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Tiger Wheels

 
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tscott165(at)cableone.net
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PostPosted: Sat Jun 02, 2007 2:40 pm    Post subject: Tiger Wheels Reply with quote

I have a main wheel off to fix a flat and greased the bearings while
I was at it. This is a 1977 Tiger. Have a question about the washers
and felt seals. The pictures on Bondline did not help. On the inner
part the bearing goes in then a washer 153-0400, felt seal, another
153-0400, and snapring just like my old Cherokee. The outer is
different. Seal retainer 153-01500 is C-shaped and holds the felt
ring. I assume felt faces outward and the metal surface of the washer
faces inward, then the 1530300 washer and snapring. Believe me I was
careful taking this apart but the parts were mixed, not at all like
in the parts manual.
Anybody care to share the correct reassembly order. PIctures in the
parts and service manuals are not in fine enough detail.

Scott
AA5B, 28339
Boise, Id


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flyv35b(at)minetfiber.com
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PostPosted: Sat Jun 02, 2007 4:24 pm    Post subject: Tiger Wheels Reply with quote

The outer is
Quote:
different. Seal retainer 153-01500 is C-shaped and holds the felt ring. I
assume felt faces outward and the metal surface of the washer faces
inward, then the 1530300 washer and snapring.

The felt faces inward and runs against the washer, which is slightly smaller
in diameter than the washer on the brake disc side.

Cliff A&P/IA
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PostPosted: Sat Jun 02, 2007 5:59 pm    Post subject: Tiger Wheels Reply with quote

Thank you Cliff. So the flat washer goes in against the bearing, then
the retainer with the felt ring, felt side first, then the snap ring,
if I understand you correctly. What exactly does the felt ring seal?
Just keep grease from slinging out?

Scott

On Jun 2, 2007, at 6:24 PM, flyv35b wrote:

Quote:

<flyv35b(at)minetfiber.com>

The outer is
> different. Seal retainer 153-01500 is C-shaped and holds the felt
> ring. I assume felt faces outward and the metal surface of the
> washer faces inward, then the 1530300 washer and snapring.

The felt faces inward and runs against the washer, which is
slightly smaller in diameter than the washer on the brake disc side.

Cliff A&P/IA

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GrummanDude



Joined: 15 Jan 2006
Posts: 926
Location: Auburn, CA

PostPosted: Sat Jun 02, 2007 7:37 pm    Post subject: Tiger Wheels Reply with quote

I see more of these installed wrong than any other piece on the plane.
It's right up there with the nose gear stuff being installed wrong.

When installed correctly, the larger diameter 'washers', both inside
and outside, go on the inside of the wheel. If in doubt, make sure
they slide over the axle all the way past the step in the axle. If it
catches on the step on the axle, and won't go past it, it's wrong. Use
Shell 22 grease. The idea of the inner felt seal is that the inside
diameter of the felt seal rides on the portion of the axle just past
the step. It seals against the axle.

The outer washer has a slightly smaller outside diameter and a smaller
inside diameter. It should NOT slide over the step on the axle. The
idea here is that the outer washer provides the surface against which
the nut crushes the roller bearing against the step on the axle.
Properly adjusted, you'll get about 1 to 2 rotations out of the tire
when rotated firmly. Any looser than that and there will be no preload
on the bearing. By-the-way, that bearing is so over engineered for its
purpose that there is no way to describe it. The dust seal, that felt
in the cup, rotates with the wheel. The washer does not; it is crushed
between the inner bearing roller and the nut. Dust is kept from
bearing along the moving surface.

After packing the bearing with Shell 22, place the bearing in the race,
pack some grease in the area around the outside of the beaing, push the
washer in to squeeze out the excess grease, use some of that grease to
lightly coat the felt (yea, I know the instructions say to use 10
weight oil. That will just run all over the place.) and then install
(1) the other washer on the inside or (2) the 'c' shaped washer with
the dust seal, and the snap ring.

When tightening the nut remember: the grease will take up some of the
pre-load that will go away after the first landing. The distance
between the flats won't let you over tighten the bearing. Make it
snug, 1 to 2 rotations of the tire.

Good luck
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flyv35b(at)minetfiber.com
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PostPosted: Sun Jun 03, 2007 4:58 am    Post subject: Tiger Wheels Reply with quote

Yes, that's correct. The rotation should occur between the felt and ring
surface. It does keep most of the grease from slinging out and dirt from
getting in but is not what I would call a good seal. The inner felt seal
and two retainers on the brake side seem to do a better job. The best
arrangement that I have seen is a sealed bearing where the seal is bonded to
the bearing cone and rubs and seals on the edge of the bearing race (the
cup) as I have on my Bonanza. It works far better and I don't think the
cost is much more or maybe less than all the parts combined on the other
configuration.

Cliff
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Discover



Joined: 26 Feb 2007
Posts: 429

PostPosted: Mon Jun 04, 2007 7:51 am    Post subject: Tiger Wheels Reply with quote

Hi Scott,

While this topic has been covered quite well already, I have uploaded the
Tiger Aircraft LLC Maintenance Manual Chapter 32 which covers the Main
Wheels beginning on page 14 with a nice diagram on page 16 that you may find
useful.

http://members.cox.net/923te/CHAPTER%2032_TEXT%20LANDING%20GEAR.pdf

Regards,
Ned
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currydon(at)bellsouth.net
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PostPosted: Mon Jun 04, 2007 8:09 am    Post subject: Tiger Wheels Reply with quote

Wow, that has a lot more detail than the old AA5B version I have! Is the
entire manual available online? What about the Parts Man?
Thanks in advance,
Don/AG5B

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