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Tail Wheel Upgrade

JW969

Member
I would like to upgrade the tail wheel on my plane. I was looking for suggestions on what to get.

Jason
 
It’s old and small. I was thinking a bigger size might be better. The reason I think so is mine has the longer mains so that would get the tail up a little bit.

I’m am not an expert so seeking advice from others.
 
It’s old and small. I was thinking a bigger size might be better. The reason I think so is mine has the longer mains so that would get the tail up a little bit.

I’m am not an expert so seeking advice from others.
The longer mains with a small tailwheel and the resulting higher angle of attack is a good thing. This makes it easier to complete a three-point landing without the RV-6 skipping back into the air since the wing is closer to stalling.

Your easiest option is to just replace the tailwheel with a new one from Vans. There are other choices such as the Bell fork mentioned above (I fly one) but I suggest you install a fresh wheel and see how that works for you.

 
I have the Bell fork on my 8 and the had the Screaming Eagle fork on my 7. Both give better ground clearance than the stock Vans fork and work with the Vans mount. I have been running the Flyboys Delux TW tire for over 800 hrs. It has better bearings than the stock Vans tire and runs a little smoother.
 
I would like to upgrade the tail wheel on my plane. I was looking for suggestions on what to get.

Jason
Tail wheel or tail wheel fork?

A lot depends on when your RV-6 was built. The original had tail wheel fork that was not full swivel. IF the builder installed an Aviation Products full swivel tail wheel, then it uses a larger diameter axle and requires different bearings. IF it is the Van's full swivel tail wheel fork, then it uses the same size axle as the original tail wheel fork that was not full swivel.

I had an Aviation Products dual fork full swivel tailwheel when I built my RV-6. (The single fork version will bend after numerous landings.) After wearing the aluminum part that mounts to the tailspring out, I added a bushing to it. When I wore the bushing out, I replaced the assembly with current production Van's Aircraft parts other than using the lightest weight tailwheel available and the Bell tailwheel fork.

I now have a lighter weight fork on order from AeroGarage. I love the Bell tailwheel fork but like the idea of reducing weight.

If all you are looking for is tire, I recommend the Dayton Murdock light weight tire. IF cost is a factor, this would be a good option.
 
Thanks for that info. I’m going to look into that and move forward. I have a friend who’s and A&P that’s going to help me so should be kinda fun.
 


Needle bearing/ball bearing in the yoke. Low friction, doesn't wear the shaft like a top hat bushing. Ditch the single sided arm and order the double, rig with dual cables or chains. Units rigged with the link will prematurely pop into full swivel before the rudder can reach the stop.
 


Needle bearing/ball bearing in the yoke. Low friction, doesn't wear the shaft like a top hat bushing. Ditch the single sided arm and order the double, rig with dual cables or chains. Units rigged with the link will prematurely pop into full swivel before the rudder can reach the stop.
Agree with this 100.0%, and I've tried at least 6 variations. The yoke with bearings is well worth the expense. Also agree with dual cables/chains. I've had a couple of failures of the various single sided push-pull devices. The cheap Van's tailwheel is heavier, but seems to absorb bumps best within the solid rubber choices. Tried the Condor2 and ended up with terrible shimmy.

My suggestions are driven by my observed performance, reliability and reduced maintenance time/cost.
 
Tail wheel or tail wheel fork?

A lot depends on when your RV-6 was built. The original had tail wheel fork that was not full swivel. IF the builder installed an Aviation Products full swivel tail wheel, then it uses a larger diameter axle and requires different bearings. IF it is the Van's full swivel tail wheel fork, then it uses the same size axle as the original tail wheel fork that was not full swivel.

I had an Aviation Products dual fork full swivel tailwheel when I built my RV-6. (The single fork version will bend after numerous landings.) After wearing the aluminum part that mounts to the tailspring out, I added a bushing to it. When I wore the bushing out, I replaced the assembly with current production Van's Aircraft parts other than using the lightest weight tailwheel available and the Bell tailwheel fork.

I now have a lighter weight fork on order from AeroGarage. I love the Bell tailwheel fork but like the idea of reducing weight.

If all you are looking for is tire, I recommend the Dayton Murdock light weight tire. IF cost is a factor, this would be a good option.
I put the Aero Garage fork, links and lightweight tail wheel on long legged 4. Saved a bit more than a pound by removing the Aviation Products single fork tailwheel. I can recommend that. Lite links are good idea as well. Leave some slack in the links, touch down straight and it will stay straight.
 
I have the JD Air tailwheel assembly (yoke, fork, and lightweight tailwheel) with the pushrod steering linkage. The tailwheel is great, not crazy about the steering linkage. My particular RV just likes to go straight unless acted upon by the wind, so with steering chains set pretty loose it was easy to taxi. With the steering link, you always have a steering input going to the wheel, so it's definitely more work with the linkage. It's not bad, just different. I've got a set of Aero Garage Lite Links in my box-of-stuff-to-install that I'm going to try.
 
I have the JD Air tailwheel assembly (yoke, fork, and lightweight tailwheel) with the pushrod steering linkage. The tailwheel is great, not crazy about the steering linkage. My particular RV just likes to go straight unless acted upon by the wind, so with steering chains set pretty loose it was easy to taxi. With the steering link, you always have a steering input going to the wheel, so it's definitely more work with the linkage. It's not bad, just different. I've got a set of Aero Garage Lite Links in my box-of-stuff-to-install that I'm going to try.
Lite Links are a great deal. Leave enough slack so you can negotiate the torque and crosswinds. Keri Mi stays straight on landing if I land straight even with moderate cross wind because of slack in links.
 
Evidently there were some early models that had longer “extended” mains than others from talking to some local guys that know way more than me. After comparing mine to another 6 at my home airport there is a noticeable difference.
 
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