Ah! So that was an attempt to deal with wheel shake on landing? Interesting. It will be interesting to see if the shimmy in my RV-7 (which is sometimes pretty bad and other times non-existent) is any different now that I've cleaned out the foam....From my RV6 builders manual.
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Internal fixation for the gear leg fairings -- a little "Great stuff" or 2-part pour foam at the top and the bottom 1.5 - 2" and things stay put...sort of.Learning my way around my new (to me) RV-7 with lots of help from the folks on the forums. What is/was the rationale for filling the gear leg fairings with foam?
Ah! So that was an attempt to deal with wheel shake on landing? Interesting. It will be interesting to see if the shimmy in my RV-7 (which is sometimes pretty bad and other times non-existent) is any different now that I've cleaned out the foam....
That always solves it for me, but with tires + tubes coming in at $600+, it would be nice to find a solution that didn't leave a fair amount of tread on the throw-away's...Try a new set of high quality tires.
As time went on there were other approaches. Bonding wood to the gearleg, and then mounting the fiberglass fairing over it (but not bonding the fairing to the leg). Certainly is easier to get the leg fairing aligned with the airstream that way. A misaligned gearleg fairing can appear as a "heavy wing".Ah! So that was an attempt to deal with wheel shake on landing? Interesting. It will be interesting to see if the shimmy in my RV-7 (which is sometimes pretty bad and other times non-existent) is any different now that I've cleaned out the foam....
yes, and no.Gear leg "shimmy" is solved by attaching another mass to the gear leg
The foam was in the gear leg fairing, not the wheel pant.We've been making these fairings for a long time. Where would we put the foam, and why?