Sinistar
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- Sep 9, 2016
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Display name:
Brad
This is for a Cessna 182.
About 4 times a year I find myself pushing the tail down to either install/remove the front wheel pant or top off the nose strut. Our mechanic sets 4 cases of oil on the tail. I set 3x60lb sandbags on the tail. I think it needs about 160lbs. But I am not fan on placing stuff on the elevator. I bought a yoga mat from Target and always place the sand bags on that first so they won't slide off or make any scrapes. But I still don't like hefting that much weight on the elevator (always up close by the elevator).
So I've been thinking.
It seems like what would work great would be a floor jack. Then fix 180lbs on it. Add a small chain. Pump it up, hook up the chain and then slowly release the jack back down thereby pulling the tail down. I think I can find some old tractor weights to keep the profile down.
In our hangar there is dirt under the tail area so using a pulley to a winch on the wall would not work (tried it - just too soft).
I'm not worried about 180lbs (downward) on the tail hook as it probably takes a lot more than that if tied down and wind gets under the tail. But maybe that is pushing it?
Curious what others use to tip the tail down to get the nose wheel off the ground so they work on things up front?
About 4 times a year I find myself pushing the tail down to either install/remove the front wheel pant or top off the nose strut. Our mechanic sets 4 cases of oil on the tail. I set 3x60lb sandbags on the tail. I think it needs about 160lbs. But I am not fan on placing stuff on the elevator. I bought a yoga mat from Target and always place the sand bags on that first so they won't slide off or make any scrapes. But I still don't like hefting that much weight on the elevator (always up close by the elevator).
So I've been thinking.
It seems like what would work great would be a floor jack. Then fix 180lbs on it. Add a small chain. Pump it up, hook up the chain and then slowly release the jack back down thereby pulling the tail down. I think I can find some old tractor weights to keep the profile down.
In our hangar there is dirt under the tail area so using a pulley to a winch on the wall would not work (tried it - just too soft).
I'm not worried about 180lbs (downward) on the tail hook as it probably takes a lot more than that if tied down and wind gets under the tail. But maybe that is pushing it?
Curious what others use to tip the tail down to get the nose wheel off the ground so they work on things up front?