at that time with absolutely no trailing rake.  We rebuilt
it with 7 degrees aft rake and that demon was tamed.  It now actually
reminds me of a normally operating aircraft.  

 

In the case of my friend's Dimona, most landings resulted in scary tailwheel
shimmy--I thought it would take off the tailboom.  He mitigated this at
first by making wheel landings and holding the tail off as long as he could.
On the couple times I experienced it, I braked as much and as soon as
possible to get slowed down.  We tried various tailwheel tire pressures and
checked balance, etc..  It has been a while, so my recollection is a bit
vague, but what I did discover by looking at the tailwheel fork while
installed, the shoulder of the weldment where the vertical shaft enters the
lower flanged spacer was not parallel with the face of that spacer.  Upon
disassembly we were able to discern some bending of the shaft at that point
(the shoulder of the weldment and the tailwheel vertical shaft).   We had a
whiz of a machinist fabricate a new shaft and other parts of the tailwheel
fork.  I test flew it afterwards and it was a different airplane.  Rudder
cables were also replaced at a later date. 

 

Hope some of that is of help to you.

 

Michael Stockhill

Polson, Montana, USA 

 

On Wed, Sep 30, 2015 at 3:40 AM, Mathys Kuhn <[email protected]>
wrote:

Hi Everybody
I operate a mid 80's model Hoffma Dimona in South Africa. Lately I started
experiencing a significant tailwheel shimmy at low speed after landing on a
tar runway. Has anybody ever experienced something similar? ANY ADVICE?
Many Thanks
 


Mathys Kuhn


Training Captain
T: 0825685614
C: 0825685614
F: 016 9330248
 <mailto:[email protected]> e: [email protected]

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Ian Williams
Sent: 23 September 2015 10:56 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [DOG mailing list] Morning Glory Cloud Documentary

 

Apparently only able to be viewed in Australia. 

Sent from my iPhone


On 23/09/2015, at 13:05, Rob Thompson <[email protected]> wrote:

G'day All,

For those of you who missed it, the Morning Glory Cloud Documentary is on
SBS "Catch Up" 

http://www.sbs.com.au/ondemand/video/521484355510/secrets-of-a-strange-cloud



cheers

Rob

Rob Thompson
0429 493828

P Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail. 


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