I did find washers listed in the parts book for apparently taking up the 
space...I think, as I see no other use for the 2 washers listed in the assy. 
Page 30 of the Parts manual, item 16-18 & 16-19. It is strange they dont 
list the washers right with the bolt, nut and cotter key, but they are listed 
after the 4 attachment bolts and washers, etc,., listed for mounting the 
assy. 
 
AN960-A416 , Univair part 415-13001-56;   2 ea.   (for each 
side).
 
Bearing numer AN201-K4A  Univair part no.  415-52307-1
 
Rossi, you are correct in that one should not force a fit by bending the 
mounting materials. I, too am not a licensed mechanic; so one must take my info 
with a grain of salt...and let your mechanic advise you on proper repairs.
 
Harry

--- On Tue, 6/17/08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [ercoupe-tech] Aileron Bell Crank Saga
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, June 17, 2008, 3:07 PM






Ed,

I have found that sometimes you need to use some shim stock to take up the 
clearance that you are talking about.  You are right - it's not a good 
idea to just crank down on the nut until the aluminum casting bends enough to 
take up the slack.  One reason that it's not a good idea is that it 
stresses the aluminum casting in a manner that the casting was not 
designed for.  The second reason is that when you bend the casting in, the 
alignment of the straight hole that is drilled through the two "ears" of 
the casting is no longer straight.  It is misaligned by an amount 
equal to the angle that you bent the casting by. This results in 
even more wear.  (We're talking about thousandths of an inch here.)  
This is particularly true of taking slop out of the nose gear scissors.  
Those castings are not meant to be pinched down by tightening the bolts.

If there is a lot of clearance between the ball in the rod end and 
the casting, you might get lucky and get a thin washer to fit in there 
between one side of the ball and the casting.  If not, you can make a thin 
washer out of shim stock and use that.  If it is a small enough diameter 
washer that you need, you might consider sacrificing a feeler gauge blade 
or two to make the shim from. That way you have an endless selection of 
thicknesses to choose from.

Also when you are tightening down all of the rod end jam nuts, make sure that 
you don't have any binding between the rod ends, the rod end nuts, and the 
fittings that they attach to.  You should check that you can still 
easily twist the control rod back and forth with the controls moved 
to the extreme limits of their travel.  If the control pushrod is not free 
to twist (around it's longitudinal axis) throughout the entire range of travel 
of the controls, then something is wrong.  

Also be careful to check how the ends of those bolts clear the surrounding 
structure.  The clearances in a few locations are very tight and you have 
to use exactly the right bolt length, and exactly the right number of washers 
in exactly the right locations to make sure that both ends of the bolts clear 
everything properly.  

Fun stuff, huh? 

Of course - take this all with a grain of salt since I'm not licensed or 
qualified to work on airplanes... .....

Best Regards,


Wayne DelRossi
Alon N5618F
 


-----Original Message-----
From: claveled <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: ercoupe-tech@ yahoogroups. com
Sent: Tue, 17 Jun 2008 12:22 pm
Subject: [ercoupe-tech] Aileron Bell Crank Saga






Continuation of the aileron bellcrank saga.
I removed the bellcrank and found the suspect bearings to be ok. The 
loosness was caused by worn 60 year old bolts. So hurray! I don't have 
to remove and replace the bearings. With new bolts it was a nice fit. 
The new question I have is this. When I attached the bellcrank to the 
push-pull rod that goes to the spider I noticed that in order to have a 
grip fit to the Heim ball I had to squeeze the bellcrank cheeks 
together with the castle nut. This springs the bellcrank cheeks 
together. The bellcrank is an alluminum casting. I am not to 
comfrotable with this. If I don't remove the excess play the Heim ball 
is free to rotate around the bolt instead of the ball boss and the wear 
will be on the bolt. I am sorry if this is confusing but I found it 
difficut to describe. 
All opinions gratefully accepted. Thanks.
Ed
N3396H




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