tomhall1776 wrote:Hey Jered, I've loved reading through your thread and as someone considering the S-21 it is a huge help! In fact I've enjoyed it so much this is my first post. Any updates on how the build is going?


AMRE2ME2 wrote:What happened? Such an informative thread and all of a sudden, nothing.


Timberwolf wrote:Not an uncommon system on the landing gear. The spring gear on the murphy rebel with a setup like that does exert the load on that single bolt, in almost pure tension. Sure, there is some shear load associated, but it’s negligible in regards to what the bolt can handle. The most common failure mode is the bolt stretching from a hard landing. It’s pretty easy to spot by noting a loose bolt during the resulting inspection. I’m only familiar with 1 bolt failure event, it it was concluded that this was the result of repeated hard landings. Bottom line, don’t tighten a loose landing gear bolt on this kind of gear; replace it.
http://wrayt.ca/rebel%20site/test_results.html


The Bellanca/American champion line all have gear like that after '65ish. I've never seen a failure of the inner bolt, but the original outer U bolt that they had would crack. The fuselage tubing will usually give before the bolt will.Battson wrote:Yes, I am sure it's very well engineered for normal use and I don't want to question their design engineering. It's always amazing how small the bolts are.
My question was about surviving an impact with an unexpected obstacle, typical of backcountry flying. This is nothing to do with the design for normal use, more about crash survivability.
Yes ultimate tensile strength is 125kpsi, but they start to yield much lower, their shear strength is what matters in this case and that is only 76kpsi with a long arm attached to the other end.
Let's say the gear leg gives an advantage over the bolt of 4x. I calculate an impulsive force of about 620kg will shear the bolt off.
My rough working on the back on an envelope came to the conclusion, if the plane weighs 1,200lbs (540kg) when landing, and one gear leg it hits an obstacle big enough to slow the plane by 21 knots (in 1 second), then your gear leg is shearing that AN5 bolt.
(Edit to fix mathematical error)







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