Thank you both very much for your comments and Phil I have received your
hand drawing. I have attached a picture of my tailwheel as it stands today.
I have also gone through all the documentation (3 3" binders, but no large
sized drawings like one receives with an RV) that I received with the plane
and there is nothing regarding the tailwheel, just a section on the
tailspring. That section addresses the installation of the tail spring only
with the last item being "13) Assemble the tailwheel as per instruction
supplied with the wheel parts. There are no wheel parts instructions. I just
thought this was the standard Murphy documentation.
So I have taken the picture below of my tailwheel assembly. If the picture
does not come through, I can send it off-line directly to you, if needed. I
will have to take it apart to see if the components are the same as depicted
in the drawing. The wheel swivels 360 degrees without any grove to kick out
from. Maybe it is missing some parts, assembled wrong, or misaligned from
sitting too long. At this point my wishes are to see if I can design a
locking pin controlled by a cable from the cockpit which can disengage the
locking pin. I envision a spring held pin (downward pressure) which can be
released by pulling a cable and when the cable is released and wheel aligned
would re-engage. Maybe wishful thinking at this stage.
I have also beefed up the tail cone per instructions from the O'Shea web
site so that the tail cone should be strong enough to support some increased
side loads. I like the comment about "you never need the brakes for anything
but taxiing." That should make my hand control be a supper performer. I will
post pictures of the hand control on the builders web site when installed
(it is about 60% complete now) as well as a CAD drawing. It may be of
interest to other wheelchair pilots.
At Treasure Coast Airpark (Port St Lucie, Florida) where I am located, we
have a 4200 foot grass strip (good for my initial flights) until I get used
to the characteristics of the plane. I have always liked landing on grass as
it is more forgiving. And I am already getting the itch to go flying in the
Murphy Rebel. I have friends in Seattle (one building a Moose) that feel
that the Rebel is the perfect plane for me and I tend to agree from all the
hearsay and the stats I see on the plane. I am already sitting in the
cockpit seat and making buzzing sounds.
Thanks for your assistance and will keep you informed as to my progress.
Gary Gustafson #242
-----Original Message-----
From: mike.davis@dcsol.com [mailto:mike.davis@dcsol.com] On Behalf Of Bob
Patterson
Sent: Friday, August 19, 2005 11:29 PM
To: rebel-builders@dcsol.com
Subject: Re: Rebel tail wheel
Hi Gary !
I agree completely with Phil ! The Rebel is one of the
easiest taildraggers there is to land. If you can, try to do at least
5 hours on a grass strip before you venture to pavement - grass
is MUCH more forgiving ! (I have checked out folks on pavement
in 5 hours, who had flown only Cherokees, so it is possible -
you just have to be a bit more careful.)
In any case, as Phil says, you never need the brakes for anything
but taxiing. If you are reasonably ahead of the airplane with the rudder,
you will have no problems. Be careful not to set the brakes to be too
sensitive - pilots DO get into trouble landing with their toes on the
brakes, or worse, just one brake ! ;-)
I'm wondering if you are missing some parts, because Murphy has
never sold a free-wheeling tailwheel ! It should be either "steerable"
(fixed to the rudder by chains & springs), or "full-swivel" (as previous,
but with a mechanism in the horn that allows it to "kick-out" at the
end of travel, for tighter turns, and backing up for parking). Might
be worth a review of the manual !
I think what Phil has done is to lock the "kick-out", making it
a manual, ground only, operation -- not necessarily a bad thing. It
certainly would make steering positive, with no chance of unwanted
"kick-out" - not that I've EVER had that, though ! Sounds like you
could try it, and change later if you wanted.....
Where are you ?? Might be a Rebel nearby that you could try...
......bobp
-----Original Message-----
From: Phil Stubley [mailto:phil.stubley@sympatico.ca]
Sent: Friday, August 19, 2005 7:50 PM
To: Gary Gustafson
Cc: rebel-builders@dcsol.com
Subject: Re: Rebel tail wheel
Hi Gary,
Great to hear you are taking the challenge of flying with less capabilities
than most of us have but just take for granted!!!
I will send a copy of the sketch I sent to Ian. You have the write-up I
see.
I think the Rebel is one of the best designs for handling crosswinds. I
have #302, with the fiberglass spring like yours, and live a lot on a WIDE
grass strip but with a strong crosswind most of the time. I have no trouble
with it. I never landed on wheels before the rebel, so had to relearn
tailwheel plus mains with it. I don't really have to use the brakes for
steering, the rudder plus the tailwheel do the job except for tight turns
at zero speed, (getting gas eg)
Bobp's comment about the fixed tailwheel causing structural problems is the
only negative I have heard. It sure is great for handling, except for
backing up on the ground. That can really load the structure if you (your
helpers) aren't aware. That's when the lock release pin comes in handy.
Good luck with it.
Phil.
-------------------------------orig.-------------------------
On Friday 19 August 2005 07:49 pm, Phil Stubley wrote:
Hi Gary,
Great to hear you are taking thechallenge of flying with less capabilities
than most of us have but just take for granted!!!
I will send a copy of the sketch I sent to Ian. You have the writeup I
see.
I think the Rebel is one of the best designs for handling crosswinds. I
have #302, with the fiberglass spring like yours, and live a lot on a WIDE
troublegrass strip but with a strong crosswind most of the time. I have no
with it. I never landed on wheels before the rebel, so had to relearn
tailwheel plus mains with it. I don't really have to use the brakes for
steering, the rudder plus the tailwheel do the job except for tight turns
at zero speed, (getting gas eg)
theBobp's comment about the fixed tailwheel causing structural problems is
only negative I have heard. It sure is great for handling, except for
backing up on the ground. That can really load the structure if you (your
helpers) aren't aware. That's when the lock release pin comes in handy.
Good luck with it.
Phil.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gary Gustafson" <gargus@adelphia.net>
To: "Phil Stubley" <phil.stubley@sympatico.ca>
Sent: Wednesday, August 17, 2005 11:17 AM
Subject: FW: Rebel tail wheel
I have been in correspondence with Ian Donaldson in regard to the tail
wheel modifications. I have Rebel #242 (an oldie) with a fiberglass
tail spring and a free wheeling tail wheel.
I am a wheelchair pilot who will be flying a tail dragger for the first
time
and I know how critical braking is. Hence, I am very concerned about a
afreewheeling tail wheel. I am putting in a center 'stick' with 2 levers,
design that I received from a wheelchair RV6 pilot with 750 hours. Looks
like it will work very well in the Rebel. But I hear stories about and
have
seen one ground loop (quite a bit of damage) which gives rise as to how
responsive I can be in controlling the independent brakes during cross
wind
landings. I do not think a free wheeling tail wheel helps.
wonderHence I am very interested in your mod based on Ian's comments and
If you would be so kind as to forward your drawings.
Thanking you in advance.
Gary Gustafson
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