I am not sure I understand what you are saying below. Did you have the
laygear machined & they didn't get the end perfectly perpendicular to the
center line of the laygear? How did you determine that the gear needed to be
machined? Also, are you indicating that you are not using the original thrust
bushing, but rather a larger non-original bushing? I would be very
concerned about installing a modified laygear with a thrust surface that is
not
machined properly.
Gary Hodson
In a message dated 4/18/2009 7:35:11 P.M. Central Daylight Time,
rdickson@midwestarchaeology.com writes:
Endfloat on the laygear is between
.007-.0016. I read that .0012 is the limit, but the end of the laygear is
not perfectly even (thanks to the machine shop). The front of the box
contains the much larger bushing. Shouldn't the real thrust be toward the
large end anyway?
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