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10-04-2019, 10:38 AM
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Medford, NJ USA
Posts: 282
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How do you let it down after it is up
Resurrecting this old thread.
I understand the concept of raising the nose by pulling down the tail with a ratcheting strap. And I am using six 5 gallon jugs of water as my weight. To test the concept I added tension to the strap and was able to pull the nose up. I only went as far and pulling most of the weight off the nose. However, when I went to release the strap, it releases all at once and the nose drops rather quickly. Glad the nose wheel wasn't up off the ground. So how are you releasing the strap? Should I just add my body wight to the tail and then release?
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10-04-2019, 11:59 AM
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Rochester Hills, MI
Posts: 58
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RV10Pilot
Resurrecting this old thread.
I understand the concept of raising the nose by pulling down the tail with a ratcheting strap. And I am using six 5 gallon jugs of water as my weight. To test the concept I added tension to the strap and was able to pull the nose up. I only went as far and pulling most of the weight off the nose. However, when I went to release the strap, it releases all at once and the nose drops rather quickly. Glad the nose wheel wasn't up off the ground. So how are you releasing the strap? Should I just add my body wight to the tail and then release?
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A 1.5 Ton Aluminum floor jack from HF fits nicely under the spindle of the front nose gear. It has worked well for most nose lifting tasks - checking breakout force, tire/wheel servicing, lifting onto scale, etc. In your case you could use it to let down the nose in a controlled manner.
Like so....

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-Brendon
RV-10
Last edited by bsvantho : 10-04-2019 at 12:07 PM.
Reason: added pic link
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10-04-2019, 02:51 PM
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Join Date: Aug 2016
Location: Quarryville ,pa
Posts: 526
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Nose lift
I installed a 3/8 threaded anchor in the concrete floor directly under the tail tie down. Screw in a tie down and use a come a long to pull the tail down. You can also control it when you lower the nose back down, which is why I don?t use a ratchet strap.
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RV10 N620RV
IO540 C4B5
Whirlwind 375RV prop
Garmin G900X
First Flight 2/14/2019
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10-04-2019, 11:26 PM
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Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Portland, OR
Posts: 337
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Slow...
Quote:
Originally Posted by RV10Pilot
Resurrecting this old thread.
I understand the concept of raising the nose by pulling down the tail with a ratcheting strap. And I am using six 5 gallon jugs of water as my weight. To test the concept I added tension to the strap and was able to pull the nose up. I only went as far and pulling most of the weight off the nose. However, when I went to release the strap, it releases all at once and the nose drops rather quickly. Glad the nose wheel wasn't up off the ground. So how are you releasing the strap? Should I just add my body wight to the tail and then release?
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I use my cars scissor jack to lift the nose wheel off the ground. Once elevated, I then attach the concrete bucket to the tail. With it attached, I lower the scissor jack until the nose wheel hangs freely. The process is reversed which then allows the scissor jack to slowly lower the nose.
__________________
David Halmos
RV-10
Flying - 570+ hours
Portland, OR
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10-05-2019, 04:42 AM
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Tampa, FL
Posts: 2,861
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I use my engine crane to lift the nose using straps connected to the engine mount vs pulling the tail down.
__________________
Todd "I drink and know things" Stovall
PP ASEL-IA
RV-10 N728TT - Flying!
WAR EAGLE!
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10-11-2019, 05:58 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2018
Location: Louisville KY
Posts: 95
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How much weight on tail is safe ?
I use a ratcheting winch bolted to a concrete filled container to pull down the tail ring. It takes a LOT of force. Is there any danger of damaging the structure with this method of raising the nose?
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John
Cessna 170B-sold
Zenith 601XL-sold
Vans RV-6 slider-sold
Vans RV-9A slider, flying
O-360, AFS EFIS, True-track autopilot, Garmin GDL-82 ADS-B, Garmin 327 Transponder, Garmin 496
Dues happily paid Jan 3, 2020
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10-11-2019, 07:02 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2016
Location: Quarryville ,pa
Posts: 526
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Aviaman
I use a ratcheting winch bolted to a concrete filled container to pull down the tail ring. It takes a LOT of force. Is there any danger of damaging the structure with this method of raising the nose?
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I'll have to put a dynamometer on it next time but I'm betting it's 300lbs or slightly less on a -10. It would be interesting what the mothership says.
__________________
RV10 N620RV
IO540 C4B5
Whirlwind 375RV prop
Garmin G900X
First Flight 2/14/2019
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10-11-2019, 09:46 AM
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Dogwood Airpark (VA42)
Posts: 2,587
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Aviaman
I use a ratcheting winch bolted to a concrete filled container to pull down the tail ring. It takes a LOT of force. Is there any danger of damaging the structure with this method of raising the nose?
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Perhaps you should consider how much you trust the aluminum anchor that you cut the tail tie down threads into.
For me, I would never raise the nose by pulling down on the tail tie down. Lifting the nose up with an engine hoist is simple and safe.
Carl
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10-11-2019, 09:51 AM
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Landing field "12VA"
Posts: 1,529
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There must be something I'm not following here - how is the pull-down force on the tail to lift the nose any greater than the air load on the horizontal stab/elevator that's required to take off or land on the mains? Are we worried somehow about the fuselage structure not handling that load - or the tail tie-down ring? Off the cuff, neither one would worry me - seems like expected loads that would have been designed for.
But I see Carl's point - and thus far have only ever raised my -10 nose wheel by lifting the engine ring with a hoist. Last night I raised my 6A nose by ratcheting the tail down to the deck of my 60" mower - but that's a welded stainless tie-down ring with two AN-3 bolts in shear holding it on.
__________________
Bill Boyd
Hop-Along Aerodrome (12VA)
RV-6A - N30YD - Built '98 / sold '20
RV-10 - N130YD reserved - under construction
donating monthly to the VAF - thanks, Doug
Last edited by Bill Boyd : 10-11-2019 at 09:55 AM.
Reason: Carl's comment while I was writing mine.
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10-11-2019, 10:03 AM
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Prosper, TX
Posts: 373
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Tail Weight
An important distinction here is where the aircraft is supported to get the nose wheel off the ground. If the wings are supported at the jack points under the main spar, then the weight required on the tail tie down isn't much and is comparable to the aerodynamic load on the HS in level flight. If the main gear wheels on the floor are the fulcrum, then it'a a different story since they're well behind the main spar and a long way behind the CG. This requires a lot more weight and probably isn't a great idea...
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RV-10 N415JS
Slow build kit #40874
Homebuilt Kit Champion Oshkosh 2019
Atlantic crossings: 2
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