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		timwarlick(at)mchsi.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Aug 30, 2009 8:04 am    Post subject: Transporting a Kolb | 
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				All,
   
  Found out that I "may" be moving from Mobile, AL to  Tucson, AZ.
   
  For those who have transported their Kolbs,  should I let the movers try to move it in the moving van or should I rent a 26  foot U-Haul truck and drive it the 23 hours?
   
  Either way, with the wings folded it is pretty  compact. What precautions do I need to take?
   
  Tim Warlick
  Kolb Mark 3 Classic
  BMW R100 powered
   
   
     [quote][b]
 
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		aslsa.rng(at)gmail.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Aug 30, 2009 9:23 am    Post subject: Transporting a Kolb | 
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				Tim, It it were me I'd get the U-Haul. That's the way I brought mine back from Alabama. The best precaution you can take is to get the main gear up off the floor of the truck so road shocks won't be transmitted to the plane. I used 4" foam pads with a plywood compression plate to spread the load over the entire piece of foam. Put the boom in a padded cradle to get the tail wheel off the floor for the same reason. I was the packaging engineer for an office equipment manufacturer in the 90's. I spent a couple of days at the Yellow Freight Packaging Laboratory filming tests of out packaging. One of the things I learned was that a normal highway expansion joint transmits a 6G shock load to the truck floor. Do that about 100,000 times (not an unusual number for 2,000 miles of road) and it will damage your aircraft
  
 
 Rick Girard
 do not archive
 
 On Sun, Aug 30, 2009 at 10:56 AM, Tim Warlick <timwarlick(at)mchsi.com (timwarlick(at)mchsi.com)> wrote:
  [quote]       All,
   
  Found out that I "may" be moving from Mobile, AL to  Tucson, AZ.
   
  For those who have transported their Kolbs,  should I let the movers try to move it in the moving van or should I rent a 26  foot U-Haul truck and drive it the 23 hours?
   
  Either way, with the wings folded it is pretty  compact. What precautions do I need to take?
   
  Tim Warlick
  Kolb Mark 3 Classic
  BMW R100 powered
   
   
      	  | Quote: | 	 		  
 
 get="_blank">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Kolb-List
 tp://forums.matronics.com
 _blank">http://www.matronics.com/contribution
 
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 [b]
 
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		rlaird
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 373 Location: Houston
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				 Posted: Sun Aug 30, 2009 9:42 am    Post subject: Transporting a Kolb | 
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				To add to what Rick said, which I whole heartedly agree with.... of all the Kolbs I've seen transported, the most common mistake was not protecting the leading edge of the wings.  I would suggest removing the wings, then wrapping them with foam rubber, doubly so on the leading edge.  I suspended mine from the ceiling of the trailer and then rigged it with blankets, foam rubber, etc. so that the wings wouldn't move around.
  
   -- Robert
 On Sun, Aug 30, 2009 at 12:21 PM, Richard Girard <aslsa.rng(at)gmail.com (aslsa.rng(at)gmail.com)> wrote:
 [quote] Tim, It it were me I'd get the U-Haul. That's the way I brought mine back from Alabama. The best precaution you can take is to get the main gear up off the floor of the truck so road shocks won't be transmitted to the plane. I used 4" foam pads with a plywood compression plate to spread the load over the entire piece of foam. Put the boom in a padded cradle to get the tail wheel off the floor for the same reason.  I was the packaging engineer for an office equipment manufacturer in the 90's. I spent a couple of days at the Yellow Freight Packaging Laboratory filming tests of out packaging. One of the things I learned was that a normal highway expansion joint transmits a 6G shock load to the truck floor. Do that about 100,000 times (not an unusual number for 2,000 miles of road) and it will damage your aircraft
   
 
 Rick Girard
 do not archive
 
 On Sun, Aug 30, 2009 at 10:56 AM, Tim Warlick <timwarlick(at)mchsi.com (timwarlick(at)mchsi.com)> wrote:
   
  	  | Quote: | 	 		         All,
   
  Found out that I "may" be moving from Mobile, AL to  Tucson, AZ.
   
  For those who have transported their Kolbs,  should I let the movers try to move it in the moving van or should I rent a 26  foot U-Haul truck and drive it the 23 hours?
   
  Either way, with the wings folded it is pretty  compact. What precautions do I need to take?
   
  Tim Warlick
  Kolb Mark 3 Classic
  BMW R100 powered
   
   
     
 
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 [b]
 
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 _________________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Robert Laird
 
formerly: MkIIIc w/ 912ULS  &  Gyrobee
 
current:  Autogyro Cavalon w/ 914ULS
 
Houston, TX area
 
http://www.Texas-Flyer.com | 
			 
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		zeprep251(at)aol.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Aug 30, 2009 4:05 pm    Post subject: Transporting a Kolb | 
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				Tim,
    Trucks are firm riding.I would try to find a trailer. A car hauler is easy to adapt.I'll send you some pictures that may give you some ideas.
  
    G.Aman 5005 miles to MV and back
  
  --
 
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		NeilsenRM(at)comcast.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Aug 30, 2009 4:41 pm    Post subject: Transporting a Kolb | 
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				Tim
   
  For a one way trip like that it might just be alot  easer to fly your plane. The weather this time of year should be fairly good and  no mountains. 
   
