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Dan,
Righto! The only thing holding the main gear from collapsing outward
is the over center link. Crosswind landings and takeoffs can certainly place a
great deal of stress on those links. By the time I had finished
building my 320 in '96, Lancair made a new outboard link
available with the rod end actually screwed into it. I still have the old
original ones in my "don't you ever use these parts" box. I remember that
it was hard to drill the rivet holes and go through the center of the
rod end that slipped into the link.
While folks may want to refer to replacement "steel", the
actual links are made from some pretty tough alloy beyond simple
aluminum. Were I to have some sort of copy made I would try to find out
what the alloy composition is.
Scott Krueger
In a message dated 8/16/2010 7:46:57 A.M. Central Daylight Time,
dfs155@roadrunner.com writes:
Back in
'93 when I was getting ready for my inspection and first flight of my 235,
my hangar mate who had taken off earlier in the week for Oshkosh, showed
up in the hangar with his wrecked L235 on a trailer. In Arizona a main
gear over-center link pulled apart on take-off (but before he had flying
speed) and he took out some runway lights with one of his wings - plus a
lot of other damage. On the early design, the steel fitting to which the
lower ball-end was attached was epoxied and riveted into the lower
aluminum link - and that's where the thing came apart.
When I saw
where the failure had ocurred, I took my lower over-center links to a
machinist friend and had him make copies in steel with internal threads
for a short length of SS threaded rod for the connection to the female
threaded ball-end. (Incidentally, following that incident, I told Lancair
about what I had done and they immediately changed the design and made
steel links available - if you've been around Lancair long enough, you may
remember when that happened). I had the machinist make about a dozen pairs
and for a bunch of guys still using the original parts, and if I remember
correctly, they were about $100 per set. Small price to pay to eliminate
such a really bad potential failure mode - even if the cost was two or
three times that today.
I'm bringing this up to suggest that having
a good machinist make copies of your link parts, if you deem it necessary,
shouldn't be such a big deal - CAD drawings of no. I'm not a machinist but
with the original part in hand, a good machinist should be able to make an
exact replica in whatever material you want - or with whatever mods you
think necessary - as I had done, changing the bearing connection to a
threaded insert vs. the smooth bore hole which required glueing and
riveting.
In my opinion, the nose gear link is no more complicated in
design than the main gear link so it shouldn't be all that difficult to
copy.
Just my two cents worth.
Dan Schaefer LNC-2
N235SP still flying (a lot) today.
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