I found that it also helps to smooth and round out the end of the wire so
that it is not as prone to catch on the transitions.

 

Roy

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Kevin
Sent: Wednesday, April 07, 2010 9:48 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ercoupe-tech] Re: Installing new trim tab wire

 

  

The easiest way I have found to install the wire is to push it in from the
rear. It will probably hang up at the junction where it transitions from
flex to solid under the fairing in front of the horizontal stab. You can
take off the fairing and disconnect the fitting, push the wire through a bit
and then reconnect the fitting. It will usually go pretty well until it hits
the next transition back to flex. At that point disconnect the fitting and
do the same thing and reconnect it. Lubricate the wire as it goes in and you
might need to grip it with pliers or something. If you do tape up the pliers
so it does not knick the wire.

Replacing the flex in the tail will required removal of the stabilizer.

Kevin1

--- In [email protected] <mailto:ercoupe-tech%40yahoogroups.com>
, "pilotmac818" <pilotmac...@...> wrote:
>
> The new wire goes through the conduit in the fuselage just fine but gets
stuck in the conduit in the elevator (horizontal stabilizer). I think the
conduit might be twisted. I bought a new conduit from Skyport but I'm
chicken to remove the old one for fear that the new one won't go through
cleanly (there is no opening in the elevator to help guide it; by the way,
how do we check for corrosion when we can't see the inside of the elevator?
A subject for a separate note). I have some ideas of how to do this but I
would benefit greatly from hearing from someone who has actually done it.
> 
> Mac McMahon
> N94184
> VKX Friendly, MD
>



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