Mailing List lml@lancaironline.net Message #69960
From: John Cooper <snopercod@comporium.net>
Sender: <marv@lancaironline.net>
Subject: [LML] Main wheel alignment
Date: Wed, 07 May 2014 07:49:19 -0400
To: <lml@lancaironline.net>
I'm spinning this off from the fast-taxi-testing thread.

This morning I checked the alignment of my main landing gear using a $10 Laser Level in a darkened hanger. This unit doesn't just shoot a point of light, but has a fan-shaped pattern which leaves a line along the floor or the bottom of the aircraft and up a wall. I just set the level on a piece of 2x4, snugged it up against the tire on each side, shot a line 10' back to the tail area from both tires, and made a mark on a piece of blue tape stuck to the hangar floor on either side. Then I used a carpenter's square and a level to drop a line from the center of the tail and made another mark on the floor. (A plumb bob would work better but I didn't have one handy.)





Then I moved the laser level back to the floor under the tail and shot a line forward from the centerline back there to the over-center link on the nose gear, and also to a mark on the floor midway between the two tires. (At this step it was necessary to insure that the laser level was also level from side-to-side so the fan pattern would be vertical.) The whole job took about an hour and was was much easier than using a long box beam to measure the angles. With a little care, I believe the method can be very accurate. The only downside to this cheap laser level is that it uses three expensive button batteries that don't last too long. A set of fresh batteries cost me more than the unit itself - about $12 at Radio Shack.


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