I am now assisting my A&P /  IA, working under his supervision. Yesterday, I 
started training on towing airplanes with the tug. It is much harder than it 
looks, and it is very easy to quickly reach extreme turns of the nose wheel. I 
used to be concerned about people towing my plane and now I am even more 
concerned! Just MHO.
Eliacim 
  

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Larry Snyder 
  To: carl_lavon 
  Cc: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, February 16, 2009 5:41 AM
  Subject: Re: [ercoupe-tech] Re: towing an Ercoupe


  I don't want to disagree with someone with lots of letters after his name, 
but I had the lower scissors on my Ercoupe bent up by an FBO towing it and 
turning it sharply when parking it. It can happen. I ALWAYS warn any FBO that 
might move my plane about it, and I'm starting to put a DO NOT TOW flag on the 
nose gear.



  Larry Snyder
  Washington, MO








  On Feb 16, 2009, at 5:31 AM, carl_lavon wrote:


    Yes, Linda, it was I who asked the question. Thanks for your input. 
    My FBO assured me that it had put out instructions for our line 
    people about the proper handling of my Ercoupe, but the owner of the 
    FBO and airport manager of KJVY was a 'coupe owner for years and his 
    comment was that they are tougher than one might expect. Since he 
    has nearly 70 years of flying experience and enough alphabet soup on 
    his pilot's license to start a large preschool, I'll defer to him! 
    But he did say that since turning the nose wheel also turned all the 
    flight control surfaces, it probably doesn't hurt to exercise a 
    modicum of restraint when hand moving an Ercoupe. Fly safe!

    Respectfully,

    Carl LaVon

    --- In [email protected], Linda Abrams <laspr...@...> 
    wrote:
    >
    > Thanks to all who wrote to advise on the potential difficulties to 
    > look for when a 'Coupe has been towed w/o permission. I had my 
    A&P 
    > check out the steering collar and stops as you advised, and he 
    said 
    > all looked fine. Then I talked again to the opps folks who'd done 
    > the towing; they said they had put the nose wheel onto a "tow 
    dolly," 
    > which sounds like a platform with wheels. Apparently the dolly's 
    > wheels turn instead, and leave the Ercoupe's nose gear pointing 
    > straight ahead. Perhaps that will help answer the person (Carl?) 
    who 
    > posted asking for best practice.
    > 
    > Hope this helps -
    > 
    > Linda
    > N3437H (Sky Sprite)
    > L.A.
    > 
    > On Feb 8, 2009, at 22:50, profedihmc wrote:
    > 
    > 
    > > I asked in an earlier post about the turning radius of a 415C
    > > with a double fork Cleveland nose gear. I got several interesting
    > > entries but there didn't seem to be a consensus. I cannot 
    physically
    > > lift the front end off the ground nor am I in the least way
    > > mechanically inclined. Don't know what gene it is that men get 
    who
    > > are able to turn wrenches and swing hammers; all I know is that I
    > > didn't get that one and I'm not afraid to admit it. I could 
    write a
    > > technical manual, mind you, but I'm just not a mechanic. Is 
    there no
    > > where to turn for an informed answer to that question concerning 
    the
    > > turning radius? I'm trying to prevent damage to the nose gear by
    > > someone parking my plane using a tug. I need to mark the gear
    > > somehow and having the radius would help me explain it to the 
    local
    > > mechanic so he could mark it for me.
    > >
    > > Thanks!
    > >
    > > "Couper" Carl LaVon
    > > N415CB '46 ERCO 415C
    > >
    >






  

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