  Just a thought
   
  do not archive
   
  Rick Neilsen
  Redrive VW powered MKIIIC
   
  [quote]   ---
 
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		cristalclear13
 
  
  Joined: 19 Sep 2007 Posts: 363 Location: Southeast Georgia
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				 Posted: Sun Aug 30, 2009 7:01 pm    Post subject: Re: Transporting a Kolb | 
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				 	  | timwarlick(at)mchsi.com wrote: | 	 		  All,
   
  Found out that I "may" be moving from Mobile, AL to  Tucson, AZ.
   
  For those who have transported their Kolbs,  should I let the movers try to move it in the moving van or should I rent a 26  foot U-Haul truck and drive it the 23 hours?
   
  Either way, with the wings folded it is pretty  compact. What precautions do I need to take?
   
  Tim Warlick
  Kolb Mark 3 Classic
  BMW R100 powered
  | 	  
 I rented a 26 foot Pennske truck to get my Mark II from northern Alabama to southeast Georgia, about an 8 or 9 hour trip.
 The man I bought the plane from had some homemade wood wing holders padded with carpet, and we also padded it with extra moving blankets.  I believe we strapped the wings to the side wall as well.
 We nailed some boards into the floor on both sides of the tires (don't know if we were supposed to do that to the truck, but it had a wood floor and we removed it after we were done).  As you can see in the picture we used rachet straps wrapped around the board that runs along the side of the truck wall to help stabilize it.
 We put foam in between the horizontal and vertical stabilizer while it was folded up, but we missed a spot and the only damage I had to the entire plane after the move was a small hole in my horizontal stabilizer.
 
 The other ideas already mentioned from others would be a good thing to incorporate if you decide to go with the Uhaul truck.
 
 By the way I had four men to lift the plane in and out of the truck.  My Mark II is about 400 pounds.
 
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 _________________ Cristal Waters
 
Kolb Mark II Twinstar Rotax 503 DCSI  Sept 2007 - sold Sept 2012
 
Private Pilot Aug 2008
 
ELSA Repairman for N193Y April 2008
 
Rotax 2 stroke maintenance April 2009
  Last edited by cristalclear13 on Mon Aug 31, 2009 6:57 am; edited 1 time in total | 
			 
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		Tom O'Hara
 
 
  Joined: 26 Jan 2006 Posts: 34
 
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				 Posted: Mon Aug 31, 2009 5:54 am    Post subject: Re: Transporting a Kolb | 
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				I sent some pics to you this morning.  They have already been posted here a couple of years ago.
 
 Tom
 
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		George Alexander
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 245 Location: SW Florida
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				 Posted: Mon Aug 31, 2009 6:16 am    Post subject: Re: Transporting a Kolb | 
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				 	  | timwarlick(at)mchsi.com wrote: | 	 		  All,
   
  Found out that I "may" be moving from Mobile, AL to  Tucson, AZ.
   
  For those who have transported their Kolbs,  should I let the movers try to move it in the moving van or should I rent a 26  foot U-Haul truck and drive it the 23 hours?
   
  Either way, with the wings folded it is pretty  compact. What precautions do I need to take?
   
  Tim Warlick
  Kolb Mark 3 Classic
  BMW R100 powered
   | 	  
 
 Tim:
 If you haven't already, you may want to check my web site (link below in signature tag).  There are a wide variety of techniques used for transporting a Kolb.  (About 16 setups.)
 Go to the web site and click on "Trailering a Kolb".
 Whatever method you use, the two points that seem to be  consistent are to: get the tail wheel off the floor by supporting the tail boom and support the wings independent of the tail boom.
 My $.02 worth.
 
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 _________________ George Alexander
 
FS II R503  
 
E-LSA N709FS
 
http://www.oh2fly.net | 
			 
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		Dana
 
  
  Joined: 13 Dec 2007 Posts: 1047 Location: Connecticut, USA
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				 Posted: Tue Sep 01, 2009 1:18 pm    Post subject: Transporting a Kolb | 
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				At 11:56 AM 8/30/2009, Tim Warlick wrote:
   	  | Quote: | 	 		   
  Found out that I "may" be moving from Mobile, AL to Tucson, AZ.
   
  For those who have transported their Kolbs, should I let the movers try to move it in the moving van or should I rent a 26 foot U-Haul truck and drive it the 23 hours?
   
  Either way, with the wings folded it is pretty compact. What precautions do I need to take? | 	  
  You REALLY REALLY don't want to trust your plane to movers who know nothing about aircraft!
 
  I don't know about the later models, but my UltraStar manual has a section about trailering.  The important points are:
 
  -Plane sits on the main wheels.
  -Use a padded cradle to support the tail boom, don't rest on the tailwheel (the folded wings move too much weight aft for the tailwheel to handle).  The padded cradle is right under the folded wing support.
  -Secure the wings so they can't slip off the supports.
 
  Why don't you just fly it there?
 
  -Dana
  
  --
   "If I knew there were coming to my house a man with the fixed intention of doing me good I would run for my life." - Thoreau    [quote][b]
 
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		pj.ladd(at)btinternet.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed Sep 02, 2009 6:50 am    Post subject: Transporting a Kolb | 
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				Definitely do not trust removers.
   
  Go and have a look at the local glider peoples  trailers and adapt some of their fittings.
  They trail more than we do.
  Personally I would detach the wings. Just folding  them transfers a lot of weight to the rear wheel.
  Strips or small pieces of carpet are  invaluable.
   
  Cheers
   
  Pat 
    [quote][b]
 
